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| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 04:44:09 -0700 |
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| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 04:44:09 -0700 |
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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/14297-0.txt b/14297-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..da89a65 --- /dev/null +++ b/14297-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,4325 @@ +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14297 *** + +THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA + +By + +RICHARD HARDING DAVIS, F.R.G.S. + + +AUTHOR OF "SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE," "THE SCARLET CAR," + "WITH BOTH ARMIES IN SOUTH AFRICA," "FARCES," + "THE CUBAN AND PORTO RICAN CAMPAIGNS" + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + FROM PHOTOGRAPHS BY THE AUTHOR + AND OTHERS + + +CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS +NEW YORK +1907 + + + [Illustration (Frontispiece): Mr. Davis and "Wood Boys" of the + Congo.] + + + +TO + +CECIL CLARK DAVIS + +MY FELLOW VOYAGER ALONG +THE COASTS OF AFRICA + + + + + CONTENTS + + + I + THE COASTERS 3 + + II + MY BROTHER'S KEEPER 32 + + III + THE CAPITAL OF THE CONGO 55 + + IV + AMERICANS IN THE CONGO 93 + + V + HUNTING THE HIPPO 118 + + VI + OLD CALABAR 142 + + VII + ALONG THE EAST COAST 176 + + + + ILLUSTRATIONS + + + MR. DAVIS AND "WOOD BOYS" OF THE CONGO _Frontispiece_ + + MRS. DAVIS IN A BORROWED "HAMMOCK," THE LOCAL MEANS + OF TRANSPORT ON THE WEST COAST 10 + + A WHITE BUILDING, THAT BLAZED LIKE THE BASE OF A + WHITEWASHED STOVE AT WHITE HEAT 22 + + THE "MAMMY CHAIR" IS LIKE THOSE SWINGS YOU SEE + IN PUBLIC PLAYGROUNDS 28 + + A VILLAGE ON THE KASAI RIVER 42 + + "TENANTS" OF LEOPOLD, WHO CLAIMS THAT THE CONGO + BELONGS TO HIM, AND THAT THESE NATIVE PEOPLE + ARE THERE ONLY AS HIS TENANTS 52 + + THE FACILITIES FOR LANDING AT BANANA, THE PORT OF + ENTRY TO THE CONGO, ARE LIMITED 56 + + "PRISONERS" OF THE STATE IN CHAINS AT MATADI 60 + + BUSH BOYS IN THE PLAZA AT MATADI SEEKING SHADE 70 + + THE MONUMENT IN STANLEY PARK, ERECTED, NOT TO + STANLEY, BUT TO LEOPOLD 82 + + THE _Deliverance_. THE RIVER RACED OVER THE DECK + TO A DEPTH OF FOUR OR FIVE INCHES. BETWEEN + HER CABIN AND THE WOOD-PILE, WERE STORED FIFTY + HUMAN BEINGS 86 + + THE NATIVE WIFE OF A _Chef de Poste_ 90 + + ENGLISH MISSIONARIES, AND SOME OF THEIR CHARGES 98 + + THE LABORING MAN UPON WHOM THE AMERICAN CONCESSIONAIRES + MUST DEPEND 106 + + MR. DAVIS AND NATIVE "BOY," ON THE KASAI RIVER 128 + + THE HIPPOPOTAMUS THAT DID NOT KNOW HE WAS DEAD 134 + + THE JESUIT BROTHERS AT THE WOMBALI MISSION 138 + + THERE, IN THE SURF, WE FOUND THESE TONS OF MAHOGANY, + POUNDING AGAINST EACH OTHER 152 + + A LOG OF MAHOGANY JAMMED IN THE ANCHOR CHAINS 156 + + THE PALACE OF THE KING OF THE CAMEROONS 160 + + THE HOME OF THE THIRTY QUEENS OF KING MANGO BELL 164 + + THE MOTHER SUPERIOR AND SISTERS OF ST. JOSEPH AND + THEIR CONVERTS AT OLD CALABAR 168 + + THE KROO BOYS SIT, NOT ON THE THWARTS, BUT ON THE + GUNWALES, AS A WOMAN RIDES A SIDE SADDLE 172 + + GOING VISITING IN HER PRIVATE TRAM-CAR AT BEIRA 182 + + ONE-HALF OF THE STREET CLEANING DEPARTMENT OF + MOZAMBIQUE 190 + + CUSTOM HOUSE, ZANZIBAR 194 + + CHAIN-GANGS OF PETTY OFFENDERS OUTSIDE OF ZANZIBAR 198 + + THE IVORY ON THE RIGHT, COVERED ONLY WITH SACKING, + IS READY FOR SHIPMENT TO BOSTON, U.S.A. 202 + + THE LATE SULTAN OF ZANZIBAR IN HIS STATE CARRIAGE 206 + + H.S.H. HAMUD BIN MUHAMAD BIN SAID, THE LATE + SULTAN OF ZANZIBAR 210 + + A GERMAN "FACTORY" AT TANGA, THE STORE BELOW, THE + LIVING APARTMENTS ABOVE 214 + + SOUDANESE SOLDIERS UNDER A GERMAN OFFICER OUTSIDE + OF TANGA 218 + + + + +THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA + + +I + +THE COASTERS + + +No matter how often one sets out, "for to admire, and for to see, +for to behold this world so wide," he never quite gets over being +surprised at the erratic manner in which "civilization" distributes +itself; at the way it ignores one spot upon the earth's surface, and +upon another, several thousand miles away, heaps its blessings and +its tyrannies. Having settled in a place one might suppose the +"influences of civilization" would first be felt by the people +nearest that place. Instead of which, a number of men go forth in a +ship and carry civilization as far away from that spot as the winds +will bear them. + +When a stone falls in a pool each part of each ripple is equally +distant from the spot where the stone fell; but if the stone of +civilization were to have fallen, for instance, into New Orleans, +equally near to that spot we would find the people of New York City +and the naked Indians of Yucatan. Civilization does not radiate, or +diffuse. It leaps; and as to where it will next strike it is as +independent as forked lightning. During hundreds of years it passed +over the continent of Africa to settle only at its northern coast +line and its most southern cape; and, to-day, it has given Cuba all +of its benefits, and has left the equally beautiful island of Hayti, +only fourteen hours away, sunk in fetish worship and brutal +ignorance. + +One of the places it has chosen to ignore is the West Coast of +Africa. We are familiar with the Northern Coast and South Africa. We +know all about Morocco and the picturesque Raisuli, Lord Cromer, and +Shepheard's Hotel. The Kimberley Diamond Mines, the Boer War, +Jameson's Raid, and Cecil Rhodes have made us know South Africa, and +on the East Coast we supply Durban with buggies and farm wagons, +furniture from Grand Rapids, and, although we have nothing against +Durban, breakfast food and canned meats. We know Victoria Falls, +because they have eclipsed our own Niagara Falls, and Zanzibar, +farther up the Coast, is familiar through comic operas and rag-time. +Of itself, the Cape to Cairo Railroad would make the East Coast +known to us. But the West Coast still means that distant shore from +whence the "first families" of Boston, Bristol and New Orleans +exported slaves. Now, for our soap and our salad, the West Coast +supplies palm oil and kernel oil, and for automobile tires, rubber. +But still to it there cling the mystery, the hazard, the cruelty of +those earlier times. It is not of palm oil and rubber one thinks +when he reads on the ship's itinerary, "the Gold Coast, the Ivory +Coast, the Bight of Benin, and Old Calabar." + +One of the strange leaps made by civilization is from Southampton to +Cape Town, and one of its strangest ironies is in its ignoring all +the six thousand miles of coast line that lies between. Nowadays, in +winter time, the English, flying from the damp cold of London, go to +Cape Town as unconcernedly as to the Riviera. They travel in great +seagoing hotels, on which they play cricket, and dress for dinner. +Of the damp, fever-driven coast line past which, in splendid ease, +they are travelling, save for the tall peaks of Teneriffe and Cape +Verde, they know nothing. + +When last Mrs. Davis and I made that voyage from Southampton, the +decks were crowded chiefly with those English whose faces are +familiar at the Savoy and the Ritz, and who, within an hour, had +settled down to seventeen days of uninterrupted bridge, with, before +them, the prospect on landing of the luxury of the Mount Nelson and +the hospitalities of Government House. When, the other day, we again +left Southampton, that former departure came back in strange +contrast. It emphasized that this time we are not accompanying +civilization on one of her flying leaps. Instead, now, we are going +down to the sea in ships with the vortrekkers of civilization, those +who are making the ways straight; who, in a few weeks, will be +leaving us to lose themselves in great forests, who clear the paths +of noisome jungles where the sun seldom penetrates, who sit in +sun-baked "factories," as they call their trading houses, measuring +life by steamer days, who preach the Gospel to the cannibals of the +Congo, whose voices are the voices of those calling in the +wilderness. + +As our tender came alongside the _Bruxellesville_ at Southampton, we +saw at the winch Kroo boys of the Ivory Coast; leaning over the rail +the Soeurs Blanches of the Congo, robed, although the cold was +bitter and the decks black with soot-stained snow, all in white; +missionaries with long beards, a bishop in a purple biretta, and +innumerable Belgian officers shivering in their cloaks and wearing +the blue ribbon and silver star that tells of three years of service +along the Equator. This time our fellow passengers are no +pleasure-seekers, no Cook's tourists sailing south to avoid a +rigorous winter. They have squeezed the last minute out of their +leave, and they are going back to the station, to the factory, to +the mission, to the barracks. They call themselves "Coasters," and +they inhabit a world all to themselves. In square miles, it is a +very big world, but it is one of those places civilization has +skipped. + +Nearly every one of our passengers from Antwerp or Southampton knows +that if he keeps his contract, and does not die, it will be three +years before he again sees his home. So our departure was not +enlivening, and, in the smoking-room, the exiles prepared us for +lonely ports of call, for sickening heat, for swarming multitudes of +blacks. + +In consequence, when we passed Finisterre, Spain, which from New +York seems almost a foreign country, was a near neighbor, a dear +friend. And the Island of Teneriffe was an anticlimax. It was as +though by a trick of the compass we had been sailing southwest and +were entering the friendly harbor of Ponce or Havana. + +Santa Cruz, the port town of Teneriffe, like La Guayra, rises at the +base of great hills. It is a smiling, bright-colored, red-roofed, +typical Spanish town. The hills about it mount in innumerable +terraces planted with fruits and vegetables, and from many of these +houses on the hills, should the owner step hurriedly out of his +front door, he would land upon the roof of his nearest neighbor. +Back of this first chain of hills are broad farming lands and +plateaus from which Barcelona and London are fed with the earliest +and the most tender of potatoes that appear in England at the same +time Bermuda potatoes are being printed in big letters on the bills +of fare along Broadway. Santa Cruz itself supplies passing steamers +with coal, and passengers with lace work and post cards; and to the +English in search of sunshine, with a rival to Madeira. It should be +a successful rival, for it is a charming place, and on the day we +were there the thermometer was at 72°, and every one was complaining +of the cruel severity of the winter. In Santa Cruz one who knows +Spanish America has but to shut his eyes and imagine himself back in +Santiago de Cuba or Caracas. There are the same charming plazas, the +yellow churches and towered cathedral, the long iron-barred windows, +glimpses through marble-paved halls of cool patios, the same open +shops one finds in Obispo and O'Reilly Streets, the idle officers +with smart uniforms and swinging swords in front of cafés killing +time and digestion with sweet drinks, and over the garden walls +great bunches of purple and scarlet flowers and sheltering palms. +The show place in Santa Cruz is the church in which are stored the +relics of the sea-fight in which, as a young man, Nelson lost his +arm and England also lost two battleflags. As she is not often +careless in that respect, it is a surprise to find, in this tiny +tucked-away little island, what you will not see in any of the show +places of the world. They tell in Santa Cruz that one night an +English middy, single-handed, recaptured the captured flags and +carried them triumphantly to his battleship. He expected at the +least a K.C.B., and when the flags, with a squad of British marines +as a guard of honor, were solemnly replaced in the church, and the +middy himself was sent upon a tour of apology to the bishop, the +governor, the commandant of the fortress, the alcalde, the collector +of customs, and the captain of the port, he declared that monarchies +were ungrateful. The other objects of interest in Teneriffe are +camels, which in the interior of the island are common beasts of +burden, and which appearing suddenly around a turn would frighten +any automobile; and the fact that in Teneriffe the fashion in +women's hats never changes. They are very funny, flat straw hats; +like children's sailor hats. They need only "_U.S.S. Iowa_" on the +band to be quite familiar. Their secret is that they are built to +support baskets and buckets of water, and that concealed in each is +a heavy pad. + + [Illustration: Mrs. Davis in a Borrowed "Hammock," the Local Means + of Transport on the West Coast.] + +After Teneriffe the destination of every one on board is as +irrevocably fixed as though the ship were a government transport. We +are all going to the West Coast or to the Congo. Should you wish to +continue on to Cape Town along the South Coast, as they call the +vast territory from Lagos to Cape Town, although there is an +irregular, a very irregular, service to the Cape, you could as +quickly reach it by going on to the Congo, returning all the way to +Southampton, and again starting on the direct line south. + +It is as though a line of steamers running down our coast to Florida +would not continue on along the South Coast to New Orleans and +Galveston, and as though no line of steamers came from New Orleans +and Galveston to meet the steamers of the East Coast. + +In consequence, the West Coast of Africa, cut off by lack of +communication from the south, divorced from the north by the Desert +of Sahara, lies in the steaming heat of the Equator to-day as it +did a thousand years ago, in inaccessible, inhospitable isolation. + +Two elements have helped to preserve this isolation: the fever that +rises from its swamps and lagoons, and the surf that thunders upon +the shore. In considering the stunted development of the West Coast, +these two elements must be kept in mind--the sickness that strikes +at sunset and by sunrise leaves the victim dead, and the monster +waves that rush booming like cannon at the beach, churning the sandy +bottom beneath, and hurling aside the great canoes as a man tosses a +cigarette. The clerk who signs the three-year contract to work on +the West Coast enlists against a greater chance of death than the +soldier who enlists to fight only bullets; and every box, puncheon, +or barrel that the trader sends in a canoe through the surf is +insured against its never reaching, as the case may be, the shore or +the ship's side. + +The surf and the fever are the Minotaurs of the West Coast, and in +the year there is not a day passes that they do not claim and +receive their tribute in merchandise and human life. Said an old +Coaster to me, pointing at the harbor of Grand Bassam: "I've seen +just as much cargo lost overboard in that surf as I've seen shipped +to Europe." One constantly wonders how the Coasters find it good +enough. How, since 1550, when the Portuguese began trading, it has +been possible to find men willing to fill the places of those who +died. But, in spite of the early massacres by the natives, in spite +of attacks by wild beasts, in spite of pirate raids, of desolating +plagues and epidemics, of wars with other white men, of damp heat +and sudden sickness, there were men who patiently rebuilt the forts +and factories, fought the surf with great breakwaters, cleared +breathing spaces in the jungle, and with the aid of quinine for +themselves, and bad gin for the natives, have held their own. Except +for the trade goods it never would be held. It is a country where +the pay is cruelly inadequate, where but few horses, sheep, or +cattle can exist, where the natives are unbelievably lazy and +insolent, and where, while there is no society of congenial spirits, +there is a superabundance of animal and insect pests. Still, so +great are gold, ivory, and rubber, and so many are the men who will +take big chances for little pay, that every foot of the West Coast +is preëmpted. As the ship rolls along, for hours from the rail you +see miles and miles of steaming yellow sand and misty swamp where as +yet no white man has set his foot. But in the real estate office of +Europe some Power claims the right to "protect" that swamp; some +treaty is filed as a title-deed. + +As the Powers finally arranged it, the map of the West Coast is like +a mosaic, like the edge of a badly constructed patchwork quilt. In +trading along the West Coast a man can find use for five European +languages, and he can use a new one at each port of call. + +To the north, the West Coast begins with Cape Verde, which is +Spanish. It is followed by Senegal, which is French; but into +Senegal is tucked "a thin red line" of British territory called +Gambia. Senegal closes in again around Gambia, and is at once +blocked to the south by the three-cornered patch which belongs to +Portugal. This is followed by French Guinea down to another British +red spot, Sierra Leone, which meets Liberia, the republic of negro +emigrants from the United States. South of Liberia is the French +Ivory Coast, then the English Gold Coast; Togo, which is German; +Dahomey, which is French; Lagos and Southern Nigeria, which again +are English; Fernando Po, which is Spanish, and the German +Cameroons. + +The coast line of these protectorates and colonies gives no idea of +the extent of their hinterland, which spreads back into the Sahara, +the Niger basin, and the Soudan. Sierra Leone, one of the smallest +of them, is as large as Maine; Liberia, where the emigrants still +keep up the tradition of the United States by talking like end men, +is as large as the State of New York; two other colonies, Senegal +and Nigeria, together are 135,000 square miles larger than the +combined square miles of all of our Atlantic States from Maine to +Florida and including both. To partition finally among the Powers +this strip of death and disease, of uncountable wealth, of unnamed +horrors and cruelties, has taken many hundreds of years, has brought +to the black man every misery that can be inflicted upon a human +being, and to thousands of white men, death and degradation, or +great wealth. + +The raids made upon the West Coast to obtain slaves began in the +fifteenth century with the discovery of the West Indies, and it was +to spare the natives of these islands, who were unused and unfitted +for manual labor and who in consequence were cruelly treated by the +Spaniards, that Las Casas, the Bishop of Chiapa, first imported +slaves from West Africa. He lived to see them suffer so much more +terribly than had the Indians who first obtained his sympathy, that +even to his eightieth year he pleaded with the Pope and the King of +Spain to undo the wrong he had begun. But the tide had set west, and +Las Casas might as well have tried to stop the Trades. In 1800 +Wilberforce stated in the House of Commons that at that time British +vessels were carrying each year to the Indies and the American +colonies 38,000 slaves, and when he spoke the traffic had been going +on for two hundred and fifty years. After the Treaty of Utrecht, +Queen Anne congratulated her Peers on the terms of the treaty which +gave to England "the fortress of Gibraltar, the Island of Minorca, +and the monopoly in the slave trade for thirty years," or, as it was +called, the _asiento_ (contract). This was considered so good an +investment that Philip V of Spain took up one-quarter of the common +stock, and good Queen Anne reserved another quarter, which later she +divided among her ladies. But for a time she and her cousin of Spain +were the two largest slave merchants in the world. The point of view +of those then engaged in the slave trade is very interesting. When +Queen Elizabeth sent Admiral Hawkins slave-hunting, she presented +him with a ship, named, with startling lack of moral perception, +after the Man of Sorrows. In a book on the slave trade I picked up +at Sierra Leone there is the diary of an officer who accompanied +Hawkins. "After," he writes, "going every day on shore to take the +inhabitants by burning and despoiling of their towns," the ship was +becalmed. "But," he adds gratefully, "the Almighty God, who never +suffereth his elect to perish, sent us the breeze." + +The slave book shows that as late as 1780 others of the "elect" of +our own South were publishing advertisements like this, which is one +of the shortest and mildest. It is from a Virginia newspaper: "The +said fellow is outlawed, and I will give ten pounds reward for his +head severed from his body, or forty shillings if brought alive." + +At about this same time an English captain threw overboard, chained +together, one hundred and thirty sick slaves. He claimed that had he +not done so the ship's company would have also sickened and died, +and the ship would have been lost, and that, therefore, the +insurance companies should pay for the slaves. The jury agreed with +him, and the Solicitor-General said: "What is all this declamation +about human beings! This is a case of chattels or goods. It is +really so--it is the case of throwing over goods. For the +purpose--the purpose of the insurance, they are goods and property; +whether right or wrong, we have nothing to do with it." In 1807 +England declared the slave trade illegal. A year later the United +States followed suit, but although on the seas her frigates chased +the slavers, on shore a part of our people continued to hold slaves, +until the Civil War rescued both them and the slaves. + +As early as 1718 Raynal and Diderot estimated that up to that time +there had been exported from Africa to the North and South Americas +nine million slaves. Our own historian, Bancroft, calculated that in +the eighteenth century the English alone imported to the Americas +three million slaves, while another 2,500,000 purchased or kidnapped +on the West Coast were lost in the surf, or on the voyage thrown +into the sea. For that number Bancroft places the gross returns as +not far from four hundred millions of dollars. + +All this is history, and to the reader familiar, but I do not +apologize for reviewing it here, as without the background of the +slave trade, the West Coast, as it is to-day, is difficult to +understand. As we have seen, to kings, to chartered "Merchant +Adventurers," to the cotton planters of the West Indies and of our +South, and to the men of the North who traded in black ivory, the +West Coast gave vast fortunes. The price was the lives of millions +of slaves. And to-day it almost seems as though the sins of the +fathers were being visited upon the children; as though the juju of +the African, under the spell of which his enemies languish and die, +has been cast upon the white man. We have to look only at home. In +the millions of dead, and in the misery of the Civil War, and +to-day in race hatred, in race riots, in monstrous crimes and as +monstrous lynchings, we seem to see the fetish of the West Coast, +the curse, falling upon the children to the third and fourth +generation of the million slaves that were thrown, shackled, into +the sea. + +The first mention in history of Sierra Leone is when in 480 B.C., +Hanno, the Carthaginian, anchored at night in its harbor, and then +owing to "fires in the forests, the beating of drums, and strange +cries that issued from the bushes," before daylight hastened away. +We now skip nineteen hundred years. This is something of a gap, but +except for the sketchy description given us by Hanno of the place, +and his one gaudy night there, Sierra Leone until the fifteenth +century utterly disappears from the knowledge of man. Happy is the +country without a history! + +Nineteen hundred years having now supposed to elapse, the second act +begins with De Cintra, who came in search of slaves, and instead +gave the place its name. Because of the roaring of the wind around +the peak that rises over the harbor he called it the Lion Mountain. + +After the fifteenth century, in a succession of failures, five +different companies of "Royal Adventurers" were chartered to trade +with her people, and, when convenient, to kidnap them; pirates in +turn kidnapped the British governor, the French and Dutch were +always at war with the settlement, and native raids, epidemics, and +fevers were continuous. The history of Sierra Leone is the history +of every other colony along the West Coast, with the difference that +it became a colony by purchase, and was not, as were the others, a +trading station gradually converted into a colony. During the war in +America, Great Britain offered freedom to all slaves that would +fight for her, and, after the war, these freed slaves were conveyed +on ships of war to London, where they were soon destitute. They +appealed to the great friend of the slave in those days, Granville +Sharp, and he with others shipped them to Sierra Leone, to +establish, with the aid of some white emigrants, an independent +colony, which was to be a refuge and sanctuary for others like +themselves. Liberia, which was the gift of philanthropists of +Baltimore to American freed slaves, was, no doubt, inspired by this +earlier effort. The colony became a refuge for slaves from every +part of the Coast, the West Indies and Nova Scotia, and to-day in +that one colony there are spoken sixty different coast dialects and +those of the hinterland. + +Sierra Leone, as originally purchased in 1786, consisted of twenty +square miles, for which among other articles of equal value King +Naimbanna received a "crimson satin embroidered waistcoat, one +puncheon of rum, ten pounds of beads, two cheeses, one box of +smoking pipes, a mock diamond ring, and a tierce of pork." + +What first impressed me about Sierra Leone was the heat. It does not +permit one to give his attention wholly to anything else. I always +have maintained that the hottest place on earth is New York, and I +have been in other places with more than a local reputation for +heat; some along the Equator, Lourenço Marquez, which is only +prevented from being an earthen oven because it is a swamp; the Red +Sea, with a following breeze, and from both shores the baked heat of +the desert, and Nagasaki, on a rainy day in midsummer. + +But New York in August radiating stored-up heat from iron-framed +buildings, with the foul, dead air shut in by the skyscrapers, with +a humidity that makes you think you are breathing through a +steam-heated sponge, is as near the lower regions as I hope any of +us will go. And yet Sierra Leone is no mean competitor. + +We climbed the moss-covered steps to the quay to face a great white +building that blazed like the base of a whitewashed stove at white +heat. Before it were some rusty cannon and a canoe cut out of a +single tree, and, seated upon it selling fruit and sun-dried fish, +some native women, naked to the waist, their bodies streaming with +palm oil and sweat. At the same moment something struck me a blow on +the top of the head, at the base of the spine and between the +shoulder blades, and the ebony ladies and the white "factory" were +burnt up in a scroll of flame. + + [Illustration: A White Building, that Blazed Like the Base of a + Whitewashed Stove at White Heat.] + +I heard myself in a far-away voice asking where one could buy a sun +helmet and a white umbrella, and until I was under their protection, +Sierra Leone interested me no more. + +One sees more different kinds of black people in Sierra Leone than +in any other port along the Coast; Senegalese and Senegambians, +Kroo boys, Liberians, naked bush boys bearing great burdens from the +forests, domestic slaves in fez and colored linen livery, carrying +hammocks swung from under a canopy, the local electric hansom, +soldiers of the W.A.F.F., the West African Frontier Force, in Zouave +uniform of scarlet and khaki, with bare legs; Arabs from as far in +the interior as Timbuctu, yellow in face and in long silken robes; +big fat "mammies" in well-washed linen like the washerwomen of +Jamaica, each balancing on her head her tightly rolled umbrella, and +in the gardens slim young girls, with only a strip of blue and white +linen from the waist to the knees, lithe, erect, with glistening +teeth and eyes, and their sisters, after two years in the mission +schools, demurely and correctly dressed like British school marms. +Sierra Leone has all the hall marks of the crown colony of the +tropics; good wharfs, clean streets, innumerable churches, public +schools operated by the government as well as many others run by +American and English missions, a club where the white "mammies," as +all women are called, and the white officers--for Sierra Leone is a +coaling station on the Cape route to India, and is garrisoned +accordingly--play croquet, and bowl into a net. + +When the officers are not bowling they are tramping into the +hinterland after tribes on the warpath from Liberia, and coming +back, perhaps wounded or racked with fever, or perhaps they do not +come back. On the day we landed they had just buried one of the +officers. On Saturday afternoon he had been playing tennis, during +the night the fever claimed him, and Sunday night he was dead. + +That night as we pulled out to the steamer there came toward us in +black silhouette against the sun, setting blood-red into the lagoon, +two great canoes. They were coming from up the river piled high with +fruit and bark, with the women and children lying huddled in the +high bow and stern, while amidships the twelve men at the oars +strained and struggled until we saw every muscle rise under the +black skin. + +As their stroke slackened, the man in the bow with the tom-tom beat +more savagely upon it, and shouted to them in shrill sharp cries. +Their eyes shone, their teeth clenched, the sweat streamed from +their naked bodies. They might have been slaves chained to the +thwarts of a trireme. + +Just ahead of them lay at anchor the only other ship beside our own +in port, a two-masted schooner, the _Gladys E. Wilden_, out of +Boston. Her captain leaned upon the rail smoking his cigar, his +shirt-sleeves held up with pink elastics, on the back of his head a +derby hat. As the rowers passed under his bows he looked critically +at the streaming black bodies and spat meditatively into the water. +His own father could have had them between decks as cargo. Now for +the petroleum and lumber he brings from Massachusetts to Sierra +Leone he returns in ballast. + +Because her lines were so home-like and her captain came from Cape +Cod, we wanted to call on the _Gladys E. Wilden_, but our own +captain had different views, and the two ships passed in the night, +and the man from Boston never will know that two folks from home +were burning signals to him. + +Because our next port of call, Grand Bassam, is the chief port of +the French Ivory Coast, which is 125,000 square miles in extent, we +expected quite a flourishing seaport. Instead, Grand Bassam was a +bank of yellow sand, a dozen bungalows in a line, a few wind-blown +cocoanut palms, an iron pier, and a French flag. Beyond the cocoanut +palms we could see a great lagoon, and each minute a wave leaped +roaring upon the yellow sand-bank and tried to hurl itself across +it, eating up the bungalows on its way, into the quiet waters of the +lake. Each time we were sure it would succeed, but the yellow bank +stood like rock, and, beaten back, the wave would rise in white +spray to the height of a three-story house, hang glistening in the +sun and then, with the crash of a falling wall, tumble at the feet +of the bungalows. + +We stopped at Grand Bassam to put ashore a young English girl who +had come out to join her husband. His factory is a two days' launch +ride up the lagoon, and the only other white woman near it does not +speak English. Her husband had wished her, for her health's sake, to +stay in his home near London, but her first baby had just died, and +against his unselfish wishes, and the advice of his partner, she had +at once set out to join him. She was a very pretty, sad, unsmiling +young wife, and she spoke only to ask her husband's partner +questions about the new home. His answers, while they did not seem +to daunt her, made every one else at the table wish she had remained +safely in her London suburb. + +Through our glasses we all watched her husband lowered from the iron +pier into a canoe and come riding the great waves to meet her. + +The Kroo boys flashed their trident-shaped paddles and sang and +shouted wildly, but he sat with his sun helmet pulled over his eyes +staring down into the bottom of the boat; while at his elbow, +another sun helmet told him yes, that now he could make out the +partner, and that, judging by the photograph, that must be She in +white under the bridge. + +The husband and the young wife were swung together over the side to +the lifting waves in a two-seated "mammy chair," like one of those +_vis-à -vis_ swings you see in public playgrounds and picnic groves, +and they carried with them, as a gift from Captain Burton, a fast +melting lump of ice, the last piece of fresh meat they will taste in +many a day, and the blessings of all the ship's company. And then, +with inhospitable haste there was a rattle of anchor chains, a quick +jangle of bells from the bridge to the engine-room, and the +_Bruxellesville_ swept out to sea, leaving the girl from the London +suburb to find her way into the heart of Africa. Next morning we +anchored in a dripping fog off Sekondi on the Gold Coast, to allow +an English doctor to find his way to a fever camp. For nine years he +had been a Coaster, and he had just gone home to fit himself, by a +winter's vacation in London, for more work along the Gold Coast. It +is said of him that he has "never lost a life." On arriving in +London he received a cable telling him three doctors had died, the +miners along the railroad to Ashanti were rotten with fever, and +that he was needed. + + [Illustration: The "Mammy Chair" is Like Those Swings You See in + Public Playgrounds.] + +So he and his wife, as cheery and bright as though she were setting +forth on her honeymoon, were going back to take up the white man's +burden. We swung them over the side as we had the other two, and +that night in the smoking-room the Coasters drank "Luck to him," +which, in the vernacular of this unhealthy shore, means "Life to +him," and to the plucky, jolly woman who was going back to fight +death with the man who had never lost a life. + +As the ship was getting under way, a young man in "whites" and a sun +helmet, an agent of a trading company, went down the sea ladder by +which I was leaning. He was smart, alert; his sleeves, rolled +recklessly to his shoulders, showed sinewy, sunburnt arms; his +helmet, I noted, was a military one. Perhaps I looked as I felt; +that it was a pity to see so good a man go back to such a land, for +he looked up at me from the swinging ladder and smiled understanding +as though we had been old acquaintances. + +"You going far?" he asked. He spoke in the soft, detached voice of +the public-school Englishman. + +"To the Congo," I answered. + +He stood swaying with the ship, looking as though there were +something he wished to say, and then laughed, and added gravely, +giving me the greeting of the Coast: "Luck to you." + +"Luck to YOU," I said. + +That is the worst of these gaddings about, these meetings with men +you wish you could know, who pass like a face in the crowded street, +who hold out a hand, or give the password of the brotherhood, and +then drop down the sea ladder and out of your life forever. + + + + +II + +MY BROTHER'S KEEPER + + +To me, the fact of greatest interest about the Congo is that it is +owned, and the twenty millions of people who inhabit it are owned by +one man. The land and its people are his private property. I am not +trying to say that he governs the Congo. He does govern it, but that +in itself would not be of interest. His claim is that he owns it. +Though backed by all the mailed fists in the German Empire, and all +the _Dreadnoughts_ of the seas, no other modern monarch would make +such a claim. It does not sound like anything we have heard since +the days and the ways of Pharaoh. And the most remarkable feature of +it is, that the man who makes this claim is the man who was placed +over the Congo as a guardian, to keep it open to the trade of the +world, to suppress slavery. That, in the Congo, he has killed trade +and made the products of the land his own, that of the natives he +did not kill he has made slaves, is what to-day gives the Congo its +chief interest. It is well to emphasize how this one man stole a +march on fourteen Powers, including the United States, and stole +also an empire of one million square miles. + +Twenty-five years ago all of Africa was divided into many parts. The +part which still remained to be distributed among the Powers was +that which was watered by the Congo River and its tributaries. + +Along the north bank of the Congo River ran the French Congo; the +Portuguese owned the lands to the south, and on the east it was shut +in by protectorates and colonies of Germany and England. It was, and +is, a territory as large, were Spain and Russia omitted, as Europe. +Were a map of the Congo laid upon a map of Europe, with the mouth of +the Congo River where France and Spain meet at Biarritz, the +boundaries of the Congo would reach south to the heel of Italy, to +Greece, to Smyrna; east to Constantinople and Odessa; northeast to +St. Petersburg and Finland, and northwest to the extreme limits of +Scotland. Distances in this country are so enormous, the means of +progress so primitive, that many of the Belgian officers with whom I +came south and who already had travelled nineteen days from Antwerp, +had still, before they reached their posts, to steam, paddle, and +walk for three months. + +In 1844 to dispose amicably of this great territory, which was much +desired by several of the Powers, a conference was held at Berlin. +There it was decided to make of the Congo Basin an Independent +State, a "free-for-all" country, where every flag could trade with +equal right, and with no special tariff or restriction. + +The General Act of this conference agreed: "The trade of ALL nations +shall enjoy complete freedom." "No Power which exercises or shall +exercise Sovereign rights in the above-mentioned regions shall be +allowed to _grant therein a monopoly or favor of any kind in matters +of trade_." "ALL the Powers exercising Sovereign rights or influence +in the afore-said territories bind themselves to watch over the +preservation of the native tribes, and to care for the improvement +of _the condition of their moral and material welfare_, and _to +help in suppressing slavery_." The italics are mine. These +quotations from the act are still binding upon the fourteen Powers, +including the United States. + +For several years previous to the Conference of Berlin, Leopold of +Belgium, as a private individual, had shown much interest in the +development of the Congo. The opening up of that territory was +apparently his hobby. Out of his own pocket he paid for expeditions +into the Congo Basin, employed German and English explorers, and +protested against the then existing iniquities of the Arabs, who for +ivory and slaves raided the Upper Congo. Finally, assisted by many +geographical societies, he founded the International Association, to +promote "civilization and trade" in Central Africa; and enlisted +Henry M. Stanley in this service. + +That, in the early years, Leopold's interest in the Congo was +unselfish may or may not be granted, but, knowing him, as we now +know him, as one of the shrewdest and, of speculators, the most +unscrupulous, at the time of the Berlin Conference, his self-seeking +may safely be accepted. Quietly, unostentatiously, he presented +himself to its individual members as a candidate for the post of +administrator of this new territory. + +On the face of it he seemed an admirable choice. He was a sovereign +of a kingdom too unimportant to be feared; of the newly created +State he undoubtedly possessed an intimate knowledge. He promised to +give to the Dutch, English, and Portuguese traders, already for many +years established on the Congo, his heartiest aid, and, for those +traders still to come, to maintain the "open door." His professions +of a desire to help the natives were profuse. He became the +unanimous choice of the conference. + +Later he announced to the Powers signing the act, that from Belgium +he had received the right to assume the title of King of the +Independent State of the Congo. The Powers recognized his new title. + +The fact that Leopold, King of Belgium, was king also of the État +Indépendant du Congo confused many into thinking that the Free State +was a colony, or under the protection, of Belgium. As we have seen, +it is not. A Belgian may serve in the army of the Free State, or in +a civil capacity, as may a man of any nation, but, although with few +exceptions only Belgians are employed in the Free State, and +although to help the King in the Congo, the Belgian Government has +loaned him great sums of money, politically and constitutionally the +two governments are as independent of each other as France and +Spain. + +And so, in 1885, Leopold, by the grace of fourteen governments, was +appointed their steward over a great estate in which each of the +governments still holds an equal right; a trustee and keeper over +twenty millions of "black brothers" whose "moral and material +welfare" each government had promised to protect. + +There is only one thing more remarkable than the fact that Leopold +was able to turn this public market into a private park, and that +is, that he has been permitted to do so. It is true he is a man of +wonderful ability. For his own ends he is a magnificent organizer. +But in the fourteen governments that created him there have been, +and to-day there are, men, if less unscrupulous, of quite as great +ability; statesmen, jealous and quick to guard the rights of the +people they represent, people who since the twelfth century have +been traders, who since 1808 have declared slavery abolished. + +And yet, for twenty-five years these statesmen have watched Leopold +disobey every provision in the act of the conference. Were they to +visit the Congo, they could see for themselves the jungle creeping +in and burying their trading posts, their great factories turned +into barracks. They know that the blacks they mutually agreed to +protect have been reduced to slavery worse than that they suffered +from the Arabs, that hundreds of thousands of them have fled from +the Congo, and that those that remain have been mutilated, maimed, +or, what was more merciful, murdered. And yet the fourteen +governments, including the United States, have done nothing. + +Some tell you they do not interfere because they are jealous one of +the other; others say that it is because they believe the Congo will +soon be taken over by Belgium, and with Belgium in control, they +argue, they would be dealing with a responsible government, instead +of with a pirate. But so long as Leopold is King of Belgium one +doubts if Belgians in the Congo would rise above the level of their +King. The English, when asked why they do not assert their rights, +granted not only to them, but to thirteen other governments, reply +that if they did they would be accused of "ulterior motives." What +ulterior motives? If you pursue a pickpocket and recover your watch +from him, are your motives in doing so open to suspicion? + +Personally, although this is looking some way ahead, I would like to +see the English take over and administrate the Congo. Wherever I +visit a colony governed by Englishmen I find under their +administration, in spite of opium in China and gin on the West +Coast, that three people are benefited: the Englishman, the native, +and the foreign trader from any other part of the world. Of the +colonies of what other country can one say the same? + +As a rule our present governments are not loath to protect their +rights. But toward asserting them in the Congo they have been moved +neither by the protests of traders, chambers of commerce, +missionaries, the public press, nor by the cry of the black man to +"let my people go." By only those in high places can it be +explained. We will leave it as a curious fact, and return to the +"Unjust Steward." + +His first act was to wage wars upon the Arabs. From the Soudan and +from the East Coast they were raiding the Congo for slaves and +ivory, and he drove them from it. By these wars he accomplished two +things. As the defender of the slave, he gained much public credit, +and he kept the ivory. But war is expensive, and soon he pointed out +to the Powers that to ask him out of his own pocket to maintain +armies in the field and to administer a great estate was unfair. He +humbly sought their permission to levy a few taxes. It seemed a +reasonable request. To clear roads, to keep boats upon the great +rivers, to mark it with buoys, to maintain wood stations for the +steamers, to improve the "moral and material welfare of the +natives," would cost money, and to allow Leopold to bring about +these improvements, which would be for the good of all, he was +permitted to levy the few taxes. That was twenty years ago; to-day I +saw none of these improvements, and the taxes have increased. + +From the first they were so heavy that the great trade houses, which +for one hundred years in peace and mutual goodwill bartered with the +natives, found themselves ruined. It was not alone the export taxes, +lighterage dues, port dues, and personal taxes that drove them out +of the Congo; it was the King appearing against them as a rival +trader, the man appointed to maintain the "open door." And a trader +with methods they could not or would not imitate. Leopold, or the +"State," saw for the existence of the Congo only two reasons: Rubber +and Ivory. And the collecting of this rubber and ivory was, as he +saw it, the sole duty of the State and its officers. When he threw +over the part of trustee and became the Arab raider he could not +waste his time, which, he had good reason to fear, might be short, +upon products that, if fostered, would be of value only in later +years. Still less time had he to give to improvements that cost +money and that would be of benefit to his successors. He wanted only +rubber; he wanted it at once, and he cared not at all how he +obtained it. So he spun, and still spins, the greatest of all +"get-rich-quick" schemes; one of gigantic proportions, full of +tragic, monstrous, nauseous details. + +The only possible way to obtain rubber is through the native; as +yet, in teeming forests, the white man can not work and live. Of +even Chinese coolies imported here to build a railroad ninety per +cent. died. So, with a stroke of the pen, Leopold declared all the +rubber in the country the property of the "State," and then, to make +sure that the natives would work it, ordered that taxes be paid in +rubber. If, once a month (in order to keep the natives steadily at +work the taxes were ordered to be paid each month instead of once a +year), each village did not bring in so many baskets of rubber the +King's cannibal soldiers raided it, carried off the women as +hostages, and made prisoners of the men, or killed and ate them. For +every kilo of rubber brought in in excess of the quota the King's +agent, who received the collected rubber and forwarded it down the +river, was paid a commission. Or was "paid by results." Another +bonus was given him based on the price at which he obtained the +rubber. If he paid the native only six cents for every two pounds, +he received a bonus of three cents, the cost to the State being but +nine cents per kilo, but, if he paid the natives twelve cents for +every two pounds, he received as a bonus less than one cent. In a +word, the more rubber the agent collected the more he personally +benefited, and if he obtained it "cheaply" or for nothing--that is, +by taking hostages, making prisoners, by the whip of hippopotamus +hide, by torture--so much greater his fortune, so much richer +Leopold. + + [Illustration: A Village on the Kasai River.] + +Few schemes devised have been more cynical, more devilish, more +cunningly designed to incite a man to cruelty and abuse. To +dishonesty it was an invitation and a reward. It was this system of +"payment by results," evolved by Leopold sooner than allow his +agents a fixed and sufficient wage, that led to the atrocities. + +One result of this system was that in seven years the natives +condemned to slavery in the rubber forests brought in rubber to the +amount of fifty-five millions of dollars. But its chief results were +the destruction of entire villages, the flight from their homes in +the Congo of hundreds of thousands of natives, and for those that +remained misery, death, the most brutal tortures and degradations, +unprintable, unthinkable. + +I am not going to enter into the question of the atrocities. In the +Congo the tip has been given out from those higher up at Brussels to +"close up" the atrocities; and for the present the evil places in +the Tenderloin and along the Broadway of the Congo are tightly shut. +But at those lonely posts, distant a month to three months' march +from the capital, the cruelties still continue. I did not see them. +Neither, last year, did a great many people in the United States see +the massacre of blacks in Atlanta. But they have reason to believe +it occurred. And after one has talked with the men and women who +have seen the atrocities, has seen in the official reports that +those accused of the atrocities do not deny having committed them, +but point out that they were merely obeying orders, and after one +has seen that even at the capital of Boma all the conditions of +slavery exist, one is assured that in the jungle, away from the +sight of men, all things are possible. Merchants, missionaries, and +officials even in Leopold's service told me that if one could spare +a year and a half, or a year, to the work in the hinterland he would +be an eye-witness of as cruel treatment of the natives as any that +has gone before, and if I can trust myself to weigh testimony and +can believe my eyes and ears I have reason to know that what they +say is true. I am convinced that to-day a man, who feels that a year +and a half is little enough to give to the aid of twenty millions of +human beings, can accomplish in the Congo as great and good work as +that of the Abolitionists. + +Three years ago atrocities here were open and above-board. For +instance. In the opinion of the State the soldiers, in killing game +for food, wasted the State cartridges, and in consequence the +soldiers, to show their officers that they did not expend the +cartridges extravagantly on antelope and wild boar, for each empty +cartridge brought in a human hand, the hand of a man, woman, or +child. These hands, drying in the sun, could be seen at the posts +along the river. They are no longer in evidence. Neither is the +flower-bed of Lieutenant Dom, which was bordered with human skulls. +A quaint conceit. + +The man to blame for the atrocities, for each separate atrocity, is +Leopold. Had he shaken his head they would have ceased. When the hue +and cry in Europe grew too hot for him and he held up his hand they +did cease. At least along the main waterways. Years before he could +have stopped them. But these were the seven fallow years, when +millions of tons of red rubber were being dumped upon the wharf at +Antwerp; little, roughly rolled red balls, like pellets of +coagulated blood, which had cost their weight in blood, which would +pay Leopold their weight in gold. + +He can not plead ignorance. Of all that goes on in his big +plantation no man has a better knowledge. Without their personal +honesty, he follows every detail of the "business" of his rubber +farm with the same diligence that made rich men of George Boldt and +Marshall Field. Leopold's knowledge is gained through many spies, by +voluminous reports, by following up the expenditure of each centime, +of each arm's-length of blue cloth. Of every Belgian employed on +his farm, and ninety-five per cent. are Belgians, he holds the +_dossier_; he knows how many kilos a month the agent whips out of +his villages, how many bottles of absinthe he smuggles from the +French side, whether he lives with one black woman or five, why his +white wife in Belgium left him, why he left Belgium, why he dare not +return. The agent knows that Leopold, King of the Belgians, knows, +and that he has shared that knowledge with the agent's employer, the +man who by bribes of rich bonuses incites him to crime, the man who +could throw him into a Belgian jail, Leopold, King of the Congo. + +The agent decides for him it is best to please both Leopolds, and +Leopold makes no secret of what best pleases him. For not only is he +responsible for the atrocities, in that he does not try to suppress +them, but he is doubly guilty in that he has encouraged them. This +he has done with cynical, callous publicity, without effort at +concealment, without shame. Men who, in obtaining rubber, committed +unspeakable crimes, the memory of which makes other men +uncomfortable in their presence, Leopold rewarded with rich +bonuses, pensions, higher office, gilt badges of shame, and rapid +advancement. To those whom even his own judges sentenced to many +years' imprisonment he promptly granted the royal pardon, promoted, +and sent back to work in the vineyard. + +"That is the sort of man for _me_," his action seemed to say. "See +how I value that good and faithful servant. That man collected much +rubber. You observe I do not ask how he got it. I will not ask you. +All you need do is to collect rubber. Use our improved methods. Gum +copal rubbed in the kinky hair of the chief and then set on fire +burns, so my agents tell me, like vitriol. For collecting rubber the +chief is no longer valuable, but to his successor it is an +object-lesson. Let me recommend also the _chicotte_, the torture +tower, the 'hostage' house, and the crucifix. Many other stimulants +to labor will no doubt suggest themselves to you and to your +cannibal 'sentries.' Help to make me rich, and don't fear the +'State.' '_L'Etat, c'est moi!_' Go as far as you like!" + +I said the degradations and tortures practised by the men "working +on commission" for Leopold are unprintable, but they have been +printed, and those who wish to read a calmly compiled, careful, and +correct record of their deeds will find it in the "Red Rubber" of +Mr. E.R. Morel. An even better book by the same authority, on the +whole history of the State, is his "King Leopold's Rule in the +Congo." Mr. Morel has many enemies. So, early in the nineteenth +century, had the English Abolitionists, Wilberforce and Granville +Sharp. After they were dead they were buried in the Abbey, and their +portraits were placed in the National Gallery. People who wish to +assist in freeing twenty millions of human beings should to-day +support Mr. Morel. It will be of more service to the blacks than, +after he is dead, burying him in Westminster Abbey. + +Mr. Morel, the American and English missionaries, and the English +Consul, Roger Casement, and other men, in Belgium, have made a +magnificent fight against Leopold; but the Powers to whom they have +appealed have been silent. Taking courage of this silence, Leopold +has divided the Congo into several great territories in which the +sole right to work rubber is conceded to certain persons. To those +who protested that no one in the Congo "Free" State but the King +could trade in rubber, Leopold, as an answer, pointed with pride at +the preserves of these foreigners. And he may well point at them +with pride, for in some of those companies he owns a third, and in +most of them he holds a half, or a controlling interest. The +directors of the foreign companies are his cronies, members of his +royal household, his brokers, bankers. You have only to read the +names published in the lists of the Brussels Stock Exchange to see +that these "trading companies," under different aliases, are +Leopold. Having, then, "conceded" the greater part of the Congo to +himself, Leopold set aside the best part of it, so far as rubber is +concerned, as a _Domaine Privé_. Officially the receipts of this pay +for running the government, and for schools, roads and wharfs, for +which taxes were levied, but for which, after twenty years, one +looks in vain. Leopold claims that through the Congo he is out of +pocket; that this carrying the banner of civilization in Africa +does not pay. Through his press bureaus he tells that his sympathy +for his black brother, his desire to see the commerce of the world +busy along the Congo, alone prevents him giving up what is for him a +losing business. There are several answers to this. One is that in +the Kasai Company alone Leopold owns 2,010 shares of stock. Worth +originally $50 a share, the value of each share rose to $3,100, +making at one time his total shares worth $5,421,000. In the +A.B.I.R. Concession he owns 1,000 shares, originally worth $100 +each, later worth $940. In the "vintage year" of 1900 each of these +shares was worth $5,050, and the 1,000 shares thus rose to the value +of $5,050,000. + +These are only two companies. In most of the others half the shares +are owned by the King. + +As published in the "State Bulletin," the money received in eight +years for rubber and ivory gathered in the _Domaine Privé_ differs +from the amount given for it in the market at Antwerp. The official +estimates show a loss to the government. The actual sales show that +the government, over and above its own estimate of its expenses, +instead of losing, made from the _Domaine Privé_ alone $10,000,000. +We are left wondering to whom went that unaccounted-for $10,000,000. +Certainly the King would not take it, for, to reimburse himself for +his efforts, he early in the game reserved for himself another tract +of territory known as the _Domaine de la Couronne_. For years he +denied that this existed. He knew nothing of Crown Lands. But, at +last, in the Belgian Chamber, it was publicly charged that for years +from this private source, which he had said did not exist, Leopold +had been drawing an income of $15,000,000. Since then the truth of +this statement has been denied, but at the time in the Chamber it +was not contradicted. + +To-day, grown insolent by the apathy of the Powers, Leopold finds +disguising himself as a company, as a laborer worthy of his hire, +irksome. He now decrees that as "Sovereign" over the Congo all of +the Congo belongs to him. It is as much his property as is a +pheasant drive, as is a staked-out mining claim, as your hat is your +property. And the twenty millions of people who inhabit it are there +only on his sufferance. They are his "tenants." He permits each +the hut in which he lives, and the garden adjoining that hut, but +his work must be for Leopold, and everything else, animal, mineral, +or vegetable, belongs to Leopold. The natives not only may not sell +ivory or rubber to independent traders, but if it is found in their +possession it is seized; and if you and I bought a tusk of ivory +here it would be taken from us and we could be prosecuted. This is +the law. Other men rule over territories more vast even than the +Congo. The King of England rules an empire upon which the sun never +sets. But he makes no claim to own it. Against the wishes of even +the humblest crofter, the King would not, because he knows he could +not, enter his cottage. Nor can we imagine even Kaiser William going +into the palm-leaf hut of a charcoal-burner in German East Africa +and saying: "This is my palm-leaf hut. This is my charcoal. You must +not sell it to the English, or the French, or the American. If they +buy from you they are 'receivers of stolen goods.' To feed my +soldiers you must drag my river for my fish. For me, in my swamp and +in my jungle, you must toil twenty-four days of each month to +gather my rubber. You must not hunt the elephants, for they are my +elephants. Those tusks that fifty years ago your grandfather, with +his naked spear, cut from an elephant, and which you have tried to +hide from me under the floor of this hut, are my ivory. Because that +elephant, running wild through the jungle fifty years ago, belonged +to me. And you yourself are mine, your time is mine, your labor is +mine, your wife, your children, all are mine. They belong to me." + + [Illustration: "Tenants" of Leopold, Who Claims that the Congo + Belongs to Him, and that These Native People Are There Only as His + Tenants.] + +This, then, is the "open door" as I find it to-day in the Congo. It +is an incredible state of affairs, so insolent, so magnificent in +its impertinence, that it would be humorous, were it not for its +background of misery and suffering, for its hostage houses, its +chain gangs, its _chicottes_, its nameless crimes against the human +body, its baskets of dried hands held up in tribute to the Belgian +blackguard. + + + + +III + +THE CAPITAL OF THE CONGO + + +Leopold's "shop" has its front door at Banana. Its house flag is a +golden star on a blue background. Banana is the port of entry to the +Congo. You have, no doubt, seen many ports of Europe--Antwerp, +Hamburg, Boulogne, Lisbon, Genoa, Marseilles. Banana is the port of +entry to a country as large as Western Europe, and while the imports +and exports of Europe trickle through all these cities, the commerce +of the Congo enters and departs entirely at Banana. You can then +picture the busy harbor, the jungle of masts, the white bridges and +awnings of the steamers. By the fat funnels and the flags you can +distinguish the English tramps, the German merchantmen, the French, +Dutch, Italian, Portuguese traders, the smart "liners" from +Liverpool, even the Arab dhows with bird-wing sails, even the steel, +four-masted schooners out of Boston, U.S.A. You can imagine the +toiling lighters, the slap-dash tenders, the launches with shrieking +whistles. + +Of course, you suspect it is not a bit like that. But were it for +fourteen countries the "open door" to twenty millions of people, +that is how it might look. + +Instead, it is the private entrance to the preserves of a private +individual. So what you really see is, on the one hand, islands of +mangrove bushes, with their roots in the muddy water; on the other, +Banana, a strip of sand and palm trees without a wharf, quay, +landing stage, without a pier to which you could make fast anything +larger than a rowboat. + +In a canoe naked natives paddle alongside to sell fish; a peevish +little man in a sun hat, who, in order to save Leopold three +salaries, holds four port offices, is being rowed to the gangway; on +shore the only other visible inhabitant of Banana, a man with no +nerves, is disturbing the brooding, sweating silence by knocking the +rust off the plates of a stranded mud-scow. Welcome to our city! +Welcome to busy, bustling Banana, the port of entry of the Congo +Free State. + + [Illustration: The Facilities for Landing at Banana, the Port of + Entry to the Congo, Are Limited.] + +In a canoe we were paddled to the back yard of the café of Madame +Samuel, and from that bower of warm beer and sardine tins trudged +through the sun up one side of Banana and down the other. In between +the two paths were the bungalows and gardens of forty white men and +two white women. Many of the gardens, as was most of Banana, were +neglected, untidy, littered with condensed-milk tins. Others, more +carefully tended, were laid out in rigid lines. With all tropical +nature to draw upon, nothing had been imagined. The most ambitious +efforts were designs in whitewashed shells and protruding beer +bottles. We could not help remembering the gardens in Japan, of the +poorest and the most ignorant coolies. Do I seem to find fault with +Banana out of all proportion to its importance? It is because +Banana, the Congo's most advanced post of civilization, is typical +of all that lies beyond. + +From what I had read of the Congo I expected a broad sweep of muddy, +malaria-breeding water, lined by low-lying swamp lands, gloomy, +monotonous, depressing. + +But on the way to Boma and, later, when I travelled on the Upper +Congo, I thought the river more beautiful than any great river I had +ever seen. It was full of wonderful surprises. Sometimes it ran +between palm-covered banks of yellow sand as low as those of the +Mississippi or the Nile; and again, in half an hour, the banks were +rock and as heavily wooded as the mountains of Montana, or as white +and bold as the cliffs of Dover, or we passed between great hills, +covered with what looked like giant oaks, and with their peaks +hidden in the clouds. I found it like no other river, because in +some one particular it was like them all. Between Banana and Boma +the banks first screened us in with the tangled jungle of the +tropics, and then opened up great wind-swept plateaux, leading to +hills that suggested--of all places--England, and, at that, +cultivated England. The contour of the hills, the shape of the +trees, the shade of their green contrasted with the green of the +grass, were like only the cliffs above Plymouth. One did not look +for native kraals and the wild antelope, but for the square, +ivy-topped tower of the village church, the loaf-shaped hayricks, +slow-moving masses of sheep. But this that looks like a pasture +land is only coarse limestone covered with bitter, unnutritious +grass, which benefits neither beast nor man. + +At sunset we anchored in the current three miles from Boma, and at +daybreak we tied up to the iron wharf. As the capital of the +government Boma contains the residence and gardens of the governor, +who is the personal representative of Leopold, both as a shopkeeper +and as a king by divine right. He is a figurehead. The real +administrator is M. Vandamme, the Secrétaire-Général, the +ubiquitous, the mysterious, whose name before you leave Southampton +is in the air, of whom all men, whether they speak in French or +English, speak well. It is from Boma that M. Vandamme sends +collectors of rubber, politely labeled inspecteurs, directeurs, +judges, capitaines, and sous-lieutenants to their posts, and +distributes them over one million square miles. + +Boma is the capital of a country which is as large as six nations of +the European continent. For twenty-five years it has been the +capital. Therefore, the reader already guesses that Boma has only +one wharf, and at that wharf there is no custom-house, no warehouse, +not even a canvas awning under which, during the six months of rainy +season, one might seek shelter for himself and his baggage. + +Our debarkation reminded me of a landing of filibusters. A wharf +forty yards long led from the steamer to the bank. Down this marched +the officers of the army, the clerks, the bookkeepers, and on the +bank and in the street each dumped his boxes, his sword, his +camp-bed, his full-dress helmet. It looked as though a huge eviction +had taken place, as though a retreating army, having gained the +river's edge, were waiting for a transport. It was not as though to +the government the coming of these gentlemen was a complete +surprise; regularly every three weeks at that exact spot a like +number disembark. But in years the State has not found it worth +while to erect for them even an open zinc shed. The cargo invoiced +to the State is given equal consideration. + +"Prisoners of the State," each wearing round his neck a steel ring +from which a chain stretches to the ring of another "prisoner," +carried the cargo to the open street, where lay the luggage of the +officers, and there dropped it. Mingled with steamer chairs, tin +bathtubs, gun-cases, were great crates of sheet iron, green boxes of +gin, bags of Teneriffe potatoes, boilers of an engine. Upon the +scene the sun beat with vicious, cruel persistence. Those officers +who had already served in the Congo dropped their belongings under +the shadow of a solitary tree. Those who for the first time were +seeing the capital of the country they had sworn to serve sank upon +their boxes and, with dismay in their eyes, mopped their red and +dripping brows. + + [Illustration: "Prisoners" of the State in Chains at Matadi.] + +Boma is built at the foot of a hill of red soil. It is a town of +scattered buildings made of wood and sheet-iron plates, sent out in +crates, and held together with screws. To Boma nature has been +considerate. She has contributed many trees, two or three long +avenues of palms, and in the many gardens caused flowers to blossom +and flourish. In the report of the "Commission of Enquiry" which +Leopold was forced to send out in 1904 to investigate the +atrocities, and each member of which, for his four months' work, +received $20,000, Boma is described as possessing "the daintiness +and _chic_ of a European watering-place." + +Boma really is like a seaport of one of the Central American republics. +It has a temporary sufficient-to-the-day-for-to-morrow-we-die air. +It looks like a military post that at any moment might be abandoned. +To remove this impression the State has certain exhibits which seem +to point to a stable and good government. There is a well-conducted +hospital and clean, well-built barracks; for the amusement of the +black soldiers even a theatre, and for the higher officials +attractive bungalows, a bandstand, where twice a week a negro band +plays by ear, and plays exceedingly well. There is even a +lawn-tennis court, where the infrequent visitor to the Congo is +welcomed, and, by the courteous Mr. Vandamme, who plays tennis as +well as he does every thing else, entertained. Boma is the shop +window of Leopold's big store. The good features of Boma are like +those attractive articles one sometimes sees in a shop window, but +which in the shop one fails to find--at least, I did not find them +in the shop. Outside of Boma I looked in vain for a school +conducted by the State, like the one at Boma, such as those the +United States Government gave by the hundred to the Philippines. I +found not one. And I looked for such a hospital as the one I saw at +Boma, such as our government has placed for its employes along, and +at both ends of, the Isthmus of Panama, and, except for the one at +Leopoldville, I saw none. + +In spite of the fact that Boma is a "European watering-place," all +the servants of the State with whom I talked wanted to get away from +it, especially those who already had served in the interior. To +appreciate what Boma lacks one has only to visit the neighboring +seaports on the same coast; the English towns of Sierra Leone and +Calabar, the French town of Libreville in the French Congo, the +German seaport Duala in the Cameroons, but especially Calabar in +Southern Nigeria. In actual existence the new Calabar is eight years +younger than Boma, and in its municipal government, its +street-making, cleaning, and lighting, wharfs, barracks, prisons, +hospitals, it is a hundred years in advance. Boma is not a capital; +it is the distributing factory for a huge trading concern, and a +particularly selfish one. There is, as I have said, only one wharf, +and at that wharf, without paying the State, only State boats may +discharge cargo, so the English, Dutch, and German boats are forced +to "tie up" along the river front. There the grass is eight feet +high and breeds mosquitoes and malaria, and conceals the wary +crocodile. At night, from the deck of the steamer, all one can see +of this capital is a fringe of this high grass in the light from the +air ports, and on shore three gas-lamps. No cafés are open, no +sailors carouse, no lighted window suggests that some one is giving +a dinner, that some one is playing bridge. Darkness, gloom, silence +mark this "European watering-place." + +"You ask me," demanded a Belgian lieutenant one night as we stood +together by the rail, "whether I like better the bush, where there +is no white man in a hundred miles, or to be stationed at Boma?" + +He threw out his hands at the gas-lamps, rapidly he pointed at each +of them in turn. + +"Voilà , Boma!" he said. + +From Boma we steamed six hours farther up the river to Matadi. On +the way we stopped at Noqui, the home of Portuguese traders on the +Portuguese bank, which, as one goes up-stream, lies to starboard. +Here the current runs at from four to five miles an hour, and has so +sharply cut away the bank that we are able to run as near to it with +the stern of our big ship as though she were a canoe. To one used +more to ocean than to Congo traffic it was somewhat bewildering to +see the five-thousand-ton steamer make fast to a tree, a sand-bank +looming up three fathoms off her quarter, and the blades of her +propeller, as though they were the knives of a lawn-mower, cutting +the eel-grass. + +At Matadi the Congo makes one of her lightning changes. Her banks, +which have been low and woody, with, on the Portuguese side, +glimpses of boundless plateaux, become towering hills of rock. At +Matadi the cataracts and rapids begin, and for two hundred miles +continue to Stanley Pool, which is the beginning of the Upper Congo. +Leopoldville is situated on Stanley Pool, just to the right of where +the rapids start their race to the south. With Leopoldville above +and Boma below, still nearer the mouth of the river, Matadi makes a +centre link in the chain of the three important towns of the Lower +Congo. + +When Henry M. Stanley was halted by the cataracts and forced to +leave the river he disembarked his expedition on the bank opposite +Matadi, and a mile farther up-stream. It was from this point he +dragged and hauled his boats, until he again reached smooth water at +Stanley Pool. The wagons on which he carried the boats still can be +seen lying on the bank, broken and rusty. Like the sight of old gun +carriages and dismantled cannon, they give one a distinct thrill. +Now, on the bank opposite from where they lie, the railroad runs +from Matadi to Leopoldville. + +The Congo forces upon one a great admiration for Stanley. Unless +civilization utterly alters it, it must always be a monument to his +courage, and as you travel farther and see the difficulties placed +in his way, your admiration increases. There are men here who make +little of what Stanley accomplished; but they are men who seldom +leave their own compound, and, who, when they do go up the river, +travel at ease, not in a canoe, or on foot through the jungle, but +in the smoking-room of the steamer and in a first-class railroad +carriage. That they are able so to travel is due to the man they +would belittle. The nickname given to Stanley by the natives is +to-day the nickname of the government. Matadi means rock. When +Stanley reached the town of Matadi, which is surrounded entirely by +rock, he began with dynamite to blast roads for his caravan. The +natives called him Bula Matadi, the Breaker of Rocks, and, as in +those days he was the Government, the Law, and the Prophets, Bula +Matadi, who then was the white man who governed, now signifies the +white man's government. But it is a very different government, and a +very different white man. With the natives the word is universal. +They say "Bula Matadi wood post." "Not traders' chop, Bula Matadi's +chop." "Him no missionary steamer, him Bula Matadi steamer." + +The town of Matadi is of importance as the place where, owing to the +rapids, passengers and cargoes are reshipped on the railroad to the +_haut Congo_. It is a railroad terminus only, and it looks it. The +railroad station and store-houses are close to the river bank, and, +spread over several acres of cinders, are the railroad yard and +machine shops. Above those buildings of hot corrugated zinc and the +black soil rises a great rock. It is not so large as Gibraltar, or +so high as the Flatiron Building, but it is a little more steep than +either. Three narrow streets lead to its top. They are of flat +stones, with cement gutters. The stones radiate the heat of stove +lids. They are worn to a mirror-like smoothness, and from their +surface the sun strikes between your eyes, at the pit of your +stomach, and the soles of your mosquito boots. The three streets +lead to a parade ground no larger than and as bare as a brickyard. +It is surrounded by the buildings of Bula Matadi, the post-office, +the custom-house, the barracks, and the Café Franco-Belge. It has a +tableland fifty yards wide of yellow clay so beaten by thousands of +naked feet, so baked by the heat, that it is as hard as a brass +shield. Other tablelands may be higher, but this is the one nearest +the sun. You cross it wearily, in short rushes, with your heart in +your throat, and seeking shade, as a man crossing the zone of fire +seeks cover from the bullets. When you reach the cool, dirty +custom-house, with walls two feet thick, you congratulate yourself +on your escape; you look back into the blaze of the flaming plaza +and wonder if you have the courage to return. + + [Illustration: Bush Boys in the Plaza at Matadi Seeking Shade.] + +At the custom-house I paid duty on articles I could not possibly +have bought anywhere in the Congo, as, for instance, a tent and a +folding-bed, and for a license to carry arms. A young man with a +hammer and tiny branding irons beat little stars and the number of +my license to _porter d'armes_ on the stock of each weapon. Without +permission of Bula Matadi on leaving the Congo, one can not sell his +guns, or give them away. This is a precaution to prevent weapons +falling into the hands of the native. For some reason a native with +a gun alarms Bula Matadi. Just on the other bank of the river the +French, who do not seem to fear the black brother, sell him +flint-lock rifles, as many as his heart desires. + +On the steamer there was a mild young missionary coming out, for the +first time, to whom some unobserving friend had given a fox-terrier. +The young man did not care for the dog. He had never owned a dog, +and did not know what to do with this one. Her name was "Fanny," +and only by the efforts of all on board did she reach the Congo +alive. There was no one, from the butcher to the captain, including +the passengers, who had not shielded Fanny from the cold, and later +from the sun, fed her, bathed her, forced medicine down her throat, +and raced her up and down the spar deck. Consequently we all knew +Fanny, and it was a great shock when from the custom-house I saw her +running around the blazing parade ground, her eyes filled with fear +and "lost dog" written all over her, from her drooping tongue to her +drooping tail. Captain Burton and I called "Fanny," and, not seeking +suicide for ourselves, sent half a dozen black boys to catch her. +But Fanny never liked her black uncles; on the steamer the Kroo boys +learned to give her the length of her chain, and so we were forced +to plunge to her rescue into the valley of heat. Perhaps she thought +we were again going to lock her up on the steamer, or perhaps that +it was a friendly game, for she ran from us as fast as from the +black boys. In Matadi no one ever had crossed the parade ground +except at a funeral march, and the spectacle of two large white +men playing tag with a small fox-terrier attracted an immense +audience. The officials and clerks left work and peered between the +iron-barred windows, the "prisoners" in chains ceased breaking rock +and stared dumbly from the barracks, the black "sentries" shrieked +and gesticulated, the naked bush boys, in from a long caravan +journey, rose from the side of their burdens and commented upon our +manoeuvres in gloomy, guttural tones. I suspect they thought we +wanted Fanny for "chop." Finally Fanny ran into the legs of a German +trader, who grabbed her by the neck and held her up to us. + +"You want him? Hey?" he shouted. + +"Ay, man," gasped Burton, now quite purple, "did you think we were +trying to amuse the dog?" + +I made a leash of my belt, and the captain returned to the ship +dragging his prisoner after him. An hour later I met the youthful +missionary leading Fanny by a rope. + +"I must tell you about Fanny," he cried. "After I took her to the +Mission I forgot to tie her up--as I suppose I should have done--and +she ran away. But, would you believe it, she found her way straight +back to the ship. Was it not intelligent of her?" + +I was too far gone with apoplexy, heat prostration, and sunstroke to +make any answer, at least one that I could make to a missionary. + +The next morning Fanny, the young missionary, and I left for +Leopoldville on the railroad. It is a narrow-gauge railroad built +near Matadi through the solid rock and later twisting and turning so +often that at many places one can see the track on three different +levels. It is not a State road, but was built and is owned by a +Dutch company, and, except that it charges exorbitant rates and does +not keep its carriages clean, it is well run, and the road-bed is +excellent. But it runs a passenger train only three times a week, +and though the distance is so short, and though the train starts at +6:30 in the morning, it does not get you to Leopoldville the same +day. Instead, you must rest over night at Thysville and start at +seven the next morning. That afternoon at three you reach +Leopoldville. For the two hundred and fifty miles the fare is two +hundred francs, and one is limited to sixty pounds of luggage. That +was the weight allowed by the Japanese to each war correspondent, +and as they gave us six months in Tokio in which to do nothing else +but weigh our equipment, I left Matadi without a penalty. Had my +luggage exceeded the limit, for each extra pound I would have had to +pay the company ten cents. To the Belgian officers and agents who go +for three years to serve the State in the bush the regulation is +especially harsh, and in a company so rich, particularly mean. To +many a poor officer, and on the pay they receive there are no rich +ones, the tax is prohibitive. It forces them to leave behind +medicines, clothing, photographic supplies, all ammunition, which +means no chance of helping out with duck and pigeon the daily menu +of goat and tinned sausages, and, what is the greatest hardship, all +books. This regulation, which the State permitted to the +concessionaires of the railroad, sends the agents of the State into +the wilderness physically and mentally unequipped, and it is no +wonder the weaker brothers go mad, and act accordingly. + +My black boys travelled second-class, which means an open car with +narrow seats very close together and a wooden roof. On these cars +passengers are allowed twenty pounds of luggage and permitted to +collect two hundred and fifty miles of heat and dust. To a black boy +twenty pounds is little enough, for he travels with much more +baggage than an average "blanc." I am not speaking of the Congo boy. +All the possessions the State leaves him he could carry in his +pockets, and he has no pockets. But wherever he goes the Kroo boy, +Mendi boy, or Sierra Leone boy carries all his belongings with him +in a tin trunk painted pink, green, or yellow. He is never separated +from his "box," and the recognized uniform of a Kroo boy at work, is +his breechcloth, and hanging from a ribbon around his knee, the key +to his box. If a boy has no box he generally carries three keys. + +In the first-class car were three French officers en route to +Brazzaville, the capital of the French Congo, and a dog, a sad +mongrel, very dirty, very hungry. On each side of the tiny toy car +were six revolving-chairs, so the four men, not to speak of the dog, +quite filled it. And to our own bulk each added hand-bags, cases of +beer, helmets, gun-cases, cameras, water-bottles, and, as the road +does not supply food of any kind, his chop-box. A chop-box is +anything that holds food, and for food of every kind, for the hours +of feeding, and the verb "to feed," on the West Coast, the only +word, the "lazy" word, is "chop." + +The absent-minded young missionary, with Fanny jammed between his +ankles, and looking out miserably upon the world, and two other +young missionaries, travelled second-class. + +They were even more crowded together than were we, but not so much +with luggage as with humanity. But as a protest against the high +charges of the railroad the missionaries always travel in the open +car. These three young men were for the first time out of England, +and in any fashion were glad to start on their long journey up the +Congo to Bolobo. To them whatever happened was a joke. It was a joke +even when the colored "wife" of one of the French officers used the +broad shoulders of one of them as a pillow and slept sweetly. She +was a large, good-natured, good-looking mulatto, and at the frequent +stations the French officer ran back to her with "white man's chop," +a tin of sausages, a pineapple, a bottle of beer. She drank the +beer from the bottle, and with religious tolerance offered it to the +Baptists. They assured her without the least regret that they were +teetotalers. To the other blacks in the open car the sight of a +white man waiting on one of their own people was a thrilling +spectacle. They regarded the woman who could command such services +with respect. It would be interesting to know what they thought of +the white man. At each station the open car disgorged its occupants +to fill with water the beer bottle each carried, and to buy from the +natives kwango, the black man's bread, a flaky, sticky flour that +tastes like boiled chestnuts; and pineapples at a franc for ten. And +such pineapples! Not hard and rubber-like, as we know them at home, +but delicious, juicy, melting in the mouth like hothouse grapes, +and, also, after each mouthful, making a complete bath necessary. +One of the French officers had a lump of ice which he broke into +pieces and divided with the others. They saluted magnificently many +times, and as each drowned the morsel in his tin cup of beer, one of +them cried with perfect simplicity: "C'est Paris!" This reminded me +that the ship's steward had placed much ice in my chop basket, and I +carried some of it to another car in which were five of the White +Sisters. For nineteen days I had been with them on the steamer, but +they had spoken to no one, and I was doubtful how they would accept +my offering. But the Mother Superior gave permission, and they took +the ice through the car window, their white hoods bristling with the +excitement of the adventure. They were on their way to a post still +two months' journey up the river, nearly to Lake Tanganyika, and for +three years or, possibly, until they died, that was the last ice +they would see. + +At Bongolo station the division superintendent came in the car and +everybody offered him refreshment, and in return he told us, in the +hope of interesting us, of a washout, and then casually mentioned +that an hour before an elephant had blocked the track. It seemed so +much too good to be true that I may have expressed some doubt, for +he said: "Why, of course and certainly. Already this morning one was +at Sariski Station and another at Sipeto." And instead of looking +out of the window I had been reading an American magazine, filched +from the smoking-room, which was one year old! + +At Thysville the railroad may have opened a hotel, but when I was +there to hunt for a night's shelter it turned you out bag and +baggage. The French officers decided to risk a Portuguese trading +store known as the "Ideal Hotel," and the missionaries very kindly +gave me the freedom of their Rest House. It is kept open for +those of the Mission who pass between the Upper and Lower Congo. +At the station the young missionaries were met by two older +missionaries--Mr. Weekes, who furnished the "Commission of Enquiry" +with much evidence, which they would not, or were not allowed to, +print, and Mr. Jennings. With them were twenty "boys" from the +Mission and, with each of them carrying a piece of our baggage on +his head, we climbed the hill, and I was given a clean, comfortable, +completely appointed bedroom. Our combined chop we turned over to a +black brother. He is the custodian of the Rest House and an +excellent cook. While he was preparing it my boys spread out my +folding rubber tub. Had I closed the door I should have smothered, +so, in the presence of twenty interested black Baptists, I took an +embarrassing but one of the most necessary baths I can remember. + +There still was a piece of the ice remaining, and as the interest in +the bathtub had begun to drag I handed it to one of my audience. He +yelled as though I had thrust into his hand a drop of vitriol, and, +leaping in the air, threw the ice on the floor and dared any one to +touch it. From the "personal" boys who had travelled to Matadi the +Mission boys had heard of ice. But none had ever seen it. They +approached it as we would a rattlesnake. Each touched it and then +sprang away. Finally one, his eyes starting from his head, +cautiously stroked the inoffensive brick and then licked his +fingers. The effect was instantaneous. He assured the others it was +"good chop," and each of them sat hunched about it on his heels, +stroking it, and licking his fingers, and then with delighted +thrills rubbing them over his naked body. The little block of ice +that at Liverpool was only a "quart of water" had assumed the value +of a diamond. + +Dinner was enlivened by an incident. Mr. Weekes, with orders simply +to "fry these," had given to the assistant of the cook two tins of +sausages. The small _chef_ presented them to us in the pan in which +he had cooked them, but he had obeyed instructions to the letter and +had fried the tins unopened. + +After dinner we sat until late, while the older men told the young +missionaries of atrocities of which, in the twenty years and within +the last three years, they had been witnesses. Already in Mr. +Morel's books I had read their testimony, but hearing from the men +themselves the tales of outrage and cruelty gave them a fresh and +more intimate value, and sent me to bed hot and sick with +indignation. But, nevertheless, the night I slept at Thysville was +the only cool one I knew in the Congo. It was as cool as is a night +in autumn at home. Thysville, between the Upper and the Lower Congo, +with its fresh mountain air, is an obvious site for a hospital for +the servants of the State. To the Congo it should be what Simla is +to the sick men of India; but the State is not running hospitals. It +is in the rubber business. + +All steamers for the Upper Congo and her great tributaries, whether +they belong to the State or the Missions, start from Leopoldville. +There they fit out for voyages, some of which last three and four +months. So it is a place of importance, but, like Boma, it looks as +though the people who yesterday built it meant to-morrow to move +out. The river-front is one long dump-heap. It is a grave-yard for +rusty boilers, deck-plates, chains, fire-bars. The interior of the +principal storehouse for ships' supplies, directly in front of the +office of the captain of the port, looks like a junk-shop for old +iron and newspapers. I should have enjoyed taking the captain of the +port by the neck and showing him the water-front and marine shops at +Calabar; the wharfs and quays of stone, the open places spread with +gravel, the whitewashed cement gutters, the spare parts of +machinery, greased and labeled in their proper shelves, even the +condemned scrap-iron in orderly piles; the whole yard as trim as a +battleship. + +On the river-front at Leopoldville a grossly fat man, collarless, +coatless, purple-faced, perspiring, was rushing up and down. He was +the captain of the port. Black women had assembled to greet +returning black soldiers, and the captain was calling upon the black +sentries to drive them away. The sentries, yelling, fell upon the +women with their six-foot staves and beat them over the head and +bare shoulders, and as they fled, screaming, the captain of the port +danced in the sun shaking his fists after them and raging violently. +Next morning I was told he had tried to calm his nerves with +absinthe, which is not particularly good for nerves, and was +exceedingly unwell. I was sorry for him. The picture of discipline +afforded by the glazed-eyed official, reeling and cursing in the +open street, had been illuminating. + +Although at Leopoldville the State has failed to build wharfs, the +esthetic features of the town have not been neglected, and there is +a pretty plaza called Stanley Park. In the centre of this plaza is a +pillar with, at its base, a bust of Leopold, and on the top of the +pillar a plaster-of-Paris lady, nude, and, not unlike the +Bacchante of MacMonnies. Not so much from the likeness as from +history, I deduced that the lady must be Cléo de Mérode. But whether +the monument is erected to her or to Leopold, or to both of them, I +do not know. + + [Illustration: The Monument in Stanley Park, Erected, not to + Stanley, but to Leopold.] + +I left Leopoldville in the _Deliverance_. Some of the State boats +that make the long trip to Stanleyville are very large ships. They +have plenty of deck room and many cabins. With their flat, raft-like +hull, their paddle-wheel astern, and the covered sun deck, they +resemble gigantic house-boats. Of one of these boats the +_Deliverance_ was only one-third the size, but I took passage on her +because she would give me a chance to see not only something of the +Congo, but also one of its great tributaries, the less travelled +Kasai. The _Deliverance_ was about sixty-five feet over all and drew +three feet of water. She was built like a mud-scow, with a deck of +iron plates. Amidships, on this deck, was a tiny cabin with berths +for two passengers and standing room for one. The furnaces and +boiler were forward, banked by piles of wood. All the river boats +burn only wood. Her engines were in the stern. These engines and the +driving-rod to the paddle-wheel were uncovered. This gives the +_Deliverance_ the look of a large automobile without a tonneau. You +were constantly wondering what had gone wrong with the carbureter, +and if it rained what would happen to her engines. Supported on iron +posts was an upper deck, on which, forward, stood the captain's box +of a cabin and directly in front of it the steering-wheel. The +telegraph, which signalled to the openwork engine below, and a +dining table as small as a chess-board, completely filled the +"bridge." When we sat at table the captain's boy could only just +squeeze himself between us and the rail. It was like dining in a +private box. And certainly no theatre ever offered such scenery, nor +did any menagerie ever present so many strange animals. + +We were four white men: Captain Jensen, his engineer, and the other +passenger, Captain Anfossi, a young Italian. Before he reached his +post he had to travel one month on the _Deliverance_ and for another +month walk through the jungle. He was the most cheerful and amusing +companion, and had he been returning after three years of exile to +his home he could not have been more brimful of spirits. Captain +Jensen was a Dane (almost every river captain is a Swede or a Dane) +and talked a little English, a little French, and a little Bangala. +The mechanician was a Finn and talked the native Bangala, and +Anfossi spoke French. After chop, when we were all assembled on the +upper deck, there would be the most extraordinary talks in four +languages, or we would appoint one man to act as a clearing-house, +and he would translate for the others. + +On the lower deck we carried twenty "wood boys," whose duty was to +cut wood for the furnace, and about thirty black passengers. They +were chiefly soldiers, who had finished their period of service for +the State, with their wives and children. They were crowded on the +top of the hatches into a space fifteen by fifteen feet between our +cabin door and the furnace. Around the combings of the hatches, and +where the scuppers would have been had the _Deliverance_ had +scuppers, the river raced over the deck to a depth of four or five +inches. When the passengers wanted to wash their few clothes or +themselves they carried on their ablutions and laundry work where +they happened to be sitting. But for Anfossi and myself to go from +our cabin to the iron ladder of the bridge it was necessary to wade +both in the water and to make stepping stones of the passengers. I +do not mean that we merely stepped over an occasional arm or leg. I +mean we walked on them. You have seen a football player, in a hurry +to make a touchdown, hurdle without prejudice both friends and foes. +Our progress was like this. But by practice we became so expert that +without even awakening them we could spring lightly from the plump +stomach of a black baby to its mother's shoulder, from there leap to +the father's ribs, and rebound upon the rungs of the ladder. + + [Illustration: The _Deliverance_.] + +The river marched to the sea at the rate of four to five miles an +hour. The _Deliverance_ could make about nine knots an hour, so we +travelled at the average rate of five miles; but for the greater +part of each day we were tied to a bank while the boys went ashore +and cut enough wood to carry us farther. And we never travelled at +night. Owing to the changing currents, before the sun set we ran +into shore and made fast to a tree. I explained how in America the +river boats used search-lights, and was told that on one boat the +State had experimented with a searchlight, but that particular +searchlight having got out of order the idea of night travelling was +condemned. + +Ours was a most lazy progress, but one with the most beautiful +surroundings and filled with entertainment. From our private box we +looked out upon the most wonderful of panoramas. Sometimes we were +closely hemmed in by mountains of light-green grass, except where, +in the hollows, streams tumbled in tiny waterfalls between gigantic +trees hung with strange flowering vines and orchids. Or we would +push into great lakes of swirling brown water, dotted with flat +islands overgrown with reed grass higher than the head of a man. +Again the water turned blue and the trees on the banks grew into +forests with the look of cultivated, well-cared-for parks, but with +no sign of man, not even a mud hut or a canoe; only the strangest of +birds and the great river beasts. Sometimes the sky was overcast and +gray, the warm rain shut us in like a fog, and the clouds hid the +peaks of the hills, or there would come a swift black tornado and +the rain beat into our private box, and each would sit crouched in +his rain coat, while the engineer smothered his driving-rods in palm +oil, and the great drops drummed down upon the awning and drowned +the fire in our pipes. After these storms, as though it were being +pushed up from below, the river seemed to rise in the centre, to +become convex. By some optical illusion, it seemed to fall away on +either hand to the depth of three or four feet. + +But as a rule we had a brilliant, gorgeous sunshine that made the +eddying waters flash and sparkle, and caused the banks of sand to +glare like whitewashed walls, and turn the sharp, hard fronds of the +palms into glittering sword-blades. The movement of the boat +tempered the heat, and in lazy content we sat in our lookout box and +smiled upon the world. Except for the throb of the engine and the +slow splash, splash, splash of the wheel there was no sound. We +might have been adrift in the heart of a great ocean. So complete +was the silence, so few were the sounds of man's presence, that at +times one almost thought that ours was the first boat to disturb the +Congo. + +Although we were travelling by boat, we spent as much time on land +as on the water. Because the _Deliverance_ burnt wood and, like an +invading army, "lived on the country," she was always stopping to +lay in a supply. That gave Anfossi and myself a chance to visit the +native villages or to hunt in the forest. + +To feed her steamers the State has established along the river-bank +posts for wood, and in theory at these places there always is a +sufficient supply of wood to carry a steamer to the next post. But +our experience was either that another steamer had just taken all +the wood or that the boys had decided to work no more and had hidden +themselves in the bush. The State posts were "clearings," less than +one hundred yards square, cut out of the jungle. Sometimes only +black men were in charge, but as a rule the _chef de poste_ was a +lonely, fever-ridden white, whose only interest in our arrival was +his hope that we might spare him quinine. I think we gave away as +many grains of quinine as we received logs of wood. Empty-handed we +would turn from the wood post and steam a mile or so farther up the +river, where we would run into a bank, and a boy with a steel hawser +would leap overboard and tie up the boat to the roots of a tree. +Then all the boys would disappear into the jungle and attack the +primeval forest. Each was supplied with a machete and was expected +to furnish a _bras_ of wood. A _bras_ is a number of sticks about as +long and as thick as your arm, placed in a pile about three feet +high and about three feet wide. To fix this measure the head boy +drove poles into the bank three feet apart, and from pole to pole at +the same distance from the ground stretched a strip of bark. When +each boy had filled one of these openings all the wood was carried +on board, and we would unhitch the _Deliverance_, and she would +proceed to burn up the fuel we had just collected. It took the +twenty boys about four hours to cut the wood, and the _Deliverance_ +the same amount of time to burn it. It was distinctly a +hand-to-mouth existence. As I have pointed out, when it is too dark +to see the currents, the Congo captains never attempt to travel. So +each night at sunset Captain Jensen ran into the bank, and as soon +as the plank was out all the black passengers and the crew passed +down it and spent the night on shore. In five minutes the women +would have the fires lighted and the men would be cutting grass +for bedding and running up little shelters of palm boughs and +hanging up linen strips that were both tents and mosquito nets. + + [Illustration: The Native Wife of a _Chef de Poste_.] + +In the moonlight the natives with their camp-fires and torches made +most wonderful pictures. Sometimes for their sleeping place the +captain would select a glade in the jungle, or where a stream had +cut a little opening in the forest, or a sandy island, with tall +rushes on either side and the hot African moon shining on the white +sand and turning the palms to silver, or they would pitch camp in a +buffalo wallow, where the grass and mud had been trampled into a +clay floor by the hoofs of hundreds of wild animals. But the fact +that they were to sleep where at sunrise and at sunset came +buffaloes, elephants, and panthers, disturbed the women not at all, +and as they bent, laughing, over the iron pots, the firelight shone +on their bare shoulders and was reflected from their white teeth and +rolling eyes and brazen bangles. + +Until late in the night the goats would bleat, babies cry, and the +"boys" and "mammies" talked, sang, quarrelled, beat tom-toms, and +squeezed mournful groans out of the accordion of civilization. One +would have thought we had anchored off a busy village rather than at +a place where, before that night, the inhabitants had been only the +beasts of the jungle and the river. + + + + +IV + +AMERICANS IN THE CONGO + + +In trying to sum up what I found in the Congo Free State, I think +what one fails to find there is of the greatest significance. To +tell what the place is like, you must tell what it lacks. One must +write of the Congo always in the negative. It is as though you +asked: "What sort of a house is this one Jones has built?" and were +answered: "Well, it hasn't any roof, and it hasn't any cellar, and +it has no windows, floors, or chimneys. It's that kind of a house." + +When first I arrived in the Congo the time I could spend there +seemed hopelessly inadequate. After I'd been there a month, it +seemed to me that in a very few days any one could obtain a +painfully correct idea of the place, and of the way it is +administered. If an orchestra starts on an piece of music with all +the instruments out of tune, it need not play through the entire +number for you to know that the instruments are out of tune. + +The charges brought against Leopold II, as King of the Congo, are +three: + +(_a_) That he has made slaves of the twenty million blacks he +promised to protect. + +(_b_) That, in spite of his promise to keep the Congo open to trade, +he has closed it to all nations. + +(_c_) That the revenues of the country and all of its trade he has +retained for himself. + +Any one who visits the Congo and remains only two weeks will be +convinced that of these charges Leopold is guilty. In that time he +will not see atrocities, but he will see that the natives are +slaves, that no foreigner can trade with them, that in the interest +of Leopold alone the country is milked. + +He will see that the government of Leopold is not a government. It +preserves the perquisites and outward signs of government. It coins +money, issues stamps, collects taxes. But it assumes none of the +responsibilities of government. The Congo Free State is only a great +trading house. And in it Leopold is the only wholesale and retail +trader. He gives a bar of soap for rubber, and makes a "turn-over" +of a cup of salt for ivory. He is not a monarch. He is a shopkeeper. + +And were the country not so rich in rubber and ivory, were the +natives not sweated so severely, he also would be a bankrupt +shopkeeper. For the Congo is not only one vast trading post, but +also it is a trading post badly managed. Even in the republics of +Central America where the government changes so frequently, and +where each new president is trying to make hay while he can, there +is better administration, more is done for the people, the rights of +other nations are better respected. + +Were the Congo properly managed, it would be one of the richest +territories on the surface of the earth. As it is, through ignorance +and cupidity, it is being despoiled and its people are the most +wretched of human beings. In the White Book containing the reports +of British vice-consuls on conditions in the Congo from April of +last year to January of this year, Mr. Mitchell tells how the +enslavement of the people still continues, how "they" (the +conscripts, as they are called) "are hunted in the forest by +soldiers, and brought in chained by the neck like criminals." They +then, though conscripted to serve in the army, are set to manual +labor. They are slaves. The difference between the slavery under +Leopold and the slavery under the Arab raiders is that the Arab was +the better and kinder master. He took "prisoners" just as Leopold +seizes "conscripts," but he had too much foresight to destroy whole +villages, to carry off all the black man's live stock, and to uproot +his vegetable gardens. He purposed to return. And he did not wish to +so terrify the blacks that to escape from him they would penetrate +farther into the jungle. His motive was purely selfish, but his +methods, compared with those of Leopold, were almost considerate. +The work the State to-day requires of the blacks is so oppressive +that they have no time, no heart, to labor for themselves. + +In every other colony--French, English, German--in the native +villages I saw vegetable gardens, goats, and chickens, large, +comfortable, three-room huts, fences, and, especially in the German +settlement of the Cameroons at Duala, many flower gardens. In Bell +Town at Duala I walked for miles through streets lined with such +huts and gardens, and saw whole families, the very old as well as +the very young, sitting contentedly in the shade of their trees, or +at work in their gardens. In the Congo native villages I saw but one +old person, of chickens or goats that were not to be given to the +government as taxes I saw none, and the vegetable gardens, when +there were any such, were cultivated for the benefit of the _chef de +poste_, and the huts were small, temporary, and filthy. The dogs in +the kennels on my farm are better housed, better fed, and much +better cared for, whether ill or well, than are the twenty millions +of blacks along the Congo River. And that these human beings are so +ill-treated is due absolutely to the cupidity of one man, and to the +apathy of the rest of the world. And it is due as much to the apathy +and indifference of whoever may read this as to the silence of Elihu +Root or Sir Edward Grey. No one can shirk his responsibility by +sneering, "Am I my brother's keeper?" The Government of the United +States and the thirteen other countries have promised to protect +these people, to care for their "material and moral welfare," and +that promise is morally binding upon the people of those countries. +How much Leopold cares for the material welfare of the natives is +illustrated by the prices he pays the "boys" who worked on the +government steamer in which I went up the Kasai. They were bound on +a three months' voyage, and for each month's work on this trip they +were given in payment their rice and eighty cents. That is, at the +end of the trip they received what in our money would be equivalent +to two dollars and forty cents. And that they did not receive in +money, but in "trade goods," which are worth about ten per cent less +than their money value. So that of the two dollars and eighty cents +that is due them, these black boys, who for three months sweated in +the dark jungle cutting wood, are robbed by this King of twenty-four +cents. One would dislike to grow rich at that price. + + [Illustration: English Missionaries, and Some of Their Charges.] + +In the French Congo I asked the traders at Libreville what they paid +their boys for cutting mahogany. I found the price was four francs a +day without "chop," or three and a half francs with "chop." That +is, on one side of the river the French pay in cash for one day's +work what Leopold pays in trade goods for the work of a month. As a +result the natives run away to the French side, and often, I might +almost say invariably, when at the _poste de bois_ on the Congo side +we would find two cords of wood, on the other bank at the post for +the French boats we would count two hundred and fifty cords of wood. +I took photographs of the native villages in all the colonies, in +order to show how they compared--of the French and Belgian wood +posts, the one well stocked and with the boys lying about asleep or +playing musical instruments, or alert to trade and barter, and on +the Belgian side no wood, and the unhappy white man alone, and +generally shivering with fever. Had the photographs only developed +properly they would have shown much more convincingly than one can +write how utterly miserable is the condition of the Congo negro. And +the condition of the white man at the wood posts is only a little +better. We found one man absolutely without supplies. He was only +twenty-four hours distant from Leopoldville, but no supplies had +been sent him. He was ill with fever, and he could eat nothing but +milk. Captain Jensen had six cans of condensed milk, which the State +calculated should suffice for him and his passengers for three +months. He turned the lot over to the sick man. + +We found another white man at the first wood post on the Kasai just +above where it meets the Congo. He was in bed and dangerously ill +with enteric fever. He had telegraphed the State at Leopoldville and +a box of medicines had been sent to him; but the State doctors had +forgotten to enclose any directions for their use. We were as +ignorant of medicines as the man himself, and, as it was impossible +to move him, we were forced to leave him lying in his cot with the +row of bottles and tiny boxes, that might have given him life, +unopened at his elbow. It was ten days before the next boat would +touch at his post. I do not know that it reached him in time. One +could tell dozens of such stories of cruelty to natives and of +injustice and neglect to the white agents. + +The fact that Leopold has granted to American syndicates control +over two great territories in the Congo may bring about a better +state of affairs, and, in any event, it may arouse public interest +in this country. It certainly should be of interest to Americans +that some of the most prominent of their countrymen have gone into +close partnership with a speculator as unscrupulous and as notorious +as is Leopold, and that they are to exploit a country which as yet +has been developed only by the help of slavery, with all its +attendant evils of cruelty and torture. + +That Leopold has no right to give these concessions is a matter +which chiefly concerns the men who are to pay for them, but it is an +interesting fact. + +The Act of Berlin expressly states: _"No Power which exercises, or +shall exercise, sovereign rights in the above-mentioned regions, +shall be allowed to grant therein a monopoly or favor of any kind in +matters of trade."_ + +Leopold is only a steward placed by the Powers over the Congo. He is +a janitor. And he has no more authority to give even a foot of +territory to Belgians, Americans, or Chinamen than the janitor of an +apartment house has authority to fill the rooms with his wife's +relations or sell the coal in the basement. + +The charge that the present concessionaires have no title that any +independent trader or miner need respect is one that is sure to be +brought up when the Powers throw Leopold out, and begin to clean +house. The concessionaires take a sporting chance that Leopold will +not be thrown out. It should be remembered that it is to his and to +their advantage to see that he is not. + +In November of 1906, Leopold gave the International Forestry and +Mining Company of the Congo mining rights in territories adjoining +his private park, the _Domaine de la Couronne_, and to the American +Congo Company he granted the right to work rubber along the Congo +River to where it joins the Kasai. This latter is a territory of +four thousand square miles. The company also has the option within +the next eleven years of buying land in any part of a district which +is nearly one-half of the entire Congo. Of the Forestry and Mining +Company one-half of the profits go to Leopold, one-fourth to +Belgians, and the remaining fourth to the Americans. Of the profits +of the American Congo Company, Leopold is entitled to one-half and +the Americans to the other half. This company was one originally +organized to exploit a new method of manufacturing crude rubber from +the plant. The company was taken over by Thomas F. Ryan and his +associates. Back of both companies are the Guggenheims, who are to +perform the actual work in the mines and in the rubber plantation. +Early in March a large number of miners and engineers were selected +by John Hays Hammond, the chief engineer of the Guggenheim +Exploration Companies, and A. Chester Beatty, and were sent to +explore the territory granted in the mining concession. Another +force of experts are soon to follow. The legal representative of the +syndicates has stated that in the Congo they intend to move "on +commercial lines." By that we take it they mean they will give the +native a proper price for his labor; and instead of offering +"bonuses" and "commissions" to their white employees will pay them +living wages. The exact terms of the concessions are wrapped in +mystery. Some say the territories ceded to the concessionaires are +to be governed by them, policed by them, and that within the +boundaries of these concessions the Americans are to have absolute +control. If this be so the syndicates are entering upon an +experiment which for Americans is almost without precedent. They +will be virtually what in England is called a chartered company, +with the difference that the Englishmen receive their charter from +their own government, while the charter under which the Americans +will act will be granted by a foreign Power, and for what they may +do in the Congo their own government could not hold them +responsible. They are answerable only to the Power that issued the +charter; and that Power is the just, the humane, the merciful +Leopold. + +The history of the early days of chartered companies in Africa, +notoriously those of the Congo, Northern Nigeria, Rhodesia, and +German Central Africa does not make pleasant reading. But until the +Americans in the Congo have made this experiment, it would be most +unfair (except that the company they choose to keep leaves them open +to suspicion) not to give them the benefit of the doubt. One can at +least say for them that they seem to be absolutely ignorant of the +difficulties that lie before them. At least that is true of all of +them to whom I have talked. + +The attorney of the Rubber Company when interviewed by a +representative of a New York paper is reported to have said: "We +have purchased a privilege from a Sovereign State and propose to +operate it along purely commercial lines. With King Leopold's +management of Congo affairs in the past, or, with _what he may do in +an administrative way in the future, we have absolutely nothing to +do_." The italics are mine. + +When asked: "Under your concessions are you given similar powers +over the native blacks as are enjoyed by other concessionaires?" the +answer of the attorney, as reported, was: "The problem of labor is +not mentioned in the concession agreement, neither is the question +of local administration. We are left to solve the labor problem in +our own way, on a purely commercial basis, and with the question of +government we have absolutely nothing whatever to do. The labor +problem will not be formidable. Our mills are simple affairs. One +man can manage them, and the question of the labor on the rubber +concession is reduced to the minimum." This answer of the learned +attorney shows an ignorance of "labor" conditions in the Congo which +is, unless assumed, absolutely abject. + +If the American syndicates are not to police and govern the +territories ceded them, but if these territories are to continue to +be administered by Leopold, it is not possible for the Americans to +have "absolutely nothing to do" with that administration. Leopold's +sole idea of administration is that every black man is his slave, in +other words, the only men the Americans can depend upon for labor +are slaves. Of the profits of these American companies Leopold is to +receive one-half. He will work his rubber with slaves. + +Are the Americans going to use slaves also, or do they intend "on +commercial lines" to pay those who work for them living wages? And +if they do, at the end of the fiscal year, having paid a fair price +for labor, are they prepared to accept a smaller profit than will +their partner Leopold, who obtains his labor with the aid of a chain +and a whip? + + [Illustration: The Laboring Man Upon Whom the American + Concessionaires Must Depend.] + +The attorney for the company airily says: "The labor problem will +not be formidable." + +If the man knows what he is talking about, he can mean but one +thing. + +The motives that led Leopold to grant these concessions are possibly +various. The motives that induced the Americans to take his offer +were probably less complicated. With them it was no question of +politics. They wanted the money; they did not need it, for they all +are rich--they merely wanted it. But Leopold wants more than the +half profits he will obtain from the Americans. If the Powers should +wake from their apathy and try to cast him out of the Congo, he +wants, through his American partners, the help of the United States. +Should he be "dethroned," by granting these concessions now on a +share and share alike basis with Belgians, French, and Americans, he +still, through them, hopes to draw from the Congo a fair income. And +in the meanwhile he looks to these Americans to kill any action +against him that may be taken in our Senate and House of +Representatives, even in the White House and Department of State. + +For the last two years Chester A. Beatty has been visiting Leopold +at Belgium, and has obtained the two concessions, and Leopold has +obtained, or hopes he has obtained, the influence of many American +shareholders. The fact that the people of the United States +possessed no "vested interest" in the Congo was the important fact +that placed any action on our part in behalf of that distressed +country above suspicion. If we acted, we did so because the United +States, as one of the signatory Powers of the Berlin Act, had +promised to protect the natives of the Congo; and we could truly +claim that we acted only in the name of humanity. Leopold has now +robbed us of that claim. He hopes that the enormous power wielded by +the Americans with whom he is associated, will prevent any action +against him in this country. + +But the deal has already been made public, and the motives of those +who now oppose improvement of conditions in the Congo, and who +support Leopold, will be at once suspected. + +To me the most interesting thing about the tract of land ceded to +Mr. Ryan, apart from the number of hippopotamuses I saw on it, was +that the people living along the Congo say that it is of no value. +They told me that two years ago, after working it for some time, +Leopold abandoned it as unprofitable, and they added that, when +Leopold cannot whip rubber out of the forest, it is hard to believe +that it can be obtained there legitimately by any one else. On the +bank I saw the "factories" to which the unprofitable rubber had been +carried from the interior. They had formerly belonged to Leopold, +now they are the property of Mr. Ryan and of the American Congo +Company. In only two years they already are in ruins, and the jungle +has engulfed them. + +I was on the land owned by the company a dozen times or more, but I +did not go into the interior. Even had I done so, I am not an expert +on rubber, and would have understood nothing of Para trees, Lagos +silk, and liane. I am speaking not of my own knowledge, only of what +was told me by people who live on the spot. I found that this +particular concession was well known, because, unlike the land given +to the Forestry and Mines Company, it is not an inaccessible tract, +but is situated only eight miles from Leopoldville. In our language, +that is about as far as is the Battery to 160th Street. Leopoldville +is the chief place on the Congo River, and every one there who spoke +to me of the concession knew where it was situated, and repeated +that it had been given up by Leopold as unprofitable, and that he +had unloaded it on Mr. Ryan. They seem to think it very clever of +the King to have got rid of it to the American millionaire. To one +knowing Mr. Ryan only from what he reads of him in the public press, +he does not seem to be the sort of man to whom Leopold could sell a +worthless rubber plantation. However, it is a matter which concerns +only Mr. Ryan and those who may think of purchasing shares in the +company. The Guggenheims, who are to operate this rubber, say that +Leopold did not know how to get out the full value of the land, and +that they, by using the machinery they will install, will be able to +make a profit, where Leopold, using only native labor, suffered a +loss. + +To the poor the ways of the truly rich are past finding out. After a +man has attained a fortune sufficient to keep him in yachts and +automobiles, one would think he could afford to indulge himself in +the luxury of being squeamish; that as to where he obtained any +further increase of wealth, he would prefer to pick and choose. + +On the contrary, these Americans go as far out of their way as +Belgium to make a partner of the man who has wrung his money from +wretched slaves, who were beaten, starved, and driven in chains. +This concession cannot make them rich. It can only make them richer. +And not richer in fact, for all the money they may whip out of the +Congo could not give them one thing that they cannot now command, +not an extra taste to the lips, not a fresh sensation, not one added +power for good. To them it can mean only a figure in ink on a page +of a bank-book. But what suffering, what misery it may mean to the +slaves who put it there! Why should men as rich as these elect to go +into partnership with one who sweats his dollars out of the naked +black? How really fine, how really wonderful it would be if these +same men, working together, decided to set free these twenty million +people--if, instead of joining hands with Leopold, they would +overthrow him and march into the Congo free men, without his chain +around their ankles, and open it to the trade of the world, and give +justice and a right to live and to work and to sell and buy to +millions of miserable human beings. These Americans working together +could do it. They could do it from Washington. Or five hundred men +with two Maxim guns could do it. The "kingdom" of the Congo is only +a house of cards. Five hundred filibusters could take Boma, proclaim +the Congo open to the traders of the world, as the Act of Berlin +declares it to be, and in a day make of Leopold the jest of Europe. +They would only be taking possession of what has always belonged to +them. + +Down in the Congo I talked to many young officers of Leopold's army. +They had been driven to serve him by the whips of failure, poverty, +or crime. I do not know that the American concessionaires are driven +by any such scourge. These younger men, who saw the depths of their +degradation, who tasted the dirty work they were doing, were daily +risking life by fever, through lack of food, by poisoned arrows, +and for three hundred dollars a year. Their necessity was great. +They had the courage of their failure. They were men one could pity. +One of them picked at the band of blue and gold braid around the +wrist of his tunic, and said: "Look, it is our badge of shame." + +To me those foreign soldiers of fortune, who, sooner than starve at +home or go to jail, serve Leopold in the jungle, seem more like men +and brothers than these truly rich, who, of their own free will, +safe in their downtown offices, become partners with this blackguard +King. + +What will be the outcome of the American advance into the Congo? +Will it prove the salvation of the Congo? Will it be, if that were +possible, a greater evil? + +E.R. Morel, who is the leader in England of the movement for the +improvement of the Congo, has written: "It is a little difficult to +imagine that the trust magnates are moulded upon the unique model of +Leopold II, and are prepared for the asking to become associates in +slave-driving. The trouble is that they probably know nothing about +African conditions, that they have been primed by the King with his +detestable theories, and are starting their enterprises on the basis +that the natives of Central Africa must be regarded as mere +'laborers' for the white man's benefit, possessing no rights in land +nor in the produce of the soil. If Mr. Ryan and his colleagues are +going to acquire their rubber over four thousand square miles, by +'commercial methods,' we welcome their advent. But we would point +out to them that, in such a case, they had better at once abandon +all idea of three or four hundred per cent dividends with which the +wily autocrat at Brussels has doubtless primed them. No such +monstrous profits are to be acquired in tropical Africa under a +trade system. If, on the other hand, the methods they are prepared +to adopt are the methods King Leopold and his other concessionaires +have adopted for the past thirteen years, devastation and +destruction, and the raising of more large bodies of soldiers, are +their essential accompaniments; and the widening of the area of the +Congo hell is assured." + +The two things in the American invasion of the Congo that promise +good to that unhappy country are that our country is represented at +Boma by a most intelligent, honest, and fearless young man in the +person of James A. Smith, our Consul-General, and that the actual +work of operating the mines and rubber is in the hands of the +Guggenheims. They are well known as men upright in affairs, and as +philanthropists and humanitarians of the common-sense type. Like +other rich men of their race, they have given largely to charity and +to assist those less fortunate than themselves. + +For thirteen years in mines in Mexico, in China, and Alaska, they +have had to deal with the problem of labor, and they have met it +successfully. Workmen of three nationalities they have treated with +fairness. + +"Why should you suppose," Mr. Daniel Guggenheim asked me, "that in +the Congo we will treat the negroes harshly? In Mexico we found the +natives ill-paid and ill-fed. We fed them and paid them well. Not +from any humanitarian idea, but because it was good business. It is +not good business to cut off a workman's hands or head. We are not +ashamed of the way we have always treated our workmen, and in the +Congo we are not going to spoil our record." + +I suggested that in Mexico he did not have as his partner Leopold, +tempting him with slave labor, and that the distance from Broadway +to his concessions in the Congo was so great that as to what his +agents might do there he could not possibly know. To this Mr. +Guggenheim answered that "Neither Leopold nor anyone else can +dictate how we shall treat the native labor," that if his agents +were cruel they would be instantly dismissed, and that for what +occurred in the Congo on the land occupied by the American Congo +Company his brothers and himself alone were responsible, and that +they accepted that responsibility. + +But already on his salary list he has men who are sure to get him +into trouble, men of whose _dossiers_ he is quite ignorant. + +From Belgium, Leopold has unloaded on the American companies several +of his "valets du roi," press agents, and tools, men who for years +have been defenders of his dirty work in the Congo; and of the +Americans, one, who is prominently exploited by the Belgians, had +to leave Africa for theft. + +That Mr. Guggenheim wishes and intends to give to the black in the +Congo fair treatment there is no possible doubt. But that on +Broadway, removed from the scene of operations in time some four to +six months, and in actual distance eight thousand miles, he can +control the acts of his agents and his partners, remains to be +proved. He is attacking a problem much more momentous than the +handling of Mexican _peons_ or Chinese coolies, and every step of +the working out of this problem will be watched by the people of +this country. + +And should they find that the example of the Belgian concessionaires +in their treatment of the natives is being imitated by even one of +the American Congo Company the people of this country will know it, +and may the Lord have mercy on his soul! + + + + +V + +HUNTING THE HIPPO + + +Except once or twice in the Zoo, I never had seen a hippopotamus, +and I was most anxious, before I left the Congo, to meet one. I +wanted to look at him when he was free, and his own master, without +iron bars or keepers; when he believed he was quite alone, and was +enjoying his bath in peace and confidence. I also wanted to shoot +him, and to hang in my ancestral halls his enormous head with the +great jaws open and the inside of them painted pink and the small +tusks hungrily protruding. I had this desire, in spite of the fact +that for every hippo except the particular one whose head I coveted, +I entertained the utmost good feeling. + +As a lad, among other beasts the hippopotamus had appealed to my +imagination. Collectively, I had always looked upon them as most +charming people. They come of an ancient family. Two thousand four +hundred years ago they were mentioned by Herodotus. And Herodotus to +the animal kingdom is what Domesday Book is to the landed gentry. To +exist beautifully for twenty-four hundred years without a single +mésalliance, without having once stooped to trade, is certainly a +strong title to nobility. Other animals by contact with man have +become degraded. The lion, the "King of Beasts," now rides a +bicycle, and growls, as previously rehearsed, at the young woman in +spangles, of whom he is secretly afraid. And the elephant, the +monarch of the jungle, and of a family as ancient and noble as that +of the hippopotamus, the monarch of the river, has become a beast of +burden and works for his living. You can see him in Phoenix Park +dragging a road-roller, in Siam and India carrying logs, and at +Coney Island he bends the knee to little girls from Brooklyn. The +royal proboscis, that once uprooted trees, now begs for peanuts. + +But, you never see a hippopotamus chained to a road-roller, or +riding a bicycle. He is still the gentleman, the man of elegant +leisure, the aristocrat of aristocrats, harming no one, and, in his +ancestral river, living the simple life. + +And yet, I sought to kill him. At least, one of him, but only one. +And, that I did not kill even one, while a bitter disappointment, is +still a source of satisfaction. + +In the Congo River we saw only two hippos, and both of them were +dead. They had been shot from a steamer. If the hippo is killed in +the water, it is impossible to recover the body at once. It sinks +and does not rise, some say, for an hour, others say for seven +hours. As in an hour the current may have carried the body four +miles below where it sank, the steamer does not wait, and the +destruction of the big beast is simple murder. There should be a law +in the Congo to prevent their destruction, and, no doubt, if the +State thought it could make a few francs out of protecting the +hippo, as it makes many million francs by preserving the elephant, +which it does for the ivory, such a law would exist. We soon saw +many hippos, but although we could not persuade the only other +passenger not to fire at them, there are a few hippos still alive in +the Congo. For, the only time the Captain and I were positive he +hit anything, was when he fired over our heads and blew off the roof +of the bridge. + +When first we saw the two dead hippos, one of them was turning and +twisting so violently that we thought he was alive. But, as we drew +near, we saw the strange convulsions were due to two enormous and +ugly crocodiles, who were fiercely pulling at the body. Crocodiles +being man-eaters, we had no feelings about shooting them, either in +the water or up a tree; and I hope we hit them. In any event, after +we fired the body drifted on in peace. + +On my return trip, going with the stream, when the boat covers about +four times the distance she makes when steaming against it, I saw +many hippos. In one day I counted sixty-nine. But on our way up the +Congo, until we turned into the Kasai River, we saw none. + +So, on the first night we camped in the Kasai I had begun to think I +never would see one, and I went ashore both skeptical and +discouraged. We had stopped, not at a wood post, but at a place on +the river's bank previously untouched by man, where there was a +stretch of beach, and then a higher level with trees and tall +grasses. Driven deep in this beach were the footprints of a large +elephant. They looked as though some one had amused himself by +sinking a bucket in the mud, and then pulling it out. For sixty +yards I followed the holes and finally lost them in a confusion of +other tracks. The place had been so trampled upon that it was beaten +into a basin. It looked as though every animal in the Kasai had met +there to hold a dance. There were the deep imprints of the hippos +and the round foot of the elephant, with the marks of the big toes +showing as clearly as though they had been scooped out of the mud +with a trowel, the hoofs of buffalo as large as the shoe of a cart +horse, and the arrow-like marks of the antelope, some in dainty +little Vs, others measuring three inches across, and three inches +from the base to the point. They came from every direction, down the +bank and out of the river; and crossed and recrossed, and beneath +the fresh prints that had been made that morning at sunrise, were +those of days before rising up sharply out of the sun-dried clay, +like bas-reliefs in stucco. I had gone ashore in a state of mind so +skeptical that I was as surprised as Crusoe at the sight of +footprints. It was as though the boy who did not believe in fairies +suddenly stumbled upon them sliding down the moonbeams. One felt +distinctly apologetic--as though uninvited he had pushed himself +into a family gathering. At the same time there was the excitement +of meeting in their own homes the strange peoples I had seen only in +the springtime, when the circus comes to New York, in the basement +of Madison Square Garden, where they are our pitiful prisoners, +bruising their shoulders against bars. Here they were monarchs of +all they surveyed. I was the intruder; and, looking down at the +marks of the great paws and delicate hoofs, I felt as much out of +place as would a grizzly bear in a Fifth Avenue club. And I behaved +much as would the grizzly bear. I rushed back for my rifle intent on +killing something. + +The sun had just set; the moon was shining faintly: it was the +moment the beasts of the jungle came to the river to drink. Anfossi, +although he had spent three years in the Congo and had three years' +contract still to work out, was as determined to kill something as +was the tenderfoot from New York. + +Sixty yards from the stern of the _Deliverance_ was the basin I had +discovered; at an equal distance from her bow, a stream plunged into +the river. Anfossi argued the hippos would prefer to drink the clear +water of the stream, to the muddy water of the basin, and elected to +watch at the stream. I carried a deck chair to the edge of my basin +and placed it in the shadow of the trees. Anfossi went into our +cabin for his rifle. At that exact moment a hippopotamus climbed +leisurely out of the river and plunged into the stream. One of the +soldiers on shore saw him and rushed for the boat. Anfossi sent my +boy on the jump for me and, like a gentleman, waited until I had +raced the sixty yards. But when we reached the stream there was +nothing visible but the trampled grass and great holes in the mud +and near us in the misty moonlight river something that puffed and +blew slowly and luxuriously, as would any fat gentleman who had been +forced to run for it. Had I followed Anfossi's judgment and gone +along the bank sixty yards ahead, instead of sixty yards astern of +the _Deliverance_, at the exact moment at which I sank into my deck +chair, the hippo would have emerged at my feet. It is even betting +as to which of us would have been the more scared. + +The next day, and for days after, we saw nothing but hippos. We saw +them floating singly and in family groups, with generally four or +five cows to one bull, and sometimes in front a baby hippo no larger +than a calf, which the mother with her great bulk would push against +the swift current, as you see a tugboat in the lee of a great liner. +Once, what I thought was a spit of rocks suddenly tumbled apart and +became twenty hippos, piled more or less on top of each other. +During that one day, as they floated with the current, enjoying +their afternoon's nap, we saw thirty-four. They impressed me as the +most idle, and, therefore, the most aristocratic of animals. They +toil not, neither do they spin; they had nothing to do but float in +the warm water and the bright sunshine; their only effort was to +open their enormous jaws and yawn luxuriously, in the pure content +of living, in absolute boredom. They reminded you only of fat gouty +old gentlemen, puffing and blowing in the pool at the Warm Springs. + +The next chance we had at one of them on shore came on our first +evening in the Kasai just before sunset. Captain Jensen was steering +for a flat island of sand and grass where he meant to tie up for the +night. About fifty yards from the spot for which we were making, was +the only tree on the island, and under it with his back to us, and +leisurely eating the leaves of the lower branches, exactly as though +he were waiting for us by appointment, was a big gray hippo. His +back being toward us, we could not aim at his head, and he could not +see us. But the _Deliverance_ is not noiseless, and, hearing the +paddle-wheel, the hippo turned, saw us, and bolted for the river. +The hippopotamus is as much at home in the water as the seal. To get +to the water, if he is surprised out of it, and to get under it, if +he is alarmed while in it, is instinct. If he does venture ashore, +he goes only a few rods from the bank and then only to forage. His +home is the river, and he rushes to bury himself in it as naturally +as the squirrel makes for a tree. This particular hippo ran for the +river as fast as a horse coming at a slow trot. He was a very badly +scared hippo. His head was high in the air, his fat sides were +shaking, and the one little eye turned toward us was filled with +concern. Behind him the yellow sun was setting into the lagoons. On +the flat stretch of sand he was the only object, and against the +horizon loomed as large as a freight car. That must be why we both +missed him. I tried to explain that the reason I missed him was +that, never before having seen so large an animal running for his +life, I could not watch him do it and look at the gun sights. No one +believed that was why I missed him. I did not believe it myself. In +any event neither of us hit his head, and he plunged down the bank +to freedom, carrying most of the bank with him. But, while we still +were violently blaming each other, at about two hundred yards below +the boat, he again waddled out of the river and waded knee deep up +the little stream. Keeping the bunches of grass between us, I ran up +the beach, aimed at his eye and this time hit him fairly enough. +With a snort he rose high in the air, and so, for an instant, +balanced his enormous bulk. The action was like that of a horse +that rears on his hind legs, when he is whipped over the nose. And +apparently my bullet hurt him no more than the whip the horse, for +he dropped heavily to all fours, and again disappeared into the +muddy river. Our disappointment and chagrin were intense, and at +once Anfossi and I organized a hunt for that evening. To encourage +us, while we were sitting on the bridge making a hasty dinner, +another hippopotamus had the impertinence to rise, blowing like a +whale, not ten feet from where we sat. We could have thrown our tin +cups and hit him; but he was in the water, and now we were seeking +only those on land. + + [Illustration: Mr. Davis and Native "Boy," on the Kasai River.] + +Two years ago when the atrocities along the Kasai made the natives +fear the white man and the white man fear the natives, each of the +river boats was furnished with a stand of Albini rifles. Three of +the black soldiers, who were keen sportsmen, were served with these +muskets, and as soon as the moon rose, the soldiers and Anfossi, my +black boy, with an extra gun, and I set forth to clear the island of +hippos. To the stranger it was a most curious hunt. The island was +perfectly flat and bare, and the river had eaten into it and +overflowed it with tiny rivulets and deep, swift-running streams. +Into these rivulets and streams the soldiers plunged, one in front, +feeling the depth of the water with a sounding rod, and as he led we +followed. The black men made a splendid picture. They were naked but +for breech-cloths, and the moonlight flashed on their wet skins and +upon the polished barrels of the muskets. But, as a sporting +proposition, as far as I could see, we had taken on the hippopotamus +at his own game. We were supposed to be on an island, but the water +was up to our belts and running at five miles an hour. I could not +understand why we had not openly and aboveboard walked into the +river. Wading waist high in the water with a salmon rod I could +understand, but not swimming around in a river with a gun. The force +of the shallowest stream was the force of the great river behind it, +and wherever you put your foot, the current, on its race to the sea, +annoyed at the impediment, washed the sand from under the sole of +your foot and tugged at your knees and ankles. To add to the +interest the three soldiers held their muskets at full cock, and as +they staggered for a footing each pointed his gun at me. There also +was a strange fish about the size of an English sole that sprang out +of the water and hurled himself through space. Each had a white +belly, and as they skimmed past us in the moonlight it was as though +some one was throwing dinner plates. After we had swum the length of +the English Channel, we returned to the boat. As to that midnight +hunt I am still uncertain as to whether we were hunting the hippos +or the hippos were hunting us. + +The next morning we had our third and last chance at a hippo. + +It is distinctly a hard-luck story. We had just gone on the bridge +for breakfast when we saw him walking slowly from us along an island +of white sand as flat as your hand, and on which he loomed large as +a haystack. Captain Jensen was a true sportsman. He jerked the bell +to the engine-room, and at full speed the _Deliverance_ raced for +the shore. The hippo heard us, and, like a baseball player caught +off base, tried to get back to the river. Captain Jensen danced on +the deck plates: + +"Schoot it! schoot it!" he yelled, "Gotfurdamn! schoot it!" When +Anfossi and I fired, the _Deliverance_ was a hundred yards from the +hippo, and the hippo was not five feet from the bank. In another +instant, he would have been over it and safe. But when we fired, he +went down as suddenly as though a safe had dropped on him. Except +that he raised his head, and rolled it from side to side, he +remained perfectly still. From his actions, or lack of actions, it +looked as though one of the bullets had broken his back; and when +the blacks saw he could not move they leaped and danced and +shrieked. To them the death of the big beast promised much chop. + +But Captain Jensen was not so confident. "Schoot it," he continued +to shout, "we lose him yet! Gotfurdamn! schoot it!" + +My gun was an American magazine rifle, holding five cartridges. We +now were very near the hippo, and I shot him in the head twice, and, +once, when he opened them, in the jaws. At each shot his head would +jerk with a quick toss of pain, and at the sight the blacks screamed +with delight that was primitively savage. After the last shot, when +Captain Jensen had brought the _Deliverance_ broadside to the bank, +the hippo ceased to move. The boat had not reached the shore before +the boys with the steel hawser were in the water; the gangplank was +run out, and the black soldiers and wood boys, with their knives, +were dancing about the hippo and hacking at his tail. Their idea was +to make him the more quickly bleed to death. I ran to the cabin for +more cartridges. It seemed an absurd precaution. I was as sure I had +the head of that hippo as I was sure that my own was still on my +neck. My only difficulty was whether to hang the head in the front +hall or in the dining-room. It might be rather too large for the +dining-room. That was all that troubled me. After three minutes, +when I was back on deck, the hippo still lay immovable. Certainly +twenty men were standing about him; three were sawing off his tail, +and the women were chanting triumphantly a song they used to sing in +the days when the men were allowed to hunt, and had returned +successful with food. + +On the bridge was Anfossi with his camera. Before the men had +surrounded the hippo he had had time to snap one picture of it. I +had just started after my camera, when from the blacks there was a +yell of alarm, of rage, and amazement. The hippo had opened his +eyes and raised his head. I shoved the boys out of the way, and, +putting the gun close to his head, fired pointblank. I wanted to put +him out of pain. I need not have distressed myself. The bullet +affected him no more than a quinine pill. What seemed chiefly to +concern him, what apparently had brought him back to life, was the +hacking at his tail. That was an indignity he could not brook. + +His expression, and he had a perfectly human expression, was one of +extreme annoyance and of some slight alarm, as though he were +muttering: "This is no place for _me_," and, without more ado, he +began to roll toward the river. Without killing some one, I could +not again use the rifle. The boys were close upon him, prying him +back with the gangplank, beating him with sticks of firewood, trying +to rope him with the steel hawser. On the bridge Captain Jensen and +Anfossi were giving orders in Danish and Italian, and on the bank I +swore in American. Everybody shoved and pushed and beat at the great +bulk, and the great bulk rolled steadily on. We might as well have +tried to budge the Fifth Avenue Hotel. He reached the bank, he +crushed it beneath him, and, like a suspension bridge, splashed into +the water. Even then, we who watched him thought he would stick fast +between the boat and the bank, that the hawser would hold him. But +he sank like a submarine, and we stood gaping at the muddy water and +saw him no more. When I recovered from my first rage I was glad he +was still alive to float in the sun and puff and blow and open his +great jaws in a luxurious yawn. I could imagine his joining his +friends after his meeting with us, and remarking in reference to our +bullets: "I find the mosquitoes are quite bad this morning." + +With this chapter is published the photograph Anfossi took, from the +deck of the steamer, of our hippo--the hippo that was too stupid to +know when he was dead. It is not a good photograph, but of our hippo +it is all we have to show. I am still undecided whether to hang it +in the hall or the dining-room. + + [Illustration: The Hippopotamus that Did Not Know He Was Dead.] + +The days I spent on my trip up the river were of delightful +sameness, sunshine by day, with the great panorama drifting past, +and quiet nights of moonlight. For diversion, there were many +hippos, crocodiles, and monkeys, and, though we saw only their +tracks and heard them only in the jungle, great elephants. And +innumerable strange birds--egrets, eagles, gray parrots, crimson +cranes, and giant flamingoes--as tall as a man and from tip to tip +measuring eight feet. + +Each day the programme was the same. The arrival at the wood post, +where we were given only excuses and no wood, and where once or +twice we unloaded blue cloth and bags of salt, which is the currency +of the Upper Congo, and the halt for hours to cut wood in the +forest. + +Once we stopped at a mission and noted the contrast it made with the +bare, unkempt posts of the State. It was the Catholic mission at +Wombali, and it was a beauty spot of flowers, thatched houses, +grass, and vegetables. There was a brickyard, and schools, and +sewing-machines, and the blacks, instead of scowling at us, nodded +and smiled and looked happy and contented. The Father was a great +red-bearded giant, who seemed to have still stored up in him all the +energy of the North. While the steamer was unloaded he raced me +over the vegetable garden and showed me his farm. I had seen other +of the Catholic Missions, and I spoke of how well they looked, of +the signs they gave of hard work, and of consideration for the +blacks. + +"I am not of that Order," the Father said gravely. He was speaking +in English, and added, as though he expected some one to resent it: +"We are Jesuits." No one resented it, and he added: "We have our +Order in your country. Do you know Fordham College?" + +Did I know it? If you are trying to find our farm, the automobile +book tells you to leave Fordham College on your left after Jerome +Avenue. + +"Of course, I know it," I said. "They have one of the best baseball +nines near New York; they play the Giants every spring." + +The Reverend Father started. + +"They play with Giants!" he gasped. + +I did not know how to say "baseball nines" in French, but at least +he was assured that whatever it was, it was one of the best near New +York. + +Then Captain Jensen's little black boy ran up to tell me the +steamer was waiting, and began in Bangalese to beg something of the +Father. The priest smiled and left us, returning with a rosary and +crucifix, which the boy hung round his neck, and then knelt, and the +red-bearded Father laid his fingers on the boy's kinky head. He was +a very happy boy over his new possession, and it was much coveted by +all the others. One of the black mammies, to ward off evil from the +little naked baby at her breast, offered an arm's length of blue +cloth for "the White Man's fetish." + + [Illustration: The Jesuit Brothers at the Wombali Mission.] + +My voyage up the Kasai ended at Dima, the headquarters of the Kasai +Concession. I had been told that at Dima I would find a rubber +plantation, and I had gone there to see it. I found that the +plantation was four days distant, and that the boat for the +plantation did not start for six days. I also had been told by the +English missionaries at Dima, that I would find an American mission. +When I reached Dima I learned that the American mission was at a +station further up the river, which could not be reached sooner than +a month. That is the sort of information upon which in the Congo +one is forced to regulate his movements. As there was at Dima +neither mission nor plantation, and as the only boat that would +leave it in ten days was departing the next morning, I remained +there only one night. It was a place cut out of the jungle, two +hundred yards square, and of all stations I saw in the Congo, the +best managed. It is the repair shop for the steamers belonging to +the Kasai Concession, as well as the headquarters of the company and +the residence of the director, M. Dryepoint. He and Van Damme seemed +to be the most popular officials in the Congo. M. Dryepoint was up +the river, so I did not meet him, but I was most courteously and +hospitably entertained by M. Fumière. He gave me a whole house to +myself, and personally showed me over his small kingdom. All the +houses were of brick, and the paths and roads were covered with +gravel and lined with flowers. Nothing in the Congo is more curious +than this pretty town of suburban villas and orderly machine shops; +with the muddy river for a street and the impenetrable jungle for a +back yard. The home of the director at Dima is the proud boast of +the entire Congo. And all they say of it is true. It did have a +billiard table and ice, and a piano, and M. Fumière invited me to +join his friends at an excellent dinner. In furnishing this +celebrated house, the idea had apparently been to place in it the +things one would least expect to find in the jungle, or, without +wishing to be ungracious, anywhere. So, although there are no women +at Dima, there are great mirrors in brass frames, chandeliers of +glass with festoons and pendants of glass, metal lamps with shades +of every color, painted plaster statuettes and carved silk-covered +chairs. In the red glow of the lamps, surrounded by these Belgian +atrocities, M. Fumière sat down to the pianola. The heat of Africa +filled the room; on one side we could have touched the jungle, on +the other in the river the hippopotamus puffed and snorted. M. +Fumière pulled out the stops, and upon the heat and silence of the +night, floated the "Evening Star," Mascagni's "Intermezzo," and +"Chin-chin Chinaman." + +Next morning I left for Leopoldville in a boat much larger than the +_Deliverance_, but with none of her cheer or good-fellowship. This +boat was run by the black wife of the captain. Trailing her velvet +gown, and cleaning her teeth with a stick of wood, she penetrated to +every part of the steamer, making discipline impossible and driving +the crew out of control. + +I was glad to escape at Kinchassa to the clean and homelike bungalow +and beautiful gardens of the only Englishman still in the employ of +the State, Mr. Cuthbert Malet, who gave me hospitably of his scanty +store of "Scotch," and, what was even more of a sacrifice, of his +precious handful of eggs. A week later I was again in Boma, waiting +for the _Nigeria_ to take me back to Liverpool. + +Before returning to the West Coast and leaving the subject of the +Congo, I wish to testify to what seemed to me the enormously +important work that is being done by the missionaries. I am not +always an admirer of the missionary. Some of those one meets in +China and Japan seem to be taking much more interest in their own +bodies than in the souls of others. But, in the Congo, almost the +only people who are working in behalf of the natives are those +attached to the missions. Because they bear witness against Leopold, +much is said by his hired men and press agents against them. But +they are deserving of great praise. Some of them are narrow and +bigoted, and one could wish they were much more tolerant of their +white brothers in exile, but compared with the good they do, these +faults count for nothing. It is due to them that Europe and the +United States know the truth about the Congo. They were the first to +bear witness, and the hazardous work they still are doing for their +fellow men is honest, practical Christianity. + + + + +VI + +OLD CALABAR + + +While I was up the Congo and the Kasai rivers, Mrs. Davis had +remained at Boma, and when I rejoined her, we booked passage home on +the _Nigeria_. We chose the _Nigeria_, which is an Elder-Dempster +freight and passenger steamer, in preference to the fast mail +steamer because of the ports of the West Coast we wished to see as +many as possible. And, on her six weeks' voyage to Liverpool, the +_Nigeria_ promised to spend as much time at anchor as at sea. On the +Coast it is a more serious matter to reserve a cabin than in New +York. You do not stop at an uptown office, and on a diagram of the +ship's insides, as though you were playing roulette, point at a +number. Instead, as you are to occupy your cabin, not for one, but +for six, weeks, you search, as vigilantly as a navy officer looking +for contraband, the ship herself and each cabin. + +But going aboard was a simple ceremony. The Hôtel Splendide stands +on the bank of the Congo River. After saying "Good-by" to her +proprietor, I walked to the edge of the water and waved my helmet. +In the Congo, a white man standing in the sun without a hat is a +spectacle sufficiently thrilling to excite the attention of all, and +at once Captain Hughes of the _Nigeria_ sent a cargo boat to the +rescue, and on the shoulders of naked Kroo boys Mrs. Davis and the +maid, and the trunks, spears, tents, bathtubs, carved idols, native +mats, and a live mongoos were dropped into it, and we were paddled +to the gangway. + +"If that's all, we might as well get under way," said Captain +Hughes. The anchor chains creaked, from the bank the proprietor of +the Splendide waved his hand, and the long voyage to Liverpool had +begun. It was as casual as halting and starting a cable-car. + +According to schedule, after leaving the Congo, we should have gone +south and touched at Loanda. But on this voyage, outward bound, the +_Nigeria_ had carried, to help build the railroad at Lobito Bay, a +deckload of camels. They had proved trying passengers, and instead +of first touching at the Congo, Captain Hughes had continued on +south and put them ashore. So we were robbed of seeing both Loanda +and the camels. + +This line, until Calabar is reached, carries but few passengers, +and, except to receive cargo, the ship is not fully in commission. +During this first week she is painted, and holystoned, her carpets +are beaten, her cabins scrubbed and aired, and the passengers mess +with the officers. So, of the ship's life, we acquired an intimate +knowledge, her interests became our own, and the necessity of +feeding her gaping holds with cargo was personal and acute. On a +transatlantic steamer, when once the hatches are down, the captain +need think only of navigation; on these coasters, the hatches never +are down, and the captain, that sort of captain dear to the heart of +the owners, is the man who fills the holds. + +A skipper going ashore to drum up trade was a novel spectacle. +Imagine the captain of one of the Atlantic greyhounds prying among +the warehouses on West Street, demanding of the merchants: +"Anything going my way, this trip?" He would scorn to do it. Before +his passengers have passed the custom officers, he is in mufti, and +on his way to his villa on Brooklyn Heights, or to the Lambs Club, +and until the Blue Peter is again at the fore, little he cares for +passengers, mails, or cargo. But the captain of a "coaster" must be +sailor and trader, too. He is expected to navigate a coast, the +latest chart of which is dated somewhere near 1830, and at which the +waves rush in walls of spray, sometimes as high as a three-story +house. He must speak all the known languages of Europe, and all the +unknown tongues of innumerable black brothers. At each port he must +entertain out of his own pocket the agents of all the trading +houses, and, in his head, he must keep the market price, "when laid +down in Liverpool," of mahogany, copra, copal, rubber, palm oil, and +ivory. To see that the agent has not overlooked a few bags of ground +nuts, or a dozen puncheons of oil, he must go on shore and peer into +the compound of each factory, and on board he must keep peace +between the Kroo boys and the black deck passengers, and see that +the white passengers with a temperature of 105, do not drink more +than is good for them. At least, those are a few of the duties the +captains on the ships controlled by Sir Alfred Jones, who is Elder +and Dempster, are expected to perform. No wonder Sir Alfred is +popular. + +Our first port of call was Landana, in Portuguese territory, but two +ships of the Woermann Line were there ahead of us and had gobbled up +all the freight. So we could but up anchor and proceed to +Libreville, formerly the capital of the French Congo. At five in the +morning by the light of a ship's lantern, we were paddled ashore to +drum up trade. We found two traders, Ives and Thomas, who had +waiting for the _Nigeria_ at the mouth of the Gabun River six +hundred logs of mahogany, and, in consequence, there was general +rejoicing, and Scotch and "sparklets," and even music from a German +music-box that would burst into song only after it had been fed with +a copper. One of the clerks said that Ives had forgotten how to +extract the coppers and in consequence was using the music-box as a +savings bank. + +In the French Congo the natives are permitted to trade; in the +Congo Free State they are not, or, rather, they have nothing with +which to trade, and the contrast between the empty "factories" of +the Congo and those of Libreville, crowded with natives buying and +selling, was remarkable. There also was a conspicuous difference in +the quality and variety of the goods. In Leopold's Congo "trade" +goods is a term of contempt. It describes articles manufactured only +for those who have no choice and must accept whatever is offered. +When your customers must take what you please to give them the +quality of your goods is likely to deteriorate. Salt of the poorest +grade, gaudy fabrics that neither "wear" nor "wash," bars of coarse +soap (the native is continually washing his single strip of cloth), +and axe-heads made of iron, are what Leopold thinks are a fair +exchange for the forced labor of the black. + +But the articles I found in the factories in Libreville were what, +in the Congo, are called "white man's goods" and were of excellent +quality and in great variety. There were even French novels and +cigars. Some of the latter, called the Young American on account of +the name and the flag on the lid, tempted me, until I saw they were +manufactured by Dusseldorffer and Vanderswassen, and one suspected +Rotterdam. + +In Ives's factory I saw for the first time a "trade" rifle, or Tower +musket. In the vernacular of the Coast, they are "gas-pipe" guns. +They are put together in England, and to a white man are a most +terrifying weapon. The original Tower muskets, such as, in the days +of '76, were hung over the fireplace of the forefathers of the Sons +of the Revolution, were manufactured in England, and stamped with +the word "Tower," and for the reigning king G.R. I suppose at that +date at the Tower of London there was an arsenal; but I am ready to +be corrected. To-day the guns are manufactured at Birmingham, but +they still have the flint lock, and still are stamped with the word +"Tower" and the royal crown over the letters G.R., and with the +arrow which is supposed to mark the property of the government. The +barrel is three feet four inches long, and the bore is that of an +artesian well. The native fills four inches of this cavity with +powder and the remaining three feet with rusty nails, barbed wire, +leaden slugs, and the legs and broken parts of iron pots. An officer +of the W.A.F.F.'s, in a fight in the bush in South Nigeria, had one +of these things fired at him from a distance of fifteen feet. He +told me all that saved him was that when the native pulled the +trigger the recoil of the gun "kicked" the muzzle two feet in the +air and the native ten feet into the bush. I bought a Tower rifle at +the trade price, a pound, and brought it home. But although my +friends have offered to back either end of the gun as being the more +destructive, we have found no one with a sufficient sporting spirit +to determine the point. + +Libreville is a very pretty town, but when it was laid out the +surveyors just missed placing the Equator in its main street. It is +easy to understand why with such a live wire in the vicinity +Libreville is warm. From the same cause it also is rich in flowers, +vines, and trees growing in generous, undisciplined abundance, +making of Libreville one vast botanical garden, and burying the town +and its bungalows under screens of green and branches of scarlet +and purple flowers. Close to the surf runs an avenue bordered by +giant cocoanut palms and, after the sun is down, this is the +fashionable promenade. Here every evening may be seen in their +freshest linen the six married white men of Libreville, and, in the +latest Paris frocks, the six married ladies, while from the verandas +of the factories that line the sea front and from under the paper +lanterns of the Café Guion the clerks and traders sip their absinthe +and play dominoes, and cast envious glances at the six fortunate +fellow exiles. + +For several days we lay a few miles south of Libreville, off the +mouth of the Gabun River, taking in the logs of mahogany. It was a +continuous performance of the greatest interest. I still do not +understand why all those engaged in it were not drowned, or pounded +to a pulp. Just before we touched at the Gabun River, two tramp +steamers, chartered by Americans, carried off a full cargo of this +mahogany to the States. It was an experiment the result of which the +traders of Libreville are awaiting with interest. The mahogany that +the reader sees in America probably comes from Hayti, Cuba, or +Belize, and is of much finer quality than that of the Gabun River, +which latter is used for making what the trade calls "fancy" +cigar-boxes and cheap furniture. But before it becomes a cigar-box +it passes through many adventures. Weeks before the steamer arrives +the trader, followed by his black boys, explores the jungle and +blazes the trees. Then the boys cut trails through the forest, and, +using logs for rollers, drag and push the tree trunks to the bank of +the river. There the tree is cut into huge cubes, weighing about a +ton, and measuring twelve to fifteen feet in length and three feet +across each face. A boy can "shape" one of these logs in a day. + +Although his pay varies according to whether the tributaries of the +river are full or low, so making the moving of the logs easy or +difficult, he can earn about three pounds ten shillings a month, +paid in cash. Compared with the eighty cents a month paid only a few +miles away in the Congo Free State, and in "trade" goods, these are +good wages. When the log is shaped the mark of the trader is branded +on it with an iron, just as we brand cattle, and it is turned loose +on the river. At the mouth of the river there is little danger of +the log escaping, for the waves are stronger than the tide, and +drive the logs upon the shore. There, in the surf, we found these +tons of mahogany pounding against each other. In the ship's +steam-launch were iron chains, a hundred yards long, to which, at +intervals, were fastened "dogs," or spikes. These spikes were driven +into the end of a log, the brand upon the log was noted by the +captain and trader, and the logs, chained together like the vertebræ +of a great sea serpent, were towed to the ship's side. There they +were made fast, and three Kroo boys knocked the spike out of each +log, warped a chain around it, and made fast that chain to the steel +hawser of the winch. As it was drawn to the deck a Senegalese +soldier, acting for the Customs, gave it a second blow with a +branding hammer, and, thundering and smashing, it swung into the +hold. + + [Illustration: There, in the Surf, We Found These Tons of Mahogany, + Pounding Against Each Other.] + +In the "round up" of the logs the star performers were the three +Kroo boys at the ship's side. For days, in fascinated horror, the +six passengers watched them, prayed for them, and made bets as to +which would be the first to die. One understands that a Kroo boy is +as much at home in the sea as on shore, but these boys were neither +in the sea nor on shore. They were balancing themselves on blocks of +slippery wood that weighed a ton, but which were hurled about by the +great waves as though they were life-belts. All night the hammering +of the logs made the ship echo like a monster drum, and all day +without an instant's pause each log reared and pitched, spun like a +barrel, dived like a porpoise, or, broadside, battered itself +against the iron plates. But, no matter what tricks it played, a +Kroo boy rode it as easily as though it were a horse in a +merry-go-round. + +It was a wonderful exhibition. It furnished all the thrills that one +gets when watching a cowboy on a bucking bronco, or a trained seal. +Again and again a log, in wicked conspiracy with another log, would +plan to entice a Kroo boy between them, and smash him. At the sight +the passengers would shriek a warning, the boy would dive between +the logs, and a mass of twelve hundred pounds of mahogany would +crash against a mass weighing fifteen hundred with a report like +colliding freight cars. + +And then, as, breathless, we waited to see what once was a Kroo boy +float to the surface, he would appear sputtering and grinning, and +saying to us as clearly as a Kroo smile can say it: "He never +touched me!" + + [Illustration: A Log of Mahogany Jammed in the Anchor Chains.] + +Two days after we had stored away the mahogany we anchored off +Duala, the capital of the German Cameroons. Duala is built upon a +high cliff, and from the water the white and yellow buildings with +many pillars gave it the appearance of a city. Instead, it is a +clean, pretty town. With the German habit of order, it has been laid +out like barracks, but with many gardens, well-kept, shaded streets, +and high, cool houses, scientifically planned to meet the +necessities of the tropics. At Duala the white traders and officials +were plump and cheerful looking, and in the air there was more of +prosperity than fever. The black and white sentry boxes and the +native soldiers practising the stork march of the Kaiser's army were +signs of a rigid military rule, but the signs of Germany's efforts +in trade were more conspicuous. Nowhere on the coast did we see as +at Duala such gorgeous offices as those of the great trading house +of Woermann, the hated rivals of "Sir Alfred," such carved +furniture, such shining brass railings, and nowhere else did we see +plate-glass windows, in which, with unceasing wonder, the natives +stared at reflections of their own persons. In the river there was a +private dry dock of the Woermanns, and along the wharfs for acres +was lumber for the Woermanns, boxes of trade goods, puncheons and +casks for the Woermanns, private cooper shops and private machine +shops and private banks for the Woermanns. The house flag of the +Woermanns became as significant as that of a reigning sovereign. One +felt inclined to salute it. + +The success of the German merchant on the East Coast and over all +the world appears to be a question of character. He is patient, +methodical, painstaking; it is his habit of industry that is helping +him to close port after port to English, French, and American goods. +The German clerks do not go to the East Coast or to China and South +America to drink absinthe or whiskey, or to play dominoes or +cricket. They work twice as long as do the other white men, and +during those longer office hours they toil twice as hard. One of our +passengers was a German agent returning for his vacation. I used to +work in the smoking-room and he always was at the next table, also +at work, on his ledgers and account books. He was so industrious +that he bored me, and one day I asked him why, instead of spoiling +his vacation with work, he had not balanced his books before he left +the Coast. + +"It is an error," he said; "I can not find him." And he explained +that in the record of his three years' stewardship, which he was to +turn over to the directors in Berlin, there was somewhere a mistake +of a sixpence. + +"But," I protested, "what's sixpence to you? You drink champagne all +day. You begin at nine in the morning!" + +"I drink champagne," said the clerk, "because for three years I have +myself alone in the bush lived, but, can I to my directors go with a +book not balanced?" He laid his hand upon his heart and shook his +head. "It is my heart that tells me 'No!'" + +After three weeks he gave a shout, his face blushed with pleasure, +and actual tears were in his eyes. He had dug out the error, and at +once he celebrated the recovery of the single sixpence by giving me +twenty-four shillings' worth of champagne. It is a true story, and +illustrates, I think, the training and method of the German mind, of +the industry of the merchants who are trading over all the seas. As +a rule the "trade" goods "made in Germany" are "shoddy." They do not +compare in quality with those of England or the States; in every +foreign port you will find that the English linen is the best, that +the American agricultural implements, American hardware, saws, axes, +machetes, are superior to those manufactured in any other country. +But the German, though his goods are poorer, cuts the coat to please +the customer. He studies the wishes of the man who is to pay. He is +not the one who says: "Take it, or leave it." + +The agent of one of the largest English firms on the Ivory Coast, +one that started by trading in slaves, said to me: "Our largest +shipment to this coast is gin. This is a French colony, and if the +French traders and I were patriots instead of merchants we would +buy from our own people, but we buy from the Germans, because trade +follows no flag. They make a gin out of potatoes colored with rum or +gin, and label it 'Demerara' and 'Jamaica.' They sell it to us on +the wharf at Antwerp for ninepence a gallon, and we sell it at nine +francs per dozen bottles. Germany is taking our trade from us +because she undersells us, and because her merchants don't wait for +trade to come to them, but go after it. Before the Woermann boat is +due their agent here will come to my factory and spy out all I have +in my compound. 'Why don't you ship those logs with us?' he'll ask. + +"'Can't spare the boys to carry them to the beach,' I'll say. + +"'I'll furnish the boys,' he'll answer. That's the German way. + +"The Elder-Dempster boats lie three miles out at sea and blow a +whistle at us. They act as though by carrying our freight they were +doing us a favor. These German ships, to save you the long pull, +anchor close to the beach and lend you their own shore boats and +their own boys to work your cargo. And if you give them a few tons +to carry, like as not they'll 'dash' you to a case of 'fizz.' And +meanwhile the English captain is lying outside the bar tooting his +whistle and wanting to know if you think he's going to run his ship +aground for a few bags of rotten kernels. And he can't see, and the +people at home can't see, why the Germans are crowding us off the +Coast." + +Just outside of Duala, in the native village of Bell Town, is the +palace and the harem of the ruler of the tribe that gave its name to +the country, Mango Bell, King of the Cameroons. His brother, Prince +William, sells photographs and "souvenirs." We bought photographs, +and on the strength of that hinted at a presentation at court. +Brother William seemed doubtful, so we bought enough postal cards to +establish us as _étrangers de distinction_, and he sent up our +names. With Pivani, Hatton & Cookson's chief clerk we were escorted +to the royal presence. The palace is a fantastic, pagoda-like +building of three stories; and furnished with many mirrors, carved +oak sideboards, and lamp-shades of colored glass. Mango Bell, King +of the Cameroons, sounds like a character in a comic opera, but the +king was an extremely serious, tall, handsome, and self-respecting +negro. Having been educated in England, he spoke much more correct +English than any of us. Of the few "Kings I Have Met," both tame and +wild, his manners were the most charming. Back of the palace is an +enormously long building under one roof. Here live his thirty-five +queens. To them we were not presented. + + [Illustration: The Palace of the King of the Cameroons.] + +Prince William asked me if I knew where in America there was a +street called Fifth Avenue. I suggested New York. He referred to a +large Bible, and finding, much to his surprise, that my guess was +correct, commissioned me to buy him, from a firm on that street, +just such another Bible as the one in his hand. He forgot to give me +the money to pay for it, but loaned us a half-dozen little princes +to bear our purchases to the wharf. For this service their royal +highnesses graciously condescended to receive a small "dash," and +with the chief clerk were especially delighted. He, being a +sleight-of-hand artist, apparently took five-franc pieces out of +their Sunday clothes and from their kinky hair. When we left they +were rapidly disrobing to find if any more five-franc pieces were +concealed about their persons. + +The morning after we sailed from Duala we anchored in the river in +front of Calabar, the capital of Southern Nigeria. Of all the ports +at which we touched on the Coast, Calabar was the hottest, the best +looking, and the best administered. It is a model colony, but to +bring it to the state it now enjoys has cost sums of money entirely +out of proportion to those the colony has earned. The money has been +spent in cutting down the jungle, filling in swamps that breed +mosquitoes and fever, and in laying out gravel walks, water mains, +and open cement gutters, and in erecting model hospitals, barracks, +and administrative offices. Even grass has been made to grow, and +the high bluff upon which are situated the homes of the white +officials and Government House has been trimmed and cultivated and +tamed until it looks like an English park. It is a complete +imitation, even to golf links and tennis courts. But the fight that +has been made against the jungle has not stopped with golf links. In +1896 the death rate was ten men out of every hundred. That +corresponds to what in warfare is a decimating fire, upon which an +officer, without danger of reproof, may withdraw his men. But at +Calabar the English doctors did not withdraw, and now the death rate +is as low as three out of every hundred. That Calabar, or any part +of the West Coast, will ever be made entirely healthy is doubtful. +Man can cut down a forest and fill in a swamp, but he can not reach +up, as to a gas jet, and turn off the sun. And at Calabar, even at +night when the sun has turned itself off, the humidity and the heat +leave one sweating, tossing, and gasping for air. In Calabar the +first thing a white man learns is not to take any liberties with the +sun. When he dresses, eats, drinks, and moves about the sun is as +constantly on his mind, as it is on the face of the sun-dial. The +chief ascent to the top of the bluff where the white people live is +up a steep cement walk about eighty yards long. At the foot of this +a white man will be met by four hammock-bearers, and you will see +him get into the hammock and be carried in it the eighty yards. + +For even that short distance he is taking no chances. But while he +nurses his vitality and cares for his health he does not use the sun +as an excuse for laziness or for slipshod work. I have never seen a +place in the tropics where, in spite of the handicap of damp, fierce +heat, the officers and civil officials are so keenly and constantly +employed, where the bright work was so bright, and the whitewash so +white. + +Out at the barracks of the West African Frontier Force, the +W.A.F.F.'s, the officers, instead of from the shade of the veranda +watching the non-coms. teach a native the manual, were themselves at +work, and each was howling orders at the black recruits and smashing +a gun against his hip and shoulder as smartly as a drill sergeant. I +found the standard maintained at Calabar the more interesting +because the men were almost entirely their own audience. If they +make the place healthy, and attractive-looking, and dress for +dinner, and shy at cocktails, and insist that their tan shoes shall +glow like meershaum pipes, it is not because of the refining +presence of lovely women, but because the men themselves like things +that way. The men of Calabar have learned that when the sun is at +110, morals, like material things, disintegrate, and that, though +the temptation is to go about in bath-room slippers and pajamas, one +is wiser to bolster up his drenched and drooping spirit with a stiff +shirt front and a mess jacket. They tell that in a bush station in +upper Nigeria, one officer got his D.S.O. because with an audience +of only a white sergeant he persisted in a habit of shaving twice a +day. + + [Illustration: The Home of the Thirty Queens of King Mango Bell.] + +There are very few women in Calabar. There are three or four who are +wives of officials, two nurses employed by the government, and the +Mother Superior and Sisters of the Order of St. Joseph, and, of +course, all of them are great belles. For the Sisters, especially +the officers, the government people, the traders, the natives, even +the rival missionaries, have the most tremendous respect and +admiration. The sacrifice of the woman who, to be near her husband +on the Coast, consents to sicken and fade and grow old before her +time, and of the nurse who, to preserve the health of others, risks +her own, is very great; but the sacrifice of the Sisters, who have +renounced all thought of home and husband, and who have exiled +themselves to this steaming swamp-land, seems the most unselfish. In +order to support the 150 little black boys and girls who are at +school at the mission, the Sisters rob themselves of everything +except the little that will keep them alive. Two, in addition to +their work at the mission, act as nurses in the English hospital, +and for that they receive together $600. This forms the sole regular +income of the five women; for each $120 a year. With anything else +that is given them in charity, they buy supplies for the little +converts. They live in a house of sandstone and zinc that holds the +heat like a flat-iron, they are obliged to wear a uniform that is of +material and fashion so unsuited to the tropics that Dr. Chichester, +in charge of the hospital, has written in protest against it to +Rome, and on many days they fast, not because the Church bids them +so to do, but because they have no food. And with it all, these five +gentlewomen are always eager, cheerful, sweet of temper, and a +living blessing to all who meet them. What now troubles them is that +they have no room to accommodate the many young heathen who come to +them to be taught to wear clothes, and to be good little boys and +girls. This is causing the Sisters great distress. Any one who does +not believe in that selfish theory, that charity begins at home, but +who would like to help to spread Christianity in darkest Africa and +give happiness to five noble women, who are giving their lives for +others, should send a postal money order to Marie T. Martin, the +Reverend Mother Superior of the Catholic Mission of Old Calabar, +Southern Nigeria. + +And if you are going to do it, as they say in the advertising pages, +"Do it now!" + + [Illustration: The Mother Superior and Sisters of St. Joseph and + Their Converts at Old Calabar.] + +At Calabar there is a royal prisoner, the King of Benin. He is not +an agreeable king like His Majesty of the Cameroons, but a grossly +fat, sensual-looking young man, who, a few years ago, when he was at +war with the English, made "ju ju" against them by sacrificing three +hundred maidens, his idea being that the ju ju would drive the +English out of Benin. It was poor ju ju, for it drove the young man +himself out of Benin, and now he is a king in exile. As far as I +could see, the social position of the king is insecure, and +certainly in Calabar he does not move in the first circles. One +afternoon, when the four or five ladies of Calabar and Mr. Bedwell, +the Acting Commissioner, and the officers of the W.A.F.F.'s were at +the clubhouse having ice-drinks, the king at the head of a retinue +of cabinet officers, high priests, and wives bore down upon the +club-house with the evident intention of inviting himself to tea. +Personally, I should like to have met a young man who could murder +three hundred girls and worry over it so little that he had not lost +one of his three hundred pounds, but the others were considerably +annoyed and sent an A.D.C. to tell him to "Move on!" as though he +were an organ-grinder, or a performing bear. + +"These kings," exclaimed a subaltern of the W.A.F.F.'s, indignantly, +"are trying to push in everywhere!" + +When we departed from Calabar, the only thing that reconciled me to +leaving it and its charming people, was the fact that when the ship +moved there was a breeze. While at anchor in the river I had found +that not being able to breathe by day or to sleep by night in time +is trying, even to the stoutest constitution. + +One of the married ladies of Calabar, her husband, an officer of +the W.A.F.F.'s, and the captain of the police sailed on the +_Nigeria_ "on leave," and all Calabar came down to do them honor. +There was the commissioner's gig, and the marine captain's gig, and +the police captain's gig, and the gig from "Matilda's," the English +trading house, and one from the Dutch house and the French house, +and each gig was manned by black boys in beautiful uniforms and +fezzes, and each crew fought to tie up to the foot of the +accommodation ladder. It was as gay as a regatta. On the +quarter-deck the officers drank champagne, in the captain's cabin +Hughes treated the traders to beer, in the "square" the non-coms. of +the W.A.F.F.'s drank ale. The men who were going away on leave tried +not to look too happy, and those who were going back to the shore +drank deep and tried not to appear too carelessly gay. A billet on +the West Coast is regarded by the man who accepts it as a sort of +sporting proposition, as a game of three innings of nine months +each, during which he matches his health against the Coast. If he +lives he wins; if he dies the Coast wins. + +After Calabar, at each port off which we anchored, at Ponny, +Focardos, Lagos, Accra, Cape Coast Castle, and Sekonni, it was +always the same. Always there came over the side the man going +"Home," the man who had fought with the Coast and won. He was as +excited, as jubilant as a prisoner sentenced to death who had +escaped his executioners. And always the heartiest in their +congratulations were the men who were left behind, his brother +officers, or his fellow traders, the men of the Sun Hat Brigade, in +their unofficial uniforms, in shirtwaists, broad belts from which +dangled keys and a whistle, beautifully polished tan boots, and with +a wand-like whip or stick of elephant hide. They swarmed the decks +and overwhelmed the escaping refugee with good wishes. He had +cheated their common enemy. By merely keeping alive he had achieved +a glorious victory. In their eyes he had performed a feat of +endurance like swimming the English Channel. They crowded to +congratulate him as people at the pit-mouth congratulate the +entombed miner, who, after many days of breathing noisome gases, +drinks the pure air. Even the black boys seem to feel the triumph +of the white master, and their paddles never flashed so bravely, and +their songs never rang so wildly, as when they were racing him away +from the brooding Coast with its poisonous vapors toward the big +white ship that meant health and home. + +Although most of the ports we saw only from across a mile or two of +breakers, they always sent us something of interest. Sometimes all +the male passengers came on board drunk. With the miners of the Gold +Coast and the "Palm Oil Ruffians" it used to be a matter of +etiquette not to leave the Coast in any other condition. Not so to +celebrate your escape seemed ungenerous and ungrateful. At Sekondi +one of the miners from Ashanti was so completely drunk, that he was +swung over the side, tied up like a plum-pudding, in a bag. + +When he emerged from the bag his expression of polite inquiry was +one with which all could sympathize. To lose consciousness on the +veranda of a café, and awake with a bump on the deck of a steamer +many miles at sea, must strengthen one's belief in magic carpets. + +Another entertainment for the white passengers was when the boat +boys fought for the black passengers as they were lowered in the +mammy-chair. As a rule, in the boats from shore, there were twelve +boys to paddle and three or four extra men to handle and unhook the +mammy-chair and the luggage. While the boys with the paddles +manoeuvred to bring their boat next to the ship's side, the extra +boys tried to pull their rivals overboard, dragging their hands from +ropes and gunwales, and beating them with paddles. They did this +while every second the boat under them was spinning in the air or +diving ten feet into the hollow of the waves, and trying to smash +itself and every other boat into driftwood. From the deck the second +officer would swing a mammy-chair over the side with the idea of +dropping it into one of these boats. But before the chair could be +lowered, a rival boat would shove the first one away, and with a +third boat would be fighting for its place. Meanwhile, high above +the angry sea, the chair and its cargo of black women would be +twirling like a weathercock and banging against the ship's side. The +mammies were too terrified to scream, but the ship's officers +yelled and swore, the boat's crews shrieked, and the black babies +howled. Each baby was strapped between the shoulders of the mother. +A mammy-chair is like one of those two-seated swings in which people +sit facing one another. If to the shoulders of each person in the +swing was tied a baby, it is obvious that should the swing bump into +anything, the baby would get the worst of it. That is what happened +in the mammy-chair. Every time the chair spun around, the head of a +baby would come "crack!" against the ship's side. So the babies +howled, and no one of the ship's passengers, crowded six deep along +the rail, blamed them. The skull of the Ethiopian may be hard, but +it is most unfair to be swathed like a mummy so that you can neither +kick nor strike back, and then have your head battered against a +five-thousand-ton ship. + +How the boys who paddled the shore boats live long enough to learn +how to handle them is a great puzzle. We were told that the method +was to take out one green boy with a crew of eleven experts. But how +did the original eleven become experts? At Accra, where the waves +are very high and rough, are the best boat boys on the coast. We +watched the Custom House boat fight her way across the two miles of +surf to the shore. The fight lasted two hours. It was as thrilling +as watching a man cross Niagara Falls on a tight-rope. The greater +part of the two hours the boat stood straight in the air, as though +it meant to shake the crew into the sea, and the rest of the time it +ran between walls of water ten feet high and was entirely lost to +sight. Two things about the paddling on the West Coast make it +peculiar; the boys sit, not on the thwarts, but on the gunwales, as +a woman rides a side-saddle, and in many parts of the coast the boys +use paddles shaped like a fork or a trident. One asks how, sitting +as they do, they are able to brace themselves, and how with their +forked paddles they obtained sufficient resistance. A coaster's +explanation of the split paddle was that the boys did not want any +more resistance than they could prevent. + + [Illustration: The Kroo Boys Sit, Not On the Thwarts, but On the + Gunwales, as a Woman Rides a Side Saddle.] + +There is no more royal manner of progress than when one of these +boats lifts you over the waves, with the boys chanting some wild +chorus, with their bare bodies glistening, their teeth and eyes +shining, the splendid muscles straining, and the dripping paddles +flashing like twelve mirrors. + +Some of the chiefs have canoes of as much as sixty men-power, +and when these men sing, and their bodies and voices are in +unison, a war canoe seems the only means of locomotion, and a +sixty-horse-power racing car becomes a vehicle suited only to the +newly rich. + +I knew I had left the West Coast when, the very night we sailed from +Sierra Leone, for greater comfort, I reached for a linen bed-spread +that during four stifling, reeking weeks had lain undisturbed at the +foot of the berth. During that time I had hated it as a monstrous +thing; as something as hot and heavy as a red flannel blanket, as a +buffalo robe. And when, on the following night, I found the +wind-screen was not in the air port, and that, nevertheless, I still +was alive, I knew we had passed out of reach of the Equator, and +that all that followed would be as conventional as the "trippers" +who joined us at the Canary Isles; and as familiar as the low, gray +skies, the green, rain-soaked hills, and the complaining Channel +gulls that convoyed us into Plymouth Harbor. + + + + +VII + +ALONG THE EAST COAST + + +Were a man picked up on a flying carpet and dropped without warning +into Lorenço Marquez, he might guess for a day before he could make +up his mind where he was, or determine to which nation the place +belonged. + +If he argued from the adobe houses with red-tiled roofs and walls of +cobalt blue, the palms, and the yellow custom-house, he might think +he was in Santiago; the Indian merchants in velvet and gold +embroideries seated in deep, dark shops which breathe out dry, +pungent odors, might take him back to Bombay; the Soudanese and +Egyptians in long blue night-gowns and freshly ironed fezzes would +remind him of Cairo; the dwarfish Portuguese soldiers, of Madeira, +Lisbon, and Madrid, and the black, bare-legged policemen in khaki +with great numerals on their chests, of Benin, Sierra Leone, or +Zanzibar. After he had noted these and the German, French, and +English merchants in white duck, and the Dutch man-of-warsmen, who +look like ship's stewards, the French marines in coal-scuttle +helmets, the British Jack-tars in their bare feet, and the native +Kaffir women, each wrapped in a single, gorgeous shawl with a black +baby peering from beneath her shoulder-blades, he would decide, by +using the deductive methods of Sherlock Holmes, that he was in the +Midway of the Chicago Fair. + +Several hundred years ago Da Gama sailed into Delagoa Bay and +founded the town of Lorenço Marquez, and since that time the +Portuguese have always felt that it is only due to him and to +themselves to remain there. They have great pride of race, and they +like the fact that they possess and govern a colony. So, up to the +present time, in spite of many temptations to dispose of it, they +have made the ownership of Delagoa Bay an article of their national +religion. But their national religion does not require of them to +improve their property. And to-day it is much as it was when the +sails of Da Gama's fleet first stirred its poisonous vapors. + +The harbor itself is an excellent one and the bay is twenty-two +miles along, but there is only one landing-pier, and that such a +pier as would be considered inconsistent with the dignity of the +Larchmont Yacht Club. To the town itself Portugal has been content +to contribute as her share the gatherers of taxes, collectors of +customs and dispensers of official seals. She is indifferent to the +fact that the bulk of general merchandise, wine, and machinery that +enter her port is brought there by foreigners. She only demands that +they buy her stamps. Her importance in her own colony is that of a +toll-gate at the entrance of a great city. + +Lorenço Marquez is not a spot which one would select for a home. +When I was first there, the deaths from fever were averaging fifteen +a day, and men who dined at the club one evening were buried +hurriedly before midnight, and when I returned in the winter months, +the fever had abated, but on the night we arrived twenty men were +robbed. The fact that we complained to the police about one of the +twenty robberies struck the commandant as an act of surprising and +unusual interest. We gathered from his manner that the citizens of +Lorenço Marquez look upon being robbed as a matter too personal and +selfish with which to trouble the police. It was perhaps credulous +of us, as our hotel was liberally labelled with notices warning its +patrons that "Owing to numerous robberies in this hotel, our guests +will please lock their doors." This was one of three hotels owned by +the same man. One of the others had been described to us as the +"tough" hotel, and at the other, a few weeks previous, a friend had +found a puff-adder barring his bedroom door. The choice was somewhat +difficult. + +On her way from Lorenço Marquez to Beira our ship, the _Kanzlar_, +kept close to the shore, and showed us low-lying banks of yellow +sand and coarse green bushes. There was none of the majesty of +outline which reaches from Table Bay to Durban, none of the blue +mountains of the Colony, nor the deeply wooded table-lands and great +inlets of Kaffraria. The rocks which stretch along the southern +coast and against which the waves break with a report like the +bursting of a lyddite shell, had disappeared, and along Gazaland and +the Portuguese territory only swamps and barren sand-hills +accompanied us in a monotonous yellow line. From the bay we saw +Beira as a long crescent of red-roofed houses, many of them of four +stories with verandas running around each story, like those of the +summer hotels along the Jersey coast. It is a town built upon the +sands, with a low stone breakwater, but without a pier or jetty, the +lack of which gives it a temporary, casual air as though it were +more a summer resort than the one port of entry for all Rhodesia. It +suggested Coney Island to one, and to others Asbury Park and the +board-walk at Atlantic City. When we found that in spite of her +Portuguese flags and naked blacks, Beira reminded us of nothing +except an American summer-resort, we set to discovering why this +should be, and decided it was because, after the red dust of the +Colony and the Transvaal, we saw again stretches of white sand, and +instead of corrugated zinc, flimsy houses of wood, which you felt +were only opened for the summer season and which for the rest of +the year remained boarded up against driven sands and equinoctial +gales. Beira need only to have added to her "Sea-View" and "Beach" +hotels, a few bathing-suits drying on a clothes-line, a tin-type +artist, and a merry-go-round, to make us feel perfectly at home. +Beira being the port on the Indian Ocean which feeds Mashonaland and +Matabeleland and the English settlers in and around Buluwayo and +Salisbury, English influence has proclaimed itself there in many +ways. When we touched, which was when the British soldiers were +moving up to Rhodesia, the place, in comparison with Lorenço +Marquez, was brisk, busy, and clean. Although both are ostensibly +Portuguese, Beira is to Lorenço Marquez what the cleanest street of +Greenwich Village, of New York City, is to "Hell's Kitchen" and the +Chinese Quarter. The houses were well swept and cool, the shops were +alluring, the streets were of clean shifting white sand, and the +sidewalks, of gray cement, were as well kept as a Philadelphia +doorstep. The most curious feature of Beira is her private tram-car +system. These cars run on tiny tracks which rise out of the sand +and extend from one end of the town to the other, with branch lines +running into the yards of shops and private houses. The motive power +for these cars is supplied by black boys who run behind and push +them. Their trucks are about half as large as those on the hand-cars +we see flying along our railroad tracks at home, worked by gangs of +Italian laborers. On some of the trucks there is only a bench, +others are shaded by awnings, and a few have carriage-lamps and +cushioned seats and carpets. Each of them is a private conveyance; +there is not one which can be hired by the public. When a merchant +wishes to go down town to the port, his black boys carry his private +tram-car from his garden and settle it on the rails, the merchant +seats himself, and the boys push him and his baby-carriage to +whatever part of the city he wishes to go. When his wife is out +shopping and stops at a store the boys lift her car into the sand in +order to make a clear track for any other car which may be coming +behind them. One would naturally suppose that with the tracks and +switch-boards and sidings already laid, the next step would be to +place cars upon them for the convenience of the public, but this is +not the case, and the tracks through the city are jealously reserved +for the individuals who tax themselves five pounds a year to extend +them and to keep them in repair. After the sleds on the island of +Madeira these private street-cars of Beira struck me as being the +most curious form of conveyance I had ever seen. + + [Illustration: Going Visiting in Her Private Tram-car at Beira.] + +Beira was occupied by the Companhia de Mozambique with the idea of +feeding Salisbury and Buluwayo from the north, and drawing away some +of the trade which at that time was monopolized by the merchants of +Cape Town and Durban. But the tse-tse fly belt lay between Beira on +the coast and the boundary of the Chartered Company's possessions, +and as neither oxen nor mules could live to cross this, it was +necessary, in order to compete with the Cape-Buluwayo line, to build +a railroad through the swamp and jungle. This road is now in +operation. It is two hundred and twenty miles in length, and in the +brief period of two months, during the long course of its progress +through the marshes, two hundred of the men working on it died of +fever. Some years ago, during a boundary dispute between the +Portuguese and the Chartered Company, there was a clash between the +Portuguese soldiers and the British South African police. How this +was settled and the honor of the Portuguese officials satisfied, +Kipling has told us in the delightful tale of "Judson and the +Empire." It was off Beira that Judson fished up a buoy and anchored +it over a sand-bar upon which he enticed the Portuguese gunboat. A +week before we touched at Beira, the Portuguese had rearranged all +the harbor buoys, but, after the casual habits of their race, had +made no mention of the fact. The result was that the _Kanzlar_ was +hung up for twenty-four hours. We tried to comfort ourselves by +thinking that we were undoubtedly occupying the same mud-bank which +had been used by the strategic Judson to further the course of +empire. + +The _Kanzlar_ could not cross the bar to go to Chinde, so the +_Adjutant_, which belongs to the same line and which was created for +these shallow waters, came to the _Kanzlar_, bringing Chinde with +her. She brought every white man in the port, and those who could +not come on board our ship remained contentedly on the _Adjutant_, +clinging to her rail as she alternately sank below, or was tossed +high above us. For three hours they smiled with satisfaction as +though they felt that to have escaped from Chinde, for even that +brief time, was sufficient recompense for a thorough ducking and the +pains of sea-sickness. On the bridge of the _Adjutant_, in white +duck and pith helmets, were the only respectable members of Chinde +society. We knew that they were the only respectable members of +Chinde society, because they told us so themselves. On her lower +deck she brought two French explorers, fully dressed for the part as +Tartarin of Tarascon might have dressed it in white havelocks and +gaiters buckled up to the thighs, and clasping express rifles in new +leather cases. From her engine-room came stokers from Egypt, and +from her forward deck Malays in fresh white linen, Mohammedans in +fez and turban, Portuguese officials, chiefly in decorations, Indian +coolies and Zanzibari boys, very black and very beautiful, who wound +and unwound long blue strips of cotton about their shoulders, or +ears, or thighs as the heat, or the nature of the work of unloading +required. Among these strange peoples were goats, as delicately +colored as a meerschaum pipe, and with the horns of our red deer, +strange white oxen with humps behind the shoulders, those that are +exhibited in cages at home as "sacred buffalo," but which here are +only patient beasts of burden, and gray monkeys, wildcats, snakes +and crocodiles in cages addressed to "Hagenbeck, Hamburg." The +freight was no less curious; assegais in bundles, horns stretching +for three feet from point to point, or rising straight, like +poignards; skins, ground-nuts, rubber, and heavy blocks of bees-wax +wrapped in coarse brown sacking, and which in time will burn before +the altars of Roman Catholic churches in Italy, Spain, and France. + +People of the "Bromide" class who run across a friend from their own +city in Paris will say, "Well, to think of meeting _you_ here. How +small the world is after all!" If they wish a better proof of how +really small it is, how closely it is knit together, how the +existence of one canning-house in Chicago supports twenty stores in +Durban, they must follow, not the missionary or the explorers, not +the punitive expeditions, but the man who wishes to buy, and the man +who brings something to sell. Trade is what has brought the +latitudes together and made the world the small department store it +is, and forced one part of it to know and to depend upon the other. + +The explorer tells you, "I was the first man to climb Kilamajaro." +"I was the first to cut a path from the shores of Lake Nyassa into +the Congo Basin." He even lectures about it, in front of a wet sheet +in the light of a stereopticon, and because he has added some miles +of territory to the known world, people buy his books and learned +societies place initials after his distinguished name. But before +his grandfather was born and long before he ever disturbed the +waters of Nyassa the Phoenicians and Arabs and Portuguese and men +of his own time and race had been there before him to buy ivory, +both white and black, to exchange beads and brass bars and +shaving-mirrors for the tusks of elephants, raw gold, copra, rubber, +and the feathers of the ostrich. Statesmen will modestly say that a +study of the map showed them how the course of empire must take its +way into this or that undiscovered wilderness, and that in +consequence, at their direction, armies marched to open these tracts +which but for their prescience would have remained a desert. But +that was not the real reason. A woman wanted three feathers to wear +at Buckingham Palace, and to oblige her a few unimaginative traders, +backed by a man who owned a tramp steamer, opened up the East Coast +of Africa; another wanted a sealskin sacque, and fleets of ships +faced floating ice under the Northern Lights. The bees of the Shire +Riverway help to illuminate the cathedrals of St. Peters and Notre +Dame, and back of Mozambique thousands of rubber-trees are being +planted to-day, because, at the other end of the globe, people want +tires for their automobiles; and because the fashionable ornament of +the natives of Swaziland is, for no reason, no longer blue-glass +beads, manufacturers of beads in Switzerland and Italy find +themselves out of pocket by some thousands and thousands of pounds. + +The traders who were making the world smaller by bringing cotton +prints to Chinde to cover her black nakedness, her British Majesty's +consul at that port, and the boy lieutenant of the paddle-wheeled +gunboat which patrols the Zambesi River, were the gentlemen who +informed me that they were the only respectable members of Chinde +society. They came over the side with the gratitude of sailors whom +the _Kanzlar_ might have picked up from a desert island, where they +had been marooned and left to rot. They observed the gilded glory of +the _Kanzlar_ smoking-room, its mirrors and marble-topped tables, +with the satisfaction and awe of the California miner, who found all +the elegance of civilization in the red plush of a Broadway omnibus. +The boy-commander of the gunboat gazed at white women in the saloon +with fascinated admiration. + +"I have never," he declared, breathlessly, "I have never seen so +many beautiful women in one place at the same time! I'd forgotten +that there were so many white people in the world." + +"If I stay on board this ship another minute I shall go home," said +Her Majesty's consul, firmly. "You will have to hold me. It's coming +over me--I feel it coming. I shall never have the strength to go +back." He appealed to the sympathetic lieutenant. "Let's desert +together," he begged. + + [Illustration: One-half of the Street Cleaning Department of + Mozambique.] + +In the swamps of the East Coast the white exiles lay aside the +cloaks and masks of crowded cities. They do not try to conceal their +feelings, their vices, or their longings. They talk to the first +white stranger they meet of things which in the great cities a man +conceals even from his room-mate, and men they would not care to +know, and whom they would never meet in the fixed social pathways of +civilization, they take to their hearts as friends. They are too few +to be particular, they have no choice, and they ask no questions. It +is enough that the white man, like themselves, is condemned to +exile. They do not try to find solace in the thought that they are +the "foretrekkers" of civilization, or take credit to themselves +because they are the path-finders and the pioneers who bear the heat +and burden of the day. They are sorry for themselves, because they +know, more keenly than any outsider can know, how good is the life +they have given up, and how hard is the one they follow, but they do +not ask anyone else to be sorry. They would be very much surprised +if they thought you saw in their struggle against native and +Portuguese barbarism, fever, and savage tribes, a life of great good +and value, full of self-renunciation, heroism, and self-sacrifice. + +On the day they boarded the _Kanzlar_ the pains of nostalgia were +sweeping over the respectable members of Chinde society like waves +of nausea, and tearing them. With a grim appreciation of their own +condition, they smiled mockingly at the ladies on the quarter-deck, +as you have seen prisoners grin through the bars; they were even +boisterous and gay, but their gayety was that of children at recess, +who know that when the bell rings they are going back to the desk. + +A little English boy ran through the smoking-room, and they fell +upon him, and quarrelled for the privilege of holding him on their +knees. He was a shy, coquettish little English boy, and the +boisterous, noisy men did not appeal to him. To them he meant home +and family and the old nursery, papered with colored pictures from +the Christmas _Graphic_. His stout, bare legs and tangled curls and +sailor's hat, with "H.M.S. Mars" across it, meant all that was clean +and sweet-smelling in their past lives. + +"I'll arrest you for a deserter," said the lieutenant of the +gunboat. "I'll make the consul send you back to the _Mars_." He held +the boy on his knee fearfully, handling him as though he were some +delicate and precious treasure that might break if he dropped it. + +The agent of the Oceanic Development Company, Limited, whose +business in life is to drive savage Angonis out of the jungle, where +he hopes in time to see the busy haunts of trade, begged for the boy +with eloquent pleading. + +"You've had the kiddie long enough now," he urged. "Let me have him. +Come here, Mr. Mars, and sit beside me, and I'll give you fizzy +water--like lemon-squash, only nicer." He held out a wet bottle of +champagne alluringly. + +"No, he is coming to his consul," that youth declared. "He's coming +to his consul for protection. You are not fit characters to +associate with an innocent child. Come to me, little boy, and do not +listen to those degraded persons." So the "innocent child" seated +himself between the consul and the chartered trader, and they patted +his fat calves and red curls and took his minute hands in their +tanned fists, eying him hungrily, like two cannibals. But the little +boy was quite unconscious and inconsiderate of their hunger, and, +with the cruelty of children, pulled himself free and ran away. + +"He was such a nice little kiddie," they said, apologetically, as +though they felt they had been caught in some act of weakness. + +"I haven't got a card with me; I haven't needed one for two years," +said the lieutenant, genially. "But fancy your knowing Sparks! He +has the next station to mine; I'm at one end of the Shire River and +he's at the other; he patrols from Fort Johnson up to the top of the +lake. I suppose you've heard him play the banjo, haven't you? That's +where we hit it off--we're both terribly keen about the banjo. I +suppose if it wasn't for my banjo, I'd go quite off my head down +here. I know Sparks would. You see, I have these chaps at Chinde to +talk to, and up at Tete there's the Portuguese governor, but Sparks +has only six white men scattered along Nyassa for three hundred +miles." + +I had heard of Sparks and the six white men. They grew so lonely +that they agreed to meet once a month at some central station and +spend the night together, and they invited Sparks to attend the +second meeting. But when he arrived he found that they had organized +a morphine club, and the only six white men on Lake Nyassa were +sitting around a table with their sleeves rolled up, giving +themselves injections. Sparks told them it was a "disgusting +practice," and put back to his gunboat. I recalled the story to the +lieutenant, and he laughed mournfully. + +"Yes," he said; "and what's worse is that we're here for two years +more, with all this fighting going on at the Cape and in China. +Still, we have our banjos, and the papers are only six weeks old, +and the steamer stops once every month." + + [Illustration: Custom House, Zanzibar.] + +Fortunately there were many bags of bees-wax to come over the side, +so we had time in which to give the exiles the news of the outside +world, and they told us of their present and past lives: of how one +as an American filibuster had furnished coal to the Chinese Navy; +how another had sold "ready to wear" clothes in a New York +department store, and another had been attaché at Madrid, and +another in charge of the forward guns of a great battle-ship. We +exchanged addresses and agreed upon the restaurant where we would +meet two years hence to celebrate their freedom, and we emptied many +bottles of iced-beer, and the fact that it was iced seemed to affect +the exiles more than the fact that it was beer. + +But at last the ship's whistle blew with raucous persistence. It was +final and heartless. It rang down the curtain on the mirage which +once a month comes to mock Chinde with memories of English villages, +of well-kept lawns melting into the Thames, of London asphalt and +flashing hansoms. With a jangling of bells in the engine-room the +mirage disappeared, and in five minutes to the exiles of Chinde the +_Kanzlar_ became a gray tub with a pennant of smoke on the horizon +line. + +I have known some men for many years, smoked and talked with them +until improper hours of the morning, known them well enough to +borrow their money, even their razors, and parted from them with +never a pang. But when our ship abandoned those boys to the unclean +land behind them, I could see them only in a blurred and misty +group. We raised our hats to them and tried to cheer, but it was +more of a salute than a cheer. I had never seen them before, I shall +never meet them again--we had just burned signals as our ships +passed in the night--and yet, I must always consider among the +friends I have lost, those white-clad youths who are making the ways +straight for others through the dripping jungles of the Zambesi, +"the only respectable members of Chinde Society."[A] + +[Footnote A: NOTE--I did not lose the white-clad youths. The +lieutenant now is the commander of a cruiser, and the consul, a +consul-general; and they write me that the editor of the Chinde +newspaper, on his editorial page, has complained that he, also, +should be included among the respectable members of Chinde Society. +He claims his absence at Tete, at the time of the visit of the +_Kanzlar_, alone prevented his social position being publicly +recognized. That justice may be done, he, now, is officially, though +tardily, created a member of Chinde's respectable society. R.H.D.] + +The profession of the slave-trader, unless it be that of his +contemporary, the pirate preying under his black flag, is the one +which holds you with the most grewsome and fascinating interest. Its +inhumanity, its legends of predatory expeditions into unknown +jungles of Africa, the long return marches to the Coast, the +captured blacks who fall dead in the trail, the dead pulling down +with their chains those who still live, the stifling holds of the +slave-ships, the swift flights before pursuing ships-of-war, the +casting away, when too closely chased, of the ship's cargo, and the +sharks that followed, all of these come back to one as he walks the +shore-wall of Mozambique. From there he sees the slave-dhows in the +harbor, the jungles on the mainland through which the slaves came by +the thousands, and still come one by one, and the ancient palaces of +the Portuguese governors, dead now some hundreds of years, to whom +this trade in human agony brought great wealth, and no loss of +honor. + + [Illustration: Chain-gangs of Petty Offenders Outside of Zanzibar.] + +Mozambique in the days of her glory was, with Zanzibar, the great +slave-market of East Africa, and the Portuguese and the Arabs who +fattened on this traffic built themselves great houses there, and a +fortress capable, in the event of a siege, of holding the garrison +and all the inhabitants as well. To-day the slave-trade brings to +those who follow it more of adventure than of financial profit, but +the houses and the official palaces and the fortress still remain, +and they are, in color, indescribably beautiful. Blue and pink and +red and light yellow are spread over their high walls, and have been +so washed and chastened by the rain and sun, that the whole city has +taken on the faint, soft tints of a once brilliant water-color. The +streets themselves are unpeopled, empty and strangely silent. Their +silence is as impressive as their beauty. In the heat of the day, +which is from sunrise to past sunset, you see no one, you hear no +footfall, no voices, no rumble of wheels or stamp of horses' hoofs. +The bare feet of the native, who is the only human being who dares +to move abroad, makes no sound, and in Mozambique there are no +carriages and no horses. Two bullock-carts, which collect scraps and +refuse from the white staring streets, are the only carts in the +city, and with the exception of a dozen 'rikshas are the only +wheeled vehicles the inhabitants have seen. + +I have never visited a city which so impressed one with the fact +that, in appearance, it had remained just as it was four hundred +years before. There is no decay, no ruins, no sign of disuse; it is, +on the contrary, clean and brilliantly beautiful in color, with +dancing blue waters all about it, and with enormous palms moving +above the towering white walls and red tiled roofs, but it is a city +of the dead. The open-work iron doors, with locks as large as +letter-boxes, are closed, the wooden window-shutters are barred, and +the wares in the shops are hidden from the sidewalk by heavy +curtains. There is a park filled with curious trees and with flowers +of gorgeous color, but the park is as deserted as a cemetery; along +the principal streets stretch mosaic pavements formed of great +blocks of white and black stone, they look like elongated +checker-boards, but no one walks upon them, and though there are +palaces painted blue, and government buildings in Pompeiian red, and +churches in chaste gray and white, there are no sentries to guard +the palaces, nor no black-robed priests enter or leave the +churches. They are like the palaces of a theatre, set on an empty +stage, and waiting for the actors. It will be a long time before the +actors come to Mozambique. It is, and will remain, a city of the +fifteenth century. It is now only a relic of a cruel and barbarous +period, when the Portuguese governors, the "gentlemen adventurers," +and the Arab slave-dealers, under its blue skies, and hidden within +its barred and painted walls, led lives of magnificent debauchery, +when the tusks of ivory were piled high along its water-front, and +the dhows at anchor reeked with slaves, and when in the +market-place, where the natives now sit bargaining over a bunch of +bananas or a basket of dried fish, their forefathers were themselves +bought and sold. + +In the five hundred years in which he has claimed the shore line of +East Africa from south of Lorenço Marquez to north of Mozambique, +and many hundreds of miles inland, the Portuguese has been the dog +in the manger among nations. In all that time he has done nothing to +help the land or the people whom he pretends to protect, and he +keeps those who would improve both from gaining any hold or +influence over either. It is doubtful if his occupation of the East +Coast can endure much longer. The English and the Germans now +surround him on every side. Even handicapped as they are by the lack +of the seaports which he enjoys, they have forced their way into the +country which lies beyond his and which bounds his on every side. +They have opened up this country with little railroads, with lonely +lengths of telegraph wires, and with their launches and gunboats +they have joined, by means of the Zambesi and Chinde Rivers, new +territories to the great Indian Ocean. His strip of land, which bars +them from the sea, is still unsettled and unsafe, its wealth +undeveloped, its people untamed. He sits at his café at the coast +and collects custom-dues and sells stamped paper. For fear of the +native he dares not march five miles beyond his sea-port town, and +the white men who venture inland for purposes of trade or to +cultivate plantations do so at their own risk, he can promise them +no protection. + +The land back of Mozambique is divided into "holdings," and the rent +of each holding is based upon the number of native huts it +contains. The tax per hut is one pound a year, and these holdings +are leased to any Portuguese who promises to pay the combined taxes +of all the huts. He also engages to cut new roads, to keep those +already made in repair, and to furnish a sufficient number of police +to maintain order. The lessees of these holdings have given rise to +many and terrible scandals. In the majority of cases, the lessee, +once out of reach of all authority and of public opinion, and +wielding the power of life and death, becomes a tyrant and +task-master over his district, taxing the natives to five and ten +times the amount which each is supposed to furnish, and treating +them virtually as his bondsmen. Up along the Shire River, the +lessees punish the blacks by hanging them from a tree by their +ankles and beating their bare backs with rhinoceros hide, until, as +it has been described to me by a reputable English resident, the +blood runs in a stream over the negro's shoulders, and forms a pool +beneath his eyes. + + [Illustration: The Ivory on the Right, Covered Only with Sacking, + Is Ready for Shipment to Boston, U.S.A.] + +You hear of no legitimate enterprise fostered by these lessees, of +no development of natural resources, but, instead, you are told +tales of sickening cruelty, and you can read in the consular +reports others quite as true; records of heartless treatment of +natives, of neglect of great resources, and of hurried snatching at +the year's crop and a return to the Coast, with nothing to show of +sustained effort or steady development. The incompetence of Portugal +cannot endure. Now that England has taken the Transvaal from the +Boer, she will find the seaport of Lorenço Marquez too necessary to +her interests to much longer leave it in the itching palms of the +Portuguese officials. Beira she also needs to feed Rhodesia, and the +Zambesi and Chinde Rivers to supply the British Central African +Company. Farther north, the Germans will find that if they mean to +make German Central Africa pay, they must control the seaboard. It +seems inevitable that, between the two great empires, the little +kingdom of Portugal will be crowded out, and having failed to +benefit either herself or anyone else on the East Coast, she will +withdraw from it, in favor of those who are fitter to survive her. + +There is no more interesting contrast along the coast of East +Africa than that presented by the colonies of England, Germany, and +Portugal. Of these three, the colonies of the Englishmen are, as one +expects to find them, the healthiest, the busiest, and the most +prosperous. They thrive under your very eyes; you feel that they +were established where they are, not by accident, not to gratify a +national vanity or a ruler's ambition, but with foresight and with +knowledge, and with the determination to make money; and that they +will increase and flourish because they are situated where the +natives and settlers have something to sell, and where the men can +bring, in return, something the natives and colonials wish to buy. +Port Elizabeth, Durban, East London, and Zanzibar belong to this +prosperous class, which gives good reason for the faith of those who +founded them. + +On the other hand, as opposed to these, there are the settlements of +the Portuguese, rotten and corrupt, and the German settlements of +Dar Es Salaam and Tanga which have still to prove their right to +exist. Outwardly, to the eye, they are model settlements. Dar Es +Salaam, in particular, is a beautiful and perfectly appointed +colonial town. In the care in which it is laid out, in the +excellence of its sanitary arrangements, in its cleanliness, and in +the magnificence of its innumerable official residences, and in +their sensible adaptability to the needs of the climate, one might +be deceived into believing that Dar Es Salaam is the beautiful +gateway of a thriving and busy colony. But there are no ramparts of +merchandise along her wharves, no bulwarks of strangely scented +bales blocking her water-front; no lighters push hurriedly from the +shore to meet the ship, although she is a German ship, or to receive +her cargo of articles "made in Germany." On the contrary, her +freight is unloaded at the English ports, and taken on at English +ports. And the German traders who send their merchandise to Hamburg +in her hold come over the side at Zanzibar, at Durban, and at Aden, +where the English merchants find in them fierce competitors. There +is nothing which goes so far to prove the falsity of the saying that +"trade follows the flag" as do these model German colonies with +their barracks, governor's palace, officers' clubs, public pleasure +parks, and with no trade; and the English colonies, where the German +merchants remain, and where, under the English flag, they grow +steadily rich. The German Emperor, believing that colonies are a +source of strength to an empire, rather than the weakness that they +are, has raised the German flag in Central East Africa, but the +ships of the German East African Company, subsidized by him, carry +their merchandize to the English ports, and his German subjects +remain where they can make the most money. They do not move to those +ports where the flag of their country would wave over them. + +Dar Es Salaam, although it lacks the one thing needful to make it a +model settlement, possesses all the other things which are needful, +and many which are pure luxuries. Its residences, as I have said, +have been built after the most approved scientific principles of +ventilation and sanitation. In no tropical country have I seen +buildings so admirably adapted to the heat and climatic changes and +at the same time more in keeping with the surrounding scenery. They +are handsome, cool-looking, white and clean, with broad verandas, +high walls, and false roofs under which currents of air are lured in +spite of themselves. The residences are set back along the high bank +which faces the bay. In front of them is a public promenade, newly +planted shade-trees arch over it, and royal palms reach up to it +from the very waters of the harbor. At one end of this semicircle +are the barracks of the Soudanese soldiers, and at the other is the +official palace of the governor. Everything in the settlement is +new, and everything is built on the scale of a city, and with the +idea of accommodating a great number of people. Hotels and cafés, +better than any one finds in the older settlements along the coast, +are arranged on the water-front, and there is a church capable of +seating the entire white population at one time. If the place is to +grow, it can do so only through trade, and when trade really comes +all these palaces and cafés and barracks which occupy the entire +water-front will have to be pushed back to make way for warehouses +and custom-house sheds. At present it is populated only by +officials, and, I believe, twelve white women. + + [Illustration: The Late Sultan of Zanzibar in His State Carriage.] + +You feel that it is an experiment, that it has been sent out like a +box of children's building blocks, and set up carefully on this +beautiful harbor. All that Dar Es Salaam needs now is trade and +emigrants. At present it is a show place, and might be exhibited at +a world's fair as an example of a model village. + +In writing of Zanzibar I am embarrassed by the knowledge that I am +not an unprejudiced witness. I fell in love with Zanzibar at first +sight, and the more I saw of it the more I wanted to take my luggage +out of the ship's hold and cable to my friends to try and have me +made Vice-Consul to Zanzibar through all succeeding administrations. + +Zanzibar runs back abruptly from a white beach in a succession of +high white walls. It glistens and glares, and dazzles you; the sand +at your feet is white, the city itself is white, the robes of the +people are white. It has no public landing-pier. Your rowboat is run +ashore on a white shelving beach, and you face an impenetrable mass +of white walls. The blue waters are behind you, the lofty +fortress-like façade before you, and a strip of white sand is at +your feet. + +And while you are wondering where this hidden city may be, a kind +resident takes you by the hand and pilots you through a narrow crack +in the rampart, along a twisting fissure between white-washed walls +where the sun cannot reach, past great black doorways of carved oak, +and out suddenly into the light and laughter and roar of Zanzibar. + +In the narrow streets are all the colors of the Orient, gorgeous, +unshaded, and violent; cobalt blue, greens, and reds on framework, +windows, and doorways; red and yellow in the awnings and curtains of +the bazaars, and orange and black, red and white, yellow, dark blue, +and purple, in the long shawls of the women. It is the busiest, and +the brightest and richest in color of all the ports along the East +African coast. Were it not for its narrow streets and its towering +walls it would be a place of perpetual sunshine. Everybody is either +actively busy, or contentedly idle. It is all movement, noise, and +glitter, everyone is telling everyone else to make way before him; +the Indian merchants beseech you from the open bazaars; their +children, swathed in gorgeous silks and hung with jewels and +bangles, stumble under your feet, the Sultan's troops assail you +with fife and drum, and the black women, wrapped below their bare +shoulders in the colors of the butterfly, and with teeth and brows +dyed purple, crowd you to the wall. Outside the city there are long +and wonderful roads between groves of the bulky mango-tree of +richest darkest green and the bending palm, shading deserted palaces +of former Sultans, temples of the Indian worshippers, native huts, +and the white-walled country residences and curtained verandas of +the white exiles. It is absurd to write them down as exiles, for it +is a Mohammedan Paradise to which they have been exiled. + +The exiles themselves will tell you that the reason you think +Zanzibar is a paradise, is because you have your steamer ticket in +your pocket. But that retort shows their lack of imagination, and a +vast ingratitude to those who have preceded them. For the charm of +Zanzibar lies in the fact that while the white men have made it +healthy and clean, have given it good roads, good laws, protection +for the slaves, quick punishment for the slave-dealers, and a firm +government under a benign and gentle Sultan, they have done all of +this without destroying one flash of its local color, or one throb +of its barbaric life, which is the showy, sunshiny, and sumptuous +life of the Far East. The good things of civilization are there, but +they are unobtrusive, and the evils of civilization appear not at +all, the native does not wear a derby hat with a kimona, as he does +in Japan, nor offer you souvenirs of Zanzibar manufactured in +Birmingham; Reuter's telegrams at the club and occasional steamers +alone connect his white masters with the outer world, and so +infrequent is the visiting stranger that the local phrase-book for +those who wish to converse in the native tongue is compiled chiefly +for the convenience of midshipmen when searching a slave-dhow. + + [Illustration: H.S.H. Hamud bin Muhamad bin Said, the Late Sultan + of Zanzibar.] + +Zanzibar is an "Arabian Nights" city, a comic-opera capital, a most +difficult city to take seriously. There is not a street, or any +house in any street, that does not suggest in its architecture and +decoration the untrammelled fancy of the scenic artist. You feel +sure that the latticed balconies are canvas, that the white adobe +walls are supported from behind by braces, that the sunshine is a +carbon light, that the chorus of boatmen who hail you on landing +will reappear immediately costumed as the Sultan's body-guard, that +the women bearing water-jars on their shoulders will come on in the +next scene as slaves of the harem, and that the national anthem will +prove to be Sousa's Typical Tune of Zanzibar. + +Several hundred years ago the Sultans of Zanzibar grew powerful and +wealthy through exporting slaves and ivory from the mainland. These +were not two separate industries, but one was developed by the other +and was dependent upon it. The procedure was brutally simple. A +slave-trader, having first paid his tribute to the Sultan, crossed +to the mainland, and marching into the interior made his bargain +with one of the local chiefs for so much ivory, and for so many men +to carry it down to the coast. Without some such means of transport +there could have been no bargain, so the chief who was anxious to +sell would select a village which had not paid him the taxes due +him, and bid the trader help himself to what men he found there. +Then would follow a hideous night attack, a massacre of women and +children, and the taking prisoners of all able-bodied males. These +men, chained together in long lines, and each bearing a heavy tooth +of ivory upon his shoulder, would be whipped down to the coast. It +was only when they had carried the ivory there, and their work was +finished, that the idea presented itself of selling them as well as +the ivory. Later, these bearers became of equal value with the +ivory, and the raiding of native villages and the capture of men and +women to be sold into slavery developed into a great industry. The +industry continues fitfully to-day, but it is carried on under great +difficulties, and at a risk of heavy punishments. What is called +"domestic slavery" is recognized on the island of Zanzibar, the vast +clove plantations which lie back of the port employing many hundreds +of these domestic slaves. It is not to free these from their slight +bondage that the efforts of those who are trying to suppress the +slave-trade is to-day directed, but to prevent others from being +added to their number. What slave-trading there is at present is by +Arabs and Indians. They convey the slaves in dhows from the mainland +to Madagascar, Arabia, or southern Persia, and to the Island of +Pemba, which lies north of Zanzibar, and only fifteen miles from the +mainland. If a slave can be brought this short distance in safety he +can be sold for five hundred dollars; on the mainland he is not +worth more than fifteen dollars. The channels, and the mouths of +rivers, and the little bays opening from the Island of Pemba are +patrolled more or less regularly by British gunboats, and junior +officers in charge of a cutter and a crew of half a dozen men, are +detached from these for a few months at a time on "boat service." It +seems to be an unprofitable pursuit, for one officer told me that +during his month of boat service he had boarded and searched three +hundred dhows, which is an average of ten a day, and found slaves on +only one of them. But as, on this occasion, he rescued four slaves, +and the slavers, moreover, showed fight, and wounded him and two of +his boat's crew, he was more than satisfied. + +The trade in ivory, which has none of these restrictions upon it, +still flourishes, and the cool, dark warerooms of Zanzibar are +stored high with it. In a corner of one little cellar they showed +us twenty-five thousand dollars worth of these tusks piled up as +carelessly as though they were logs in a wood-shed. One of the most +curious sights in Zanzibar is a line of Zanzibari boys, each +balancing a great tusk on his shoulder, worth from five hundred to +two thousand dollars, and which is unprotected except for a piece of +coarse sacking. + + [Illustration: A German "Factory" at Tanga, the Store Below, the + Living Apartments Above.] + +The largest exporters of ivory in the world are at Zanzibar, and +though probably few people know it, the firm which carries on this +business belongs to New York City, and has been in the ivory trade +with India and Africa from as far back as the fifties. In their +house at Zanzibar they have entertained every distinguished African +explorer, and the stories its walls have heard of native wars, +pirate dhows, slave-dealers, the English occupation, and terrible +marches through the jungles of the Congo, would make valuable and +picturesque history. The firm has always held a semi-official +position, for the reason that the United States Consul at Zanzibar, +who should speak at least Swahili and Portuguese, is invariably +chosen for the post from a drug-store in Yankton, Dakota, or a +post-office in Canton, Ohio. Consequently, on arriving at Zanzibar +he becomes homesick, and his first official act is to cable his +resignation, and the State Department instructs whoever happens to +be general manager of the ivory house to perform the duties of +acting-consul. So, the ivory house has nearly always held the eagle +of the consulate over its doorway. The manager of the ivory house, +who at the time of our visit was also consul, is Harris Robbins +Childs. Mr. Childs is well known in New York City, is a member of +many clubs there, and speaks at least five languages. He understands +the native tongue of Zanzibar so well that when the Prime Minister +of the Sultan took us to the palace to pay our respects, Childs +talked the language so much better than did the Sultan's own Prime +Minister that there was in consequence much joking and laughing. The +Sultan then was a most dignified, intelligent, and charming old +gentleman. He was popular both with his own people, who loved him +with a religious fervor, and with the English, who unobtrusively +conducted his affairs. + +There have been sultans who have acted less wisely than does Hamud +bin Muhamad bin Said. A few years ago one of these, Said Khaled, +defied the British Empire as represented by several gunboats, and +dared them to fire on his ship of war, a tramp steamer which he had +converted into a royal yacht. The gunboats were anchored about two +hundred yards from the palace, which stands at the water's edge, and +at the time agreed upon, they sank the Sultan's ship of war in the +short space of three minutes, and in a brief bombardment destroyed +the greater part of his palace. The ship of war still rests where +she sank, and her topmasts peer above the water only three hundred +yards distant from the windows of the new palace. They serve as a +constant warning to all future sultans. + +The new palace is of somewhat too modern architecture, and is not +nearly as dignified as are the massive white walls of the native +houses which surround it. But within it is a fairy palace, hung with +silk draperies, tapestries, and hand-painted curtains; the floors +are covered with magnificent rugs from Persia and India, and the +reception-room is crowded with treasures of ebony, ivory, lacquer +work, and gold and silver. There were two thrones made of silver +dragons, with many scales, and studded with jewels. The Sultan did +not seem to mind our openly admiring his treasures, and his +attendants, who stood about him in gorgeous-colored silks heavy with +gold embroideries, were evidently pleased with the deep impression +they made upon the visitors. The Sultan was very gentle and +courteous and human, especially in the pleasure he took over his son +and heir, who then was at school in England, and who, on the death +of his father, succeeded him. He seemed very much gratified when we +suggested that there was no better training-place for a boy than an +English public school; as Americans, he thought our opinion must be +unprejudiced. Before he sent us away, he gave Childs, and each of +us, a photograph of himself, one of which is reproduced in this +book. + +Our next port was the German settlement of Tanga. We arrived there +just as a blood-red sun was setting behind great and gloomy +mountains. The place itself was bathed in damp hot vapors, and +surrounded even to the water's edge by a steaming jungle. It was +more like what we expected Africa to be than was any other place we +had visited, and the proper touch of local color was supplied by a +trader, who gave as his reason for leaving us so early in the +evening that he needed sleep, as on the night before at his camp +three lions had kept him awake until morning. + + [Illustration: Soudanese Soldiers Under a German Officer Outside of + Tanga.] + +The bubonic plague prevented our landing at other ports. We saw them +only through field-glasses from the ship's side, so that there is, +in consequence, much that I cannot write of the East Coast of +Africa. But the trip, which allows one merely to nibble at the +Coast, is worth taking again when the bubonic plague has passed +away. It was certainly worth taking once. If I have failed to make +that apparent, the fault lies with the writer. It is certainly not +the fault of the East Coast, not the fault of the Indian Ocean, that +"sets and smiles, so soft, so bright, so blooming blue," or of the +exiles and "remittance men," or of the engineers who are building +the railroad from Cape Town to Cairo, or of any lack of interest +which the East Coast presents in its problem of trade, of conquest, +and of, among nations, the survival of the fittest. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Congo and Coasts of Africa +by Richard Harding Davis + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14297 *** diff --git a/14297-h/14297-h.htm b/14297-h/14297-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..78a08eb --- /dev/null +++ b/14297-h/14297-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,4702 @@ +<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> +<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> + +<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> + <head> + <title> + The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Congo And Coasts Of Africa, by Richard Harding Davis, F.R.G.S.. + </title> + <style type="text/css"> +/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */ +<!-- + body {margin-left: 15%; + margin-right: 15%; + font-size: 100%; } + + p { margin-top: 0.75em; + text-align: justify; + margin-bottom: .75em; + text-indent: 1.5em; } + + h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 { text-align: center; } + + hr {width: 65%; } + hr.short { width: 20%; } + hr {width: 65%; } + hr.full { width: 100%; + height: 5px; } + + table {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; font-variant: small-caps;} + + .blockquot{margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%;} + .pagenum {position: absolute; left: 92%; font-size: smaller; text-align: right;} + .itoc { font-variant: small-caps; text-indent: -1.5em; + margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 90%; + margin-bottom: 0.25em; margin-top: 0.5em; } + .cap {text-indent: 0; text-align: center; + font-size: 85%; margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 2em;} + + .center {text-align: center;} + .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;} + .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;} + + .foot { margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 5%; text-align: justify; + text-indent: -1em; font-size: 85%; margin-top: 1em; + margin-bottom: 1em; } + + pre {font-size: 8pt; } + a:link {color: blue; text-decoration: none; } + link {color: blue; text-decoration: none; } + a:visited {color: blue; text-decoration: none; } + a:hover {color: red } + + + + + // --> + /* XML end ]]>*/ + </style> + </head> +<body> +<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14297 ***</div> + +<a name="img1" id="img1"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-01.jpg" width="500" height="338" alt="Mr. Davis and "Wood Boys" of the Congo." title="Mr. Davis and "Wood Boys" of the Congo." /> +</div> +<p class="cap">Mr. Davis and "Wood Boys" of the Congo. </p> +<hr /> + +<h1>THE CONGO AND</h1> +<h1> COASTS OF AFRICA</h1> + +<h4>BY</h4> + +<h2>RICHARD HARDING DAVIS, <small>F.R.G.S.</small></h2> + + +<p class="center"><small>AUTHOR OF "SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE," "THE SCARLET CAR," <br />"WITH BOTH +ARMIES IN SOUTH AFRICA," "FARCES," "THE CUBAN<br /> AND PORTO RICAN +CAMPAIGNS"</small></p> + +<br /> + + +<h4>ILLUSTRATIONS<br /> +FROM PHOTOGRAPHS BY THE AUTHOR<br /> +AND OTHERS</h4> + +<br /> + +<h5>CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS<br /> +NEW YORK<br /> +1907</h5> + +<hr /> + + + + +<h5>TO</h5> +<h4>CECIL CLARK DAVIS</h4> + +<h5>MY FELLOW VOYAGER ALONG<br /> +THE COASTS OF AFRICA</h5> + +<hr /> +<br /> + + + +<h3>CONTENTS</h3> + + + +<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="8" summary="contents"> +<tr><td align='center'><b>i</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#I">The Coasters</a></td><td align='right'>3</td></tr> + +<tr><td align='center'><b>ii</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#II">My Brother's Keeper</a></td><td align='right'>32</td></tr> + +<tr><td align='center'><b>iii</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#III">The Capital of the Congo</a></td><td align='right'>55</td></tr> + +<tr><td align='center'><b>iv</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#IV">Americans in the Congo</a></td><td align='right'>93</td></tr> + +<tr><td align='center'><b>v</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#V">Hunting the Hippo</a></td><td align='right'>118</td></tr> + +<tr><td align='center'><b>vi</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#VI">Old Calabar</a></td><td align='right'>142</td></tr> + +<tr><td align='center'><b>vii</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#VII">Along the East Coast</a></td><td align='right'>176</td></tr> +</table> + +<br /> + +<hr class="short" /> + + +<h3>ILLUSTRATIONS</h3> + +<p class="itoc"> +<a href="#img1"> R. Davis and "Wood Boys" of the Congo</a> <i>Frontispiece</i> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img2"> Mrs. Davis in a Borrowed "Hammock," The Local Means + of Transport on the West Coast</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img3">A White Building, that Blazed Like the Base of a + Whitewashed Stove at White Heat</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> +<a href="#img4">The "Mammy Chair" is Like Those Swings You See + in Public Playgrounds</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> +<a href="#img5">A Village on the Kasai River</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> +<a href="#img6">"Tenants" of Leopold, Who Claims that the Congo + Belongs to Him, and that these Native People + are there only as His Tenants</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img7">The Facilities for Landing At Banana, the Port of + Entry to the Congo, are Limited</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img8"> "Prisoners" of the State in Chains at Matadi</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img9"> Bush Boys in the Plaza at Matadi Seeking Shade</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img10">The Monument in Stanley Park, Erected, Not to + Stanley, but to Leopold</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img11">The <i>Deliverance</i>. The River Raced over the Deck + to a Depth of Four or Five Inches. Between + Her Cabin and the Wood-pile, were Stored Fifty + Human Beings</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img12">The Native Wife of a <i>Chef de Poste</i></a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img13">English Missionaries, and Some of Their Charges</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img14">The Laboring Man Upon Whom the American Concessionaires + Must Depend</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img15">Mr. Davis and Native "Boy," on the Kasai River</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img16">The Hippopotamus that Did Not Know He Was Dead</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img17">The Jesuit Brothers at the Wombali Mission</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img18">There, in the Surf, We Found These Tons of Mahogany, + Pounding against Each Other</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img19">A Log of Mahogany Jammed in the Anchor Chains</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img20">The Palace of the King of the Cameroons</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img21">The Home of the Thirty Queens of King Mango Bell</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img22">The Mother Superior and Sisters of St. Joseph and + Their Converts at Old Calabar</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img23">The Kroo Boys Sit, not on the Thwarts, but on the + Gunwales, as a Woman Rides a Side Saddle</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img24">Going Visiting in Her Private Tram-car at Beira</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img25">One-half of the Street Cleaning Department of + Mozambique</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img26">Custom House, Zanzibar</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img27">Chain-gangs of Petty Offenders Outside of Zanzibar</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img28">The Ivory on the Right, Covered only with Sacking, + is Ready for Shipment to Boston, U.S.A.</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img29">The Late Sultan of Zanzibar in His State Carriage</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img30">H.S.H. Hamud bin Muhamad bin Said, the Late + Sultan of Zanzibar</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img31">A German "Factory" at Tanga, the Store Below, the + Living Apartments Above</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img32">Soudanese Soldiers under a German Officer Outside + of Tanga</a> +</p> + +<br /> + +<hr /> + +<br /> + + +<h3>THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA</h3> +<br /> + +<h2><a name="I" id="I"></a>I</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span> + + +<h3>THE COASTERS</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>No matter how often one sets out, "for to admire, and for to see, +for to behold this world so wide," he never quite gets over being +surprised at the erratic manner in which "civilization" distributes +itself; at the way it ignores one spot upon the earth's surface, and +upon another, several thousand miles away, heaps its blessings and +its tyrannies. Having settled in a place one might suppose the +"influences of civilization" would first be felt by the people +nearest that place. Instead of which, a number of men go forth in a +ship and carry civilization as far away from that spot as the winds +will bear them.</p> + +<p>When a stone falls in a pool each part of each ripple is equally +distant from the spot <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span> +where the stone fell; but if the stone of +civilization were to have fallen, for instance, into New Orleans, +equally near to that spot we would find the people of New York City +and the naked Indians of Yucatan. Civilization does not radiate, or +diffuse. It leaps; and as to where it will next strike it is as +independent as forked lightning. During hundreds of years it passed +over the continent of Africa to settle only at its northern coast +line and its most southern cape; and, to-day, it has given Cuba all +of its benefits, and has left the equally beautiful island of Hayti, +only fourteen hours away, sunk in fetish worship and brutal +ignorance.</p> + +<p>One of the places it has chosen to ignore is the West Coast of +Africa. We are familiar with the Northern Coast and South Africa. We +know all about Morocco and the picturesque Raisuli, Lord Cromer, and +Shepheard's Hotel. The Kimberley Diamond Mines, the Boer War, +Jameson's Raid, and Cecil Rhodes have made us know South Africa, and +on the East Coast we supply Durban with buggies and farm wagons, +furniture from Grand Rapids, and, although we have nothing against +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span> +Durban, breakfast food and canned meats. We know Victoria Falls, +because they have eclipsed our own Niagara Falls, and Zanzibar, +farther up the Coast, is familiar through comic operas and rag-time. +Of itself, the Cape to Cairo Railroad would make the East Coast +known to us. But the West Coast still means that distant shore from +whence the "first families" of Boston, Bristol and New Orleans +exported slaves. Now, for our soap and our salad, the West Coast +supplies palm oil and kernel oil, and for automobile tires, rubber. +But still to it there cling the mystery, the hazard, the cruelty of +those earlier times. It is not of palm oil and rubber one thinks +when he reads on the ship's itinerary, "the Gold Coast, the Ivory +Coast, the Bight of Benin, and Old Calabar."</p> + +<p>One of the strange leaps made by civilization is from Southampton to +Cape Town, and one of its strangest ironies is in its ignoring all +the six thousand miles of coast line that lies between. Nowadays, in +winter time, the English, flying from the damp cold of London, go to +Cape Town as unconcernedly as to the Riviera. They travel in great +seagoing hotels, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span> +on which they play cricket, and dress for dinner. +Of the damp, fever-driven coast line past which, in splendid ease, +they are travelling, save for the tall peaks of Teneriffe and Cape +Verde, they know nothing.</p> + +<p>When last Mrs. Davis and I made that voyage from Southampton, the +decks were crowded chiefly with those English whose faces are +familiar at the Savoy and the Ritz, and who, within an hour, had +settled down to seventeen days of uninterrupted bridge, with, before +them, the prospect on landing of the luxury of the Mount Nelson and +the hospitalities of Government House. When, the other day, we again +left Southampton, that former departure came back in strange +contrast. It emphasized that this time we are not accompanying +civilization on one of her flying leaps. Instead, now, we are going +down to the sea in ships with the vortrekkers of civilization, those +who are making the ways straight; who, in a few weeks, will be +leaving us to lose themselves in great forests, who clear the paths +of noisome jungles where the sun seldom penetrates, who sit in +sun-baked "factories," as they call their trading houses, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span> +measuring +life by steamer days, who preach the Gospel to the cannibals of the +Congo, whose voices are the voices of those calling in the +wilderness.</p> + +<p>As our tender came alongside the <i>Bruxellesville</i> at Southampton, we +saw at the winch Kroo boys of the Ivory Coast; leaning over the rail +the Sœurs Blanches of the Congo, robed, although the cold was +bitter and the decks black with soot-stained snow, all in white; +missionaries with long beards, a bishop in a purple biretta, and +innumerable Belgian officers shivering in their cloaks and wearing +the blue ribbon and silver star that tells of three years of service +along the Equator. This time our fellow passengers are no +pleasure-seekers, no Cook's tourists sailing south to avoid a +rigorous winter. They have squeezed the last minute out of their +leave, and they are going back to the station, to the factory, to +the mission, to the barracks. They call themselves "Coasters," and +they inhabit a world all to themselves. In square miles, it is a +very big world, but it is one of those places civilization has +skipped.</p> + +<p>Nearly every one of our passengers from Antwerp or Southampton knows +that if he <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span>keeps his contract, and does not die, it will be three +years before he again sees his home. So our departure was not +enlivening, and, in the smoking-room, the exiles prepared us for +lonely ports of call, for sickening heat, for swarming multitudes of +blacks.</p> + +<p>In consequence, when we passed Finisterre, Spain, which from New +York seems almost a foreign country, was a near neighbor, a dear +friend. And the Island of Teneriffe was an anticlimax. It was as +though by a trick of the compass we had been sailing southwest and +were entering the friendly harbor of Ponce or Havana.</p> + +<p>Santa Cruz, the port town of Teneriffe, like La Guayra, rises at the +base of great hills. It is a smiling, bright-colored, red-roofed, +typical Spanish town. The hills about it mount in innumerable +terraces planted with fruits and vegetables, and from many of these +houses on the hills, should the owner step hurriedly out of his +front door, he would land upon the roof of his nearest neighbor. +Back of this first chain of hills are broad farming lands and +plateaus from which Barcelona and London are fed with the earliest +and the most tender <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>of potatoes that appear in England at the same +time Bermuda potatoes are being printed in big letters on the bills +of fare along Broadway. Santa Cruz itself supplies passing steamers +with coal, and passengers with lace work and post cards; and to the +English in search of sunshine, with a rival to Madeira. It should be +a successful rival, for it is a charming place, and on the day we +were there the thermometer was at 72°, and every one was complaining +of the cruel severity of the winter. In Santa Cruz one who knows +Spanish America has but to shut his eyes and imagine himself back in +Santiago de Cuba or Caracas. There are the same charming plazas, the +yellow churches and towered cathedral, the long iron-barred windows, +glimpses through marble-paved halls of cool patios, the same open +shops one finds in Obispo and O'Reilly Streets, the idle officers +with smart uniforms and swinging swords in front of cafés killing +time and digestion with sweet drinks, and over the garden walls +great bunches of purple and scarlet flowers and sheltering palms. +The show place in Santa Cruz is the church in which are stored the +relics of the sea-fight in which, as a young <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>man, Nelson lost his +arm and England also lost two battleflags. As she is not often +careless in that respect, it is a surprise to find, in this tiny +tucked-away little island, what you will not see in any of the show +places of the world. They tell in Santa Cruz that one night an +English middy, single-handed, recaptured the captured flags and +carried them triumphantly to his battleship. He expected at the +least a K.C.B., and when the flags, with a squad of British marines +as a guard of honor, were solemnly replaced in the church, and the +middy himself was sent upon a tour of apology to the bishop, the +governor, the commandant of the fortress, the alcalde, the collector +of customs, and the captain of the port, he declared that monarchies +were ungrateful. The other objects of interest in Teneriffe are +camels, which in the interior of the island are common beasts of +burden, and which appearing suddenly around a turn would frighten +any automobile; and the fact that in Teneriffe the fashion in +women's hats never changes. They are very funny, flat straw hats; +like children's sailor hats. They need only "<i>U.S.S. Iowa</i>" on the +band to be quite familiar. Their secret <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>is that they are built to +support baskets and buckets of water, and that concealed in each is +a heavy pad.</p> + +<a name="img2" id="img2"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-02.jpg" width="500" height="321" alt="Mrs. Davis in a Borrowed "Hammock," the Local Means +of Transport on the West Coast." title="Mrs. Davis in a Borrowed "Hammock," the Local Means +of Transport on the West Coast." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Mrs. Davis in a Borrowed "Hammock," the Local Means +of Transport on the West Coast. </p> + +<p>After Teneriffe the destination of every one on board is as +irrevocably fixed as though the ship were a government transport. We +are all going to the West Coast or to the Congo. Should you wish to +continue on to Cape Town along the South Coast, as they call the +vast territory from Lagos to Cape Town, although there is an +irregular, a very irregular, service to the Cape, you could as +quickly reach it by going on to the Congo, returning all the way to +Southampton, and again starting on the direct line south.</p> + +<p>It is as though a line of steamers running down our coast to Florida +would not continue on along the South Coast to New Orleans and +Galveston, and as though no line of steamers came from New Orleans +and Galveston to meet the steamers of the East Coast.</p> + +<p>In consequence, the West Coast of Africa, cut off by lack of +communication from the south, divorced from the north by the Desert +of Sahara, lies in the steaming heat of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>Equator to-day as it +did a thousand years ago, in inaccessible, inhospitable isolation.</p> + +<p>Two elements have helped to preserve this isolation: the fever that +rises from its swamps and lagoons, and the surf that thunders upon +the shore. In considering the stunted development of the West Coast, +these two elements must be kept in mind—the sickness that strikes +at sunset and by sunrise leaves the victim dead, and the monster +waves that rush booming like cannon at the beach, churning the sandy +bottom beneath, and hurling aside the great canoes as a man tosses a +cigarette. The clerk who signs the three-year contract to work on +the West Coast enlists against a greater chance of death than the +soldier who enlists to fight only bullets; and every box, puncheon, +or barrel that the trader sends in a canoe through the surf is +insured against its never reaching, as the case may be, the shore or +the ship's side.</p> + +<p>The surf and the fever are the Minotaurs of the West Coast, and in +the year there is not a day passes that they do not claim and +receive their tribute in merchandise and human life. Said an old +Coaster to me, pointing at the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>harbor of Grand Bassam: "I've seen +just as much cargo lost overboard in that surf as I've seen shipped +to Europe." One constantly wonders how the Coasters find it good +enough. How, since 1550, when the Portuguese began trading, it has +been possible to find men willing to fill the places of those who +died. But, in spite of the early massacres by the natives, in spite +of attacks by wild beasts, in spite of pirate raids, of desolating +plagues and epidemics, of wars with other white men, of damp heat +and sudden sickness, there were men who patiently rebuilt the forts +and factories, fought the surf with great breakwaters, cleared +breathing spaces in the jungle, and with the aid of quinine for +themselves, and bad gin for the natives, have held their own. Except +for the trade goods it never would be held. It is a country where +the pay is cruelly inadequate, where but few horses, sheep, or +cattle can exist, where the natives are unbelievably lazy and +insolent, and where, while there is no society of congenial spirits, +there is a superabundance of animal and insect pests. Still, so +great are gold, ivory, and rubber, and so many are the men who will +take big chances <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>for little pay, that every foot of the West Coast +is preëmpted. As the ship rolls along, for hours from the rail you +see miles and miles of steaming yellow sand and misty swamp where as +yet no white man has set his foot. But in the real estate office of +Europe some Power claims the right to "protect" that swamp; some +treaty is filed as a title-deed.</p> + +<p>As the Powers finally arranged it, the map of the West Coast is like +a mosaic, like the edge of a badly constructed patchwork quilt. In +trading along the West Coast a man can find use for five European +languages, and he can use a new one at each port of call.</p> + +<p>To the north, the West Coast begins with Cape Verde, which is +Spanish. It is followed by Senegal, which is French; but into +Senegal is tucked "a thin red line" of British territory called +Gambia. Senegal closes in again around Gambia, and is at once +blocked to the south by the three-cornered patch which belongs to +Portugal. This is followed by French Guinea down to another British +red spot, Sierra Leone, which meets Liberia, the republic of negro +emigrants from the United States. South of Liberia is the French +Ivory Coast, then the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>English Gold Coast; Togo, which is German; +Dahomey, which is French; Lagos and Southern Nigeria, which again +are English; Fernando Po, which is Spanish, and the German +Cameroons.</p> + +<p>The coast line of these protectorates and colonies gives no idea of +the extent of their hinterland, which spreads back into the Sahara, +the Niger basin, and the Soudan. Sierra Leone, one of the smallest +of them, is as large as Maine; Liberia, where the emigrants still +keep up the tradition of the United States by talking like end men, +is as large as the State of New York; two other colonies, Senegal +and Nigeria, together are 135,000 square miles larger than the +combined square miles of all of our Atlantic States from Maine to +Florida and including both. To partition finally among the Powers +this strip of death and disease, of uncountable wealth, of unnamed +horrors and cruelties, has taken many hundreds of years, has brought +to the black man every misery that can be inflicted upon a human +being, and to thousands of white men, death and degradation, or +great wealth.</p> + +<p>The raids made upon the West Coast to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>obtain slaves began in the +fifteenth century with the discovery of the West Indies, and it was +to spare the natives of these islands, who were unused and unfitted +for manual labor and who in consequence were cruelly treated by the +Spaniards, that Las Casas, the Bishop of Chiapa, first imported +slaves from West Africa. He lived to see them suffer so much more +terribly than had the Indians who first obtained his sympathy, that +even to his eightieth year he pleaded with the Pope and the King of +Spain to undo the wrong he had begun. But the tide had set west, and +Las Casas might as well have tried to stop the Trades. In 1800 +Wilberforce stated in the House of Commons that at that time British +vessels were carrying each year to the Indies and the American +colonies 38,000 slaves, and when he spoke the traffic had been going +on for two hundred and fifty years. After the Treaty of Utrecht, +Queen Anne congratulated her Peers on the terms of the treaty which +gave to England "the fortress of Gibraltar, the Island of Minorca, +and the monopoly in the slave trade for thirty years," or, as it was +called, the <i>asiento</i> (contract). This was <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>considered so good an +investment that Philip V of Spain took up one-quarter of the common +stock, and good Queen Anne reserved another quarter, which later she +divided among her ladies. But for a time she and her cousin of Spain +were the two largest slave merchants in the world. The point of view +of those then engaged in the slave trade is very interesting. When +Queen Elizabeth sent Admiral Hawkins slave-hunting, she presented +him with a ship, named, with startling lack of moral perception, +after the Man of Sorrows. In a book on the slave trade I picked up +at Sierra Leone there is the diary of an officer who accompanied +Hawkins. "After," he writes, "going every day on shore to take the +inhabitants by burning and despoiling of their towns," the ship was +becalmed. "But," he adds gratefully, "the Almighty God, who never +suffereth his elect to perish, sent us the breeze."</p> + +<p>The slave book shows that as late as 1780 others of the "elect" of +our own South were publishing advertisements like this, which is one +of the shortest and mildest. It is from a Virginia newspaper: "The +said fellow is outlawed, and I will give ten pounds reward for <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>his +head severed from his body, or forty shillings if brought alive."</p> + +<p>At about this same time an English captain threw overboard, chained +together, one hundred and thirty sick slaves. He claimed that had he +not done so the ship's company would have also sickened and died, +and the ship would have been lost, and that, therefore, the +insurance companies should pay for the slaves. The jury agreed with +him, and the Solicitor-General said: "What is all this declamation +about human beings! This is a case of chattels or goods. It is +really so—it is the case of throwing over goods. For the +purpose—the purpose of the insurance, they are goods and property; +whether right or wrong, we have nothing to do with it." In 1807 +England declared the slave trade illegal. A year later the United +States followed suit, but although on the seas her frigates chased +the slavers, on shore a part of our people continued to hold slaves, +until the Civil War rescued both them and the slaves.</p> + +<p>As early as 1718 Raynal and Diderot estimated that up to that time +there had been exported from Africa to the North and South <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>Americas +nine million slaves. Our own historian, Bancroft, calculated that in +the eighteenth century the English alone imported to the Americas +three million slaves, while another 2,500,000 purchased or kidnapped +on the West Coast were lost in the surf, or on the voyage thrown +into the sea. For that number Bancroft places the gross returns as +not far from four hundred millions of dollars.</p> + +<p>All this is history, and to the reader familiar, but I do not +apologize for reviewing it here, as without the background of the +slave trade, the West Coast, as it is to-day, is difficult to +understand. As we have seen, to kings, to chartered "Merchant +Adventurers," to the cotton planters of the West Indies and of our +South, and to the men of the North who traded in black ivory, the +West Coast gave vast fortunes. The price was the lives of millions +of slaves. And to-day it almost seems as though the sins of the +fathers were being visited upon the children; as though the juju of +the African, under the spell of which his enemies languish and die, +has been cast upon the white man. We have to look only at home. In +the millions of dead, and in the misery of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>the Civil War, and +to-day in race hatred, in race riots, in monstrous crimes and as +monstrous lynchings, we seem to see the fetish of the West Coast, +the curse, falling upon the children to the third and fourth +generation of the million slaves that were thrown, shackled, into +the sea.</p> + +<p>The first mention in history of Sierra Leone is when in 480 B.C., +Hanno, the Carthaginian, anchored at night in its harbor, and then +owing to "fires in the forests, the beating of drums, and strange +cries that issued from the bushes," before daylight hastened away. +We now skip nineteen hundred years. This is something of a gap, but +except for the sketchy description given us by Hanno of the place, +and his one gaudy night there, Sierra Leone until the fifteenth +century utterly disappears from the knowledge of man. Happy is the +country without a history!</p> + +<p>Nineteen hundred years having now supposed to elapse, the second act +begins with De Cintra, who came in search of slaves, and instead +gave the place its name. Because of the roaring of the wind around +the peak that rises over the harbor he called it the Lion Mountain.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>After the fifteenth century, in a succession of failures, five +different companies of "Royal Adventurers" were chartered to trade +with her people, and, when convenient, to kidnap them; pirates in +turn kidnapped the British governor, the French and Dutch were +always at war with the settlement, and native raids, epidemics, and +fevers were continuous. The history of Sierra Leone is the history +of every other colony along the West Coast, with the difference that +it became a colony by purchase, and was not, as were the others, a +trading station gradually converted into a colony. During the war in +America, Great Britain offered freedom to all slaves that would +fight for her, and, after the war, these freed slaves were conveyed +on ships of war to London, where they were soon destitute. They +appealed to the great friend of the slave in those days, Granville +Sharp, and he with others shipped them to Sierra Leone, to +establish, with the aid of some white emigrants, an independent +colony, which was to be a refuge and sanctuary for others like +themselves. Liberia, which was the gift of philanthropists of +Baltimore to American freed slaves, was, no doubt, inspired by this +earlier <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>effort. The colony became a refuge for slaves from every +part of the Coast, the West Indies and Nova Scotia, and to-day in +that one colony there are spoken sixty different coast dialects and +those of the hinterland.</p> + +<p>Sierra Leone, as originally purchased in 1786, consisted of twenty +square miles, for which among other articles of equal value King +Naimbanna received a "crimson satin embroidered waistcoat, one +puncheon of rum, ten pounds of beads, two cheeses, one box of +smoking pipes, a mock diamond ring, and a tierce of pork."</p> + +<p>What first impressed me about Sierra Leone was the heat. It does not +permit one to give his attention wholly to anything else. I always +have maintained that the hottest place on earth is New York, and I +have been in other places with more than a local reputation for +heat; some along the Equator, Lourenço Marquez, which is only +prevented from being an earthen oven because it is a swamp; the Red +Sea, with a following breeze, and from both shores the baked heat of +the desert, and Nagasaki, on a rainy day in midsummer.</p> + +<p>But New York in August radiating stored-up <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>heat from iron-framed +buildings, with the foul, dead air shut in by the skyscrapers, with +a humidity that makes you think you are breathing through a +steam-heated sponge, is as near the lower regions as I hope any of +us will go. And yet Sierra Leone is no mean competitor.</p> + +<p>We climbed the moss-covered steps to the quay to face a great white +building that blazed like the base of a whitewashed stove at white +heat. Before it were some rusty cannon and a canoe cut out of a +single tree, and, seated upon it selling fruit and sun-dried fish, +some native women, naked to the waist, their bodies streaming with +palm oil and sweat. At the same moment something struck me a blow on +the top of the head, at the base of the spine and between the +shoulder blades, and the ebony ladies and the white "factory" were +burnt up in a scroll of flame.</p> + +<a name="img3" id="img3"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-03.jpg" width="500" height="326" alt="A White Building, that Blazed Like the Base of a +Whitewashed Stove at White Heat." title="A White Building, that Blazed Like the Base of a +Whitewashed Stove at White Heat." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">A White Building, that Blazed Like the Base of a +Whitewashed Stove at White Heat. </p> + +<p>I heard myself in a far-away voice asking where one could buy a sun +helmet and a white umbrella, and until I was under their protection, +Sierra Leone interested me no more.</p> + +<p>One sees more different kinds of black people in Sierra Leone than +in any other port <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>along the Coast; Senegalese and Senegambians, +Kroo boys, Liberians, naked bush boys bearing great burdens from the +forests, domestic slaves in fez and colored linen livery, carrying +hammocks swung from under a canopy, the local electric hansom, +soldiers of the W.A.F.F., the West African Frontier Force, in Zouave +uniform of scarlet and khaki, with bare legs; Arabs from as far in +the interior as Timbuctu, yellow in face and in long silken robes; +big fat "mammies" in well-washed linen like the washerwomen of +Jamaica, each balancing on her head her tightly rolled umbrella, and +in the gardens slim young girls, with only a strip of blue and white +linen from the waist to the knees, lithe, erect, with glistening +teeth and eyes, and their sisters, after two years in the mission +schools, demurely and correctly dressed like British school marms. +Sierra Leone has all the hall marks of the crown colony of the +tropics; good wharfs, clean streets, innumerable churches, public +schools operated by the government as well as many others run by +American and English missions, a club where the white "mammies," as +all women are called, and the white officers—for Sierra <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>Leone is a +coaling station on the Cape route to India, and is garrisoned +accordingly—play croquet, and bowl into a net.</p> + +<p>When the officers are not bowling they are tramping into the +hinterland after tribes on the warpath from Liberia, and coming +back, perhaps wounded or racked with fever, or perhaps they do not +come back. On the day we landed they had just buried one of the +officers. On Saturday afternoon he had been playing tennis, during +the night the fever claimed him, and Sunday night he was dead.</p> + +<p>That night as we pulled out to the steamer there came toward us in +black silhouette against the sun, setting blood-red into the lagoon, +two great canoes. They were coming from up the river piled high with +fruit and bark, with the women and children lying huddled in the +high bow and stern, while amidships the twelve men at the oars +strained and struggled until we saw every muscle rise under the +black skin.</p> + +<p>As their stroke slackened, the man in the bow with the tom-tom beat +more savagely upon it, and shouted to them in shrill sharp cries. +Their eyes shone, their teeth clenched, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>the sweat streamed from +their naked bodies. They might have been slaves chained to the +thwarts of a trireme.</p> + +<p>Just ahead of them lay at anchor the only other ship beside our own +in port, a two-masted schooner, the <i>Gladys E. Wilden</i>, out of +Boston. Her captain leaned upon the rail smoking his cigar, his +shirt-sleeves held up with pink elastics, on the back of his head a +derby hat. As the rowers passed under his bows he looked critically +at the streaming black bodies and spat meditatively into the water. +His own father could have had them between decks as cargo. Now for +the petroleum and lumber he brings from Massachusetts to Sierra +Leone he returns in ballast.</p> + +<p>Because her lines were so home-like and her captain came from Cape +Cod, we wanted to call on the <i>Gladys E. Wilden</i>, but our own +captain had different views, and the two ships passed in the night, +and the man from Boston never will know that two folks from home +were burning signals to him.</p> + +<p>Because our next port of call, Grand Bassam, is the chief port of +the French Ivory Coast, which is 125,000 square miles in <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>extent, we +expected quite a flourishing seaport. Instead, Grand Bassam was a +bank of yellow sand, a dozen bungalows in a line, a few wind-blown +cocoanut palms, an iron pier, and a French flag. Beyond the cocoanut +palms we could see a great lagoon, and each minute a wave leaped +roaring upon the yellow sand-bank and tried to hurl itself across +it, eating up the bungalows on its way, into the quiet waters of the +lake. Each time we were sure it would succeed, but the yellow bank +stood like rock, and, beaten back, the wave would rise in white +spray to the height of a three-story house, hang glistening in the +sun and then, with the crash of a falling wall, tumble at the feet +of the bungalows.</p> + +<p>We stopped at Grand Bassam to put ashore a young English girl who +had come out to join her husband. His factory is a two days' launch +ride up the lagoon, and the only other white woman near it does not +speak English. Her husband had wished her, for her health's sake, to +stay in his home near London, but her first baby had just died, and +against his unselfish wishes, and the advice of his partner, she had +at once set out to join him. She was <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>a very pretty, sad, unsmiling +young wife, and she spoke only to ask her husband's partner +questions about the new home. His answers, while they did not seem +to daunt her, made every one else at the table wish she had remained +safely in her London suburb.</p> + +<p>Through our glasses we all watched her husband lowered from the iron +pier into a canoe and come riding the great waves to meet her.</p> + +<p>The Kroo boys flashed their trident-shaped paddles and sang and +shouted wildly, but he sat with his sun helmet pulled over his eyes +staring down into the bottom of the boat; while at his elbow, +another sun helmet told him yes, that now he could make out the +partner, and that, judging by the photograph, that must be She in +white under the bridge.</p> + +<p>The husband and the young wife were swung together over the side to +the lifting waves in a two-seated "mammy chair," like one of those +<i>vis-à-vis</i> swings you see in public playgrounds and picnic groves, +and they carried with them, as a gift from Captain Burton, a fast +melting lump of ice, the last piece of fresh meat they will taste in +many a day, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>the blessings of all the ship's company. And then, +with inhospitable haste there was a rattle of anchor chains, a quick +jangle of bells from the bridge to the engine-room, and the +<i>Bruxellesville</i> swept out to sea, leaving the girl from the London +suburb to find her way into the heart of Africa. Next morning we +anchored in a dripping fog off Sekondi on the Gold Coast, to allow +an English doctor to find his way to a fever camp. For nine years he +had been a Coaster, and he had just gone home to fit himself, by a +winter's vacation in London, for more work along the Gold Coast. It +is said of him that he has "never lost a life." On arriving in +London he received a cable telling him three doctors had died, the +miners along the railroad to Ashanti were rotten with fever, and +that he was needed.</p> + +<a name="img4" id="img4"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 453px;"> +<img src="images/img-04.jpg" width="453" height="450" alt="The "Mammy Chair" is Like Those Swings You See in +Public Playgrounds." title="The "Mammy Chair" is Like Those Swings You See in +Public Playgrounds." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The "Mammy Chair" is Like Those Swings You See in +Public Playgrounds. </p> + +<p>So he and his wife, as cheery and bright as though she were setting +forth on her honeymoon, were going back to take up the white man's +burden. We swung them over the side as we had the other two, and +that night in the smoking-room the Coasters drank "Luck to him," +which, in the vernacular of this unhealthy shore, means "Life to +him," and to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>the plucky, jolly woman who was going back to fight +death with the man who had never lost a life.</p> + +<p>As the ship was getting under way, a young man in "whites" and a sun +helmet, an agent of a trading company, went down the sea ladder by +which I was leaning. He was smart, alert; his sleeves, rolled +recklessly to his shoulders, showed sinewy, sunburnt arms; his +helmet, I noted, was a military one. Perhaps I looked as I felt; +that it was a pity to see so good a man go back to such a land, for +he looked up at me from the swinging ladder and smiled understanding +as though we had been old acquaintances.</p> + +<p>"You going far?" he asked. He spoke in the soft, detached voice of +the public-school Englishman.</p> + +<p>"To the Congo," I answered.</p> + +<p>He stood swaying with the ship, looking as though there were +something he wished to say, and then laughed, and added gravely, +giving me the greeting of the Coast: "Luck to you."</p> + +<p>"Luck to YOU," I said.</p> + +<p>That is the worst of these gaddings about, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>these meetings with men +you wish you could know, who pass like a face in the crowded street, +who hold out a hand, or give the password of the brotherhood, and +then drop down the sea ladder and out of your life forever.</p> + + + +<hr class="short" /> +<br /> + +<a name="II" id="II"></a> +<h2>II</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span> + +<h3>MY BROTHER'S KEEPER</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>To me, the fact of greatest interest about the Congo is that it is +owned, and the twenty millions of people who inhabit it are owned by +one man. The land and its people are his private property. I am not +trying to say that he governs the Congo. He does govern it, but that +in itself would not be of interest. His claim is that he owns it. +Though backed by all the mailed fists in the German Empire, and all +the <i>Dreadnoughts</i> of the seas, no other modern monarch would make +such a claim. It does not sound like anything we have heard since +the days and the ways of Pharaoh. And the most remarkable feature of +it is, that the man who makes this claim is the man who was placed +over the Congo as a guardian, to keep it open to the trade of the +world, to suppress slavery. That, in the Congo, he has killed trade +and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>made the products of the land his own, that of the natives he +did not kill he has made slaves, is what to-day gives the Congo its +chief interest. It is well to emphasize how this one man stole a +march on fourteen Powers, including the United States, and stole +also an empire of one million square miles.</p> + +<p>Twenty-five years ago all of Africa was divided into many parts. The +part which still remained to be distributed among the Powers was +that which was watered by the Congo River and its tributaries.</p> + +<p>Along the north bank of the Congo River ran the French Congo; the +Portuguese owned the lands to the south, and on the east it was shut +in by protectorates and colonies of Germany and England. It was, and +is, a territory as large, were Spain and Russia omitted, as Europe. +Were a map of the Congo laid upon a map of Europe, with the mouth of +the Congo River where France and Spain meet at Biarritz, the +boundaries of the Congo would reach south to the heel of Italy, to +Greece, to Smyrna; east to Constantinople and Odessa; northeast to +St. Petersburg and Finland, and northwest to the extreme limits of +Scotland. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>Distances in this country are so enormous, the means of +progress so primitive, that many of the Belgian officers with whom I +came south and who already had travelled nineteen days from Antwerp, +had still, before they reached their posts, to steam, paddle, and +walk for three months.</p> + +<p>In 1844 to dispose amicably of this great territory, which was much +desired by several of the Powers, a conference was held at Berlin. +There it was decided to make of the Congo Basin an Independent +State, a "free-for-all" country, where every flag could trade with +equal right, and with no special tariff or restriction.</p> + +<p>The General Act of this conference agreed: "The trade of ALL nations +shall enjoy complete freedom." "No Power which exercises or shall +exercise Sovereign rights in the above-mentioned regions shall be +allowed to <i>grant therein a monopoly or favor of any kind in matters +of trade</i>." "ALL the Powers exercising Sovereign rights or influence +in the afore-said territories bind themselves to watch over the +preservation of the native tribes, and to care for the improvement +of <i>the condition of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>their moral and material welfare</i>, and <i>to +help in suppressing slavery</i>." The italics are mine. These +quotations from the act are still binding upon the fourteen Powers, +including the United States.</p> + +<p>For several years previous to the Conference of Berlin, Leopold of +Belgium, as a private individual, had shown much interest in the +development of the Congo. The opening up of that territory was +apparently his hobby. Out of his own pocket he paid for expeditions +into the Congo Basin, employed German and English explorers, and +protested against the then existing iniquities of the Arabs, who for +ivory and slaves raided the Upper Congo. Finally, assisted by many +geographical societies, he founded the International Association, to +promote "civilization and trade" in Central Africa; and enlisted +Henry M. Stanley in this service.</p> + +<p>That, in the early years, Leopold's interest in the Congo was +unselfish may or may not be granted, but, knowing him, as we now +know him, as one of the shrewdest and, of speculators, the most +unscrupulous, at the time of the Berlin Conference, his self-seeking +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>may safely be accepted. Quietly, unostentatiously, he presented +himself to its individual members as a candidate for the post of +administrator of this new territory.</p> + +<p>On the face of it he seemed an admirable choice. He was a sovereign +of a kingdom too unimportant to be feared; of the newly created +State he undoubtedly possessed an intimate knowledge. He promised to +give to the Dutch, English, and Portuguese traders, already for many +years established on the Congo, his heartiest aid, and, for those +traders still to come, to maintain the "open door." His professions +of a desire to help the natives were profuse. He became the +unanimous choice of the conference.</p> + +<p>Later he announced to the Powers signing the act, that from Belgium +he had received the right to assume the title of King of the +Independent State of the Congo. The Powers recognized his new title.</p> + +<p>The fact that Leopold, King of Belgium, was king also of the État +Indépendant du Congo confused many into thinking that the Free State +was a colony, or under the protection, of Belgium. As we have seen, +it is not. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>A Belgian may serve in the army of the Free State, or in +a civil capacity, as may a man of any nation, but, although with few +exceptions only Belgians are employed in the Free State, and +although to help the King in the Congo, the Belgian Government has +loaned him great sums of money, politically and constitutionally the +two governments are as independent of each other as France and +Spain.</p> + +<p>And so, in 1885, Leopold, by the grace of fourteen governments, was +appointed their steward over a great estate in which each of the +governments still holds an equal right; a trustee and keeper over +twenty millions of "black brothers" whose "moral and material +welfare" each government had promised to protect.</p> + +<p>There is only one thing more remarkable than the fact that Leopold +was able to turn this public market into a private park, and that +is, that he has been permitted to do so. It is true he is a man of +wonderful ability. For his own ends he is a magnificent organizer. +But in the fourteen governments that created him there have been, +and to-day there are, men, if less unscrupulous, of quite as great +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>ability; statesmen, jealous and quick to guard the rights of the +people they represent, people who since the twelfth century have +been traders, who since 1808 have declared slavery abolished.</p> + +<p>And yet, for twenty-five years these statesmen have watched Leopold +disobey every provision in the act of the conference. Were they to +visit the Congo, they could see for themselves the jungle creeping +in and burying their trading posts, their great factories turned +into barracks. They know that the blacks they mutually agreed to +protect have been reduced to slavery worse than that they suffered +from the Arabs, that hundreds of thousands of them have fled from +the Congo, and that those that remain have been mutilated, maimed, +or, what was more merciful, murdered. And yet the fourteen +governments, including the United States, have done nothing.</p> + +<p>Some tell you they do not interfere because they are jealous one of +the other; others say that it is because they believe the Congo will +soon be taken over by Belgium, and with Belgium in control, they +argue, they would be dealing with a responsible government, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>instead +of with a pirate. But so long as Leopold is King of Belgium one +doubts if Belgians in the Congo would rise above the level of their +King. The English, when asked why they do not assert their rights, +granted not only to them, but to thirteen other governments, reply +that if they did they would be accused of "ulterior motives." What +ulterior motives? If you pursue a pickpocket and recover your watch +from him, are your motives in doing so open to suspicion?</p> + +<p>Personally, although this is looking some way ahead, I would like to +see the English take over and administrate the Congo. Wherever I +visit a colony governed by Englishmen I find under their +administration, in spite of opium in China and gin on the West +Coast, that three people are benefited: the Englishman, the native, +and the foreign trader from any other part of the world. Of the +colonies of what other country can one say the same?</p> + +<p>As a rule our present governments are not loath to protect their +rights. But toward asserting them in the Congo they have been moved +neither by the protests of traders, chambers of commerce, +missionaries, the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>public press, nor by the cry of the black man to +"let my people go." By only those in high places can it be +explained. We will leave it as a curious fact, and return to the +"Unjust Steward."</p> + +<p>His first act was to wage wars upon the Arabs. From the Soudan and +from the East Coast they were raiding the Congo for slaves and +ivory, and he drove them from it. By these wars he accomplished two +things. As the defender of the slave, he gained much public credit, +and he kept the ivory. But war is expensive, and soon he pointed out +to the Powers that to ask him out of his own pocket to maintain +armies in the field and to administer a great estate was unfair. He +humbly sought their permission to levy a few taxes. It seemed a +reasonable request. To clear roads, to keep boats upon the great +rivers, to mark it with buoys, to maintain wood stations for the +steamers, to improve the "moral and material welfare of the +natives," would cost money, and to allow Leopold to bring about +these improvements, which would be for the good of all, he was +permitted to levy the few taxes. That was twenty years ago; to-day I +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>saw none of these improvements, and the taxes have increased.</p> + +<p>From the first they were so heavy that the great trade houses, which +for one hundred years in peace and mutual goodwill bartered with the +natives, found themselves ruined. It was not alone the export taxes, +lighterage dues, port dues, and personal taxes that drove them out +of the Congo; it was the King appearing against them as a rival +trader, the man appointed to maintain the "open door." And a trader +with methods they could not or would not imitate. Leopold, or the +"State," saw for the existence of the Congo only two reasons: Rubber +and Ivory. And the collecting of this rubber and ivory was, as he +saw it, the sole duty of the State and its officers. When he threw +over the part of trustee and became the Arab raider he could not +waste his time, which, he had good reason to fear, might be short, +upon products that, if fostered, would be of value only in later +years. Still less time had he to give to improvements that cost +money and that would be of benefit to his successors. He wanted only +rubber; he wanted it at once, and he cared not at all how <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>he +obtained it. So he spun, and still spins, the greatest of all +"get-rich-quick" schemes; one of gigantic proportions, full of +tragic, monstrous, nauseous details.</p> + +<p>The only possible way to obtain rubber is through the native; as +yet, in teeming forests, the white man can not work and live. Of +even Chinese coolies imported here to build a railroad ninety per +cent. died. So, with a stroke of the pen, Leopold declared all the +rubber in the country the property of the "State," and then, to make +sure that the natives would work it, ordered that taxes be paid in +rubber. If, once a month (in order to keep the natives steadily at +work the taxes were ordered to be paid each month instead of once a +year), each village did not bring in so many baskets of rubber the +King's cannibal soldiers raided it, carried off the women as +hostages, and made prisoners of the men, or killed and ate them. For +every kilo of rubber brought in in excess of the quota the King's +agent, who received the collected rubber and forwarded it down the +river, was paid a commission. Or was "paid by results." Another +bonus was given him based on the price at <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>which he obtained the +rubber. If he paid the native only six cents for every two pounds, +he received a bonus of three cents, the cost to the State being but +nine cents per kilo, but, if he paid the natives twelve cents for +every two pounds, he received as a bonus less than one cent. In a +word, the more rubber the agent collected the more he personally +benefited, and if he obtained it "cheaply" or for nothing—that is, +by taking hostages, making prisoners, by the whip of hippopotamus +hide, by torture—so much greater his fortune, so much richer +Leopold.</p> + +<a name="img5" id="img5"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-05.jpg" width="500" height="302" alt="A Village on the Kasai River." title="A Village on the Kasai River." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">A Village on the Kasai River. </p> + +<p>Few schemes devised have been more cynical, more devilish, more +cunningly designed to incite a man to cruelty and abuse. To +dishonesty it was an invitation and a reward. It was this system of +"payment by results," evolved by Leopold sooner than allow his +agents a fixed and sufficient wage, that led to the atrocities.</p> + +<p>One result of this system was that in seven years the natives +condemned to slavery in the rubber forests brought in rubber to the +amount of fifty-five millions of dollars. But its chief results were +the destruction of entire villages, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>the flight from their homes in +the Congo of hundreds of thousands of natives, and for those that +remained misery, death, the most brutal tortures and degradations, +unprintable, unthinkable.</p> + +<p>I am not going to enter into the question of the atrocities. In the +Congo the tip has been given out from those higher up at Brussels to +"close up" the atrocities; and for the present the evil places in +the Tenderloin and along the Broadway of the Congo are tightly shut. +But at those lonely posts, distant a month to three months' march +from the capital, the cruelties still continue. I did not see them. +Neither, last year, did a great many people in the United States see +the massacre of blacks in Atlanta. But they have reason to believe +it occurred. And after one has talked with the men and women who +have seen the atrocities, has seen in the official reports that +those accused of the atrocities do not deny having committed them, +but point out that they were merely obeying orders, and after one +has seen that even at the capital of Boma all the conditions of +slavery exist, one is assured that in the jungle, away from the +sight of men, all <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>things are possible. Merchants, missionaries, and +officials even in Leopold's service told me that if one could spare +a year and a half, or a year, to the work in the hinterland he would +be an eye-witness of as cruel treatment of the natives as any that +has gone before, and if I can trust myself to weigh testimony and +can believe my eyes and ears I have reason to know that what they +say is true. I am convinced that to-day a man, who feels that a year +and a half is little enough to give to the aid of twenty millions of +human beings, can accomplish in the Congo as great and good work as +that of the Abolitionists.</p> + +<p>Three years ago atrocities here were open and above-board. For +instance. In the opinion of the State the soldiers, in killing game +for food, wasted the State cartridges, and in consequence the +soldiers, to show their officers that they did not expend the +cartridges extravagantly on antelope and wild boar, for each empty +cartridge brought in a human hand, the hand of a man, woman, or +child. These hands, drying in the sun, could be seen at the posts +along the river. They are no longer in evidence. Neither is the +flower-bed <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>of Lieutenant Dom, which was bordered with human skulls. +A quaint conceit.</p> + +<p>The man to blame for the atrocities, for each separate atrocity, is +Leopold. Had he shaken his head they would have ceased. When the hue +and cry in Europe grew too hot for him and he held up his hand they +did cease. At least along the main waterways. Years before he could +have stopped them. But these were the seven fallow years, when +millions of tons of red rubber were being dumped upon the wharf at +Antwerp; little, roughly rolled red balls, like pellets of +coagulated blood, which had cost their weight in blood, which would +pay Leopold their weight in gold.</p> + +<p>He can not plead ignorance. Of all that goes on in his big +plantation no man has a better knowledge. Without their personal +honesty, he follows every detail of the "business" of his rubber +farm with the same diligence that made rich men of George Boldt and +Marshall Field. Leopold's knowledge is gained through many spies, by +voluminous reports, by following up the expenditure of each centime, +of each arm's-length of blue <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>cloth. Of every Belgian employed on +his farm, and ninety-five per cent. are Belgians, he holds the +<i>dossier</i>; he knows how many kilos a month the agent whips out of +his villages, how many bottles of absinthe he smuggles from the +French side, whether he lives with one black woman or five, why his +white wife in Belgium left him, why he left Belgium, why he dare not +return. The agent knows that Leopold, King of the Belgians, knows, +and that he has shared that knowledge with the agent's employer, the +man who by bribes of rich bonuses incites him to crime, the man who +could throw him into a Belgian jail, Leopold, King of the Congo.</p> + +<p>The agent decides for him it is best to please both Leopolds, and +Leopold makes no secret of what best pleases him. For not only is he +responsible for the atrocities, in that he does not try to suppress +them, but he is doubly guilty in that he has encouraged them. This +he has done with cynical, callous publicity, without effort at +concealment, without shame. Men who, in obtaining rubber, committed +unspeakable crimes, the memory of which makes other men +uncomfortable in their presence, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>Leopold rewarded with rich +bonuses, pensions, higher office, gilt badges of shame, and rapid +advancement. To those whom even his own judges sentenced to many +years' imprisonment he promptly granted the royal pardon, promoted, +and sent back to work in the vineyard.</p> + +<p>"That is the sort of man for <i>me</i>," his action seemed to say. "See +how I value that good and faithful servant. That man collected much +rubber. You observe I do not ask how he got it. I will not ask you. +All you need do is to collect rubber. Use our improved methods. Gum +copal rubbed in the kinky hair of the chief and then set on fire +burns, so my agents tell me, like vitriol. For collecting rubber the +chief is no longer valuable, but to his successor it is an +object-lesson. Let me recommend also the <i>chicotte</i>, the torture +tower, the 'hostage' house, and the crucifix. Many other stimulants +to labor will no doubt suggest themselves to you and to your +cannibal 'sentries.' Help to make me rich, and don't fear the +'State.' '<i>L'Etat, c'est moi!</i>' Go as far as you like!"</p> + +<p>I said the degradations and tortures <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>practised by the men "working +on commission" for Leopold are unprintable, but they have been +printed, and those who wish to read a calmly compiled, careful, and +correct record of their deeds will find it in the "Red Rubber" of +Mr. E.R. Morel. An even better book by the same authority, on the +whole history of the State, is his "King Leopold's Rule in the +Congo." Mr. Morel has many enemies. So, early in the nineteenth +century, had the English Abolitionists, Wilberforce and Granville +Sharp. After they were dead they were buried in the Abbey, and their +portraits were placed in the National Gallery. People who wish to +assist in freeing twenty millions of human beings should to-day +support Mr. Morel. It will be of more service to the blacks than, +after he is dead, burying him in Westminster Abbey.</p> + +<p>Mr. Morel, the American and English missionaries, and the English +Consul, Roger Casement, and other men, in Belgium, have made a +magnificent fight against Leopold; but the Powers to whom they have +appealed have been silent. Taking courage of this silence, Leopold +has divided the Congo into <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>several great territories in which the +sole right to work rubber is conceded to certain persons. To those +who protested that no one in the Congo "Free" State but the King +could trade in rubber, Leopold, as an answer, pointed with pride at +the preserves of these foreigners. And he may well point at them +with pride, for in some of those companies he owns a third, and in +most of them he holds a half, or a controlling interest. The +directors of the foreign companies are his cronies, members of his +royal household, his brokers, bankers. You have only to read the +names published in the lists of the Brussels Stock Exchange to see +that these "trading companies," under different aliases, are +Leopold. Having, then, "conceded" the greater part of the Congo to +himself, Leopold set aside the best part of it, so far as rubber is +concerned, as a <i>Domaine Privé</i>. Officially the receipts of this pay +for running the government, and for schools, roads and wharfs, for +which taxes were levied, but for which, after twenty years, one +looks in vain. Leopold claims that through the Congo he is out of +pocket; that this carrying the banner of civilization in <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>Africa +does not pay. Through his press bureaus he tells that his sympathy +for his black brother, his desire to see the commerce of the world +busy along the Congo, alone prevents him giving up what is for him a +losing business. There are several answers to this. One is that in +the Kasai Company alone Leopold owns 2,010 shares of stock. Worth +originally $50 a share, the value of each share rose to $3,100, +making at one time his total shares worth $5,421,000. In the +A.B.I.R. Concession he owns 1,000 shares, originally worth $100 +each, later worth $940. In the "vintage year" of 1900 each of these +shares was worth $5,050, and the 1,000 shares thus rose to the value +of $5,050,000.</p> + +<p>These are only two companies. In most of the others half the shares +are owned by the King.</p> + +<p>As published in the "State Bulletin," the money received in eight +years for rubber and ivory gathered in the <i>Domaine Privé</i> differs +from the amount given for it in the market at Antwerp. The official +estimates show a loss to the government. The actual sales show that +the government, over and above its own <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>estimate of its expenses, +instead of losing, made from the <i>Domaine Privé</i> alone $10,000,000. +We are left wondering to whom went that unaccounted-for $10,000,000. +Certainly the King would not take it, for, to reimburse himself for +his efforts, he early in the game reserved for himself another tract +of territory known as the <i>Domaine de la Couronne</i>. For years he +denied that this existed. He knew nothing of Crown Lands. But, at +last, in the Belgian Chamber, it was publicly charged that for years +from this private source, which he had said did not exist, Leopold +had been drawing an income of $15,000,000. Since then the truth of +this statement has been denied, but at the time in the Chamber it +was not contradicted.</p> + +<p>To-day, grown insolent by the apathy of the Powers, Leopold finds +disguising himself as a company, as a laborer worthy of his hire, +irksome. He now decrees that as "Sovereign" over the Congo all of +the Congo belongs to him. It is as much his property as is a +pheasant drive, as is a staked-out mining claim, as your hat is your +property. And the twenty millions of people who inhabit it are there +only <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>on his sufferance. They are his "tenants." He permits each +the hut in which he lives, and the garden adjoining that hut, but +his work must be for Leopold, and everything else, animal, mineral, +or vegetable, belongs to Leopold. The natives not only may not sell +ivory or rubber to independent traders, but if it is found in their +possession it is seized; and if you and I bought a tusk of ivory +here it would be taken from us and we could be prosecuted. This is +the law. Other men rule over territories more vast even than the +Congo. The King of England rules an empire upon which the sun never +sets. But he makes no claim to own it. Against the wishes of even +the humblest crofter, the King would not, because he knows he could +not, enter his cottage. Nor can we imagine even Kaiser William going +into the palm-leaf hut of a charcoal-burner in German East Africa +and saying: "This is my palm-leaf hut. This is my charcoal. You must +not sell it to the English, or the French, or the American. If they +buy from you they are 'receivers of stolen goods.' To feed my +soldiers you must drag my river for my fish. For me, in my swamp and +in my jungle, you <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>must toil twenty-four days of each month to +gather my rubber. You must not hunt the elephants, for they are my +elephants. Those tusks that fifty years ago your grandfather, with +his naked spear, cut from an elephant, and which you have tried to +hide from me under the floor of this hut, are my ivory. Because that +elephant, running wild through the jungle fifty years ago, belonged +to me. And you yourself are mine, your time is mine, your labor is +mine, your wife, your children, all are mine. They belong to me."</p> + +<a name="img6" id="img6"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-06.jpg" width="500" height="319" alt=""Tenants" of Leopold, Who Claims that the Congo +Belongs to Him, and that These Native People Are There Only as His +Tenants." title=""Tenants" of Leopold, Who Claims that the Congo +Belongs to Him, and that These Native People Are There Only as His +Tenants." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">"Tenants" of Leopold, Who Claims that the Congo +Belongs to Him, <br /> +and that These Native People Are There Only as His +Tenants. </p> + +<p>This, then, is the "open door" as I find it to-day in the Congo. It +is an incredible state of affairs, so insolent, so magnificent in +its impertinence, that it would be humorous, were it not for its +background of misery and suffering, for its hostage houses, its +chain gangs, its <i>chicottes</i>, its nameless crimes against the human +body, its baskets of dried hands held up in tribute to the Belgian +blackguard.</p> + + + +<hr class="short" /> +<br /> + +<h2><a name="III" id="III"></a>III</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span> + +<h3>THE CAPITAL OF THE CONGO</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>Leopold's "shop" has its front door at Banana. Its house flag is a +golden star on a blue background. Banana is the port of entry to the +Congo. You have, no doubt, seen many ports of Europe—Antwerp, +Hamburg, Boulogne, Lisbon, Genoa, Marseilles. Banana is the port of +entry to a country as large as Western Europe, and while the imports +and exports of Europe trickle through all these cities, the commerce +of the Congo enters and departs entirely at Banana. You can then +picture the busy harbor, the jungle of masts, the white bridges and +awnings of the steamers. By the fat funnels and the flags you can +distinguish the English tramps, the German merchantmen, the French, +Dutch, Italian, Portuguese traders, the smart "liners" from +Liverpool, even the Arab dhows with bird-wing sails, even the steel, +four-masted <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>schooners out of Boston, U.S.A. You can imagine the +toiling lighters, the slap-dash tenders, the launches with shrieking +whistles.</p> + +<p>Of course, you suspect it is not a bit like that. But were it for +fourteen countries the "open door" to twenty millions of people, +that is how it might look.</p> + +<p>Instead, it is the private entrance to the preserves of a private +individual. So what you really see is, on the one hand, islands of +mangrove bushes, with their roots in the muddy water; on the other, +Banana, a strip of sand and palm trees without a wharf, quay, +landing stage, without a pier to which you could make fast anything +larger than a rowboat.</p> + +<p>In a canoe naked natives paddle alongside to sell fish; a peevish +little man in a sun hat, who, in order to save Leopold three +salaries, holds four port offices, is being rowed to the gangway; on +shore the only other visible inhabitant of Banana, a man with no +nerves, is disturbing the brooding, sweating silence by knocking the +rust off the plates of a stranded mud-scow. Welcome to our city! +Welcome to busy, bustling Banana, the port of entry of the Congo +Free State.</p> + +<a name="img7" id="img7"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-07.jpg" width="500" height="352" alt="The Facilities for Landing at Banana, the Port of +Entry to the Congo, Are Limited." title="The Facilities for Landing at Banana, the Port of +Entry to the Congo, Are Limited." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Facilities for Landing at Banana, the Port of +Entry to the Congo, Are Limited. </p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>In a canoe we were paddled to the back yard of the café of Madame +Samuel, and from that bower of warm beer and sardine tins trudged +through the sun up one side of Banana and down the other. In between +the two paths were the bungalows and gardens of forty white men and +two white women. Many of the gardens, as was most of Banana, were +neglected, untidy, littered with condensed-milk tins. Others, more +carefully tended, were laid out in rigid lines. With all tropical +nature to draw upon, nothing had been imagined. The most ambitious +efforts were designs in whitewashed shells and protruding beer +bottles. We could not help remembering the gardens in Japan, of the +poorest and the most ignorant coolies. Do I seem to find fault with +Banana out of all proportion to its importance? It is because +Banana, the Congo's most advanced post of civilization, is typical +of all that lies beyond.</p> + +<p>From what I had read of the Congo I expected a broad sweep of muddy, +malaria-breeding water, lined by low-lying swamp lands, gloomy, +monotonous, depressing.</p> + +<p>But on the way to Boma and, later, when <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>I travelled on the Upper +Congo, I thought the river more beautiful than any great river I had +ever seen. It was full of wonderful surprises. Sometimes it ran +between palm-covered banks of yellow sand as low as those of the +Mississippi or the Nile; and again, in half an hour, the banks were +rock and as heavily wooded as the mountains of Montana, or as white +and bold as the cliffs of Dover, or we passed between great hills, +covered with what looked like giant oaks, and with their peaks +hidden in the clouds. I found it like no other river, because in +some one particular it was like them all. Between Banana and Boma +the banks first screened us in with the tangled jungle of the +tropics, and then opened up great wind-swept plateaux, leading to +hills that suggested—of all places—England, and, at that, +cultivated England. The contour of the hills, the shape of the +trees, the shade of their green contrasted with the green of the +grass, were like only the cliffs above Plymouth. One did not look +for native kraals and the wild antelope, but for the square, +ivy-topped tower of the village church, the loaf-shaped hayricks, +slow-moving masses of sheep. But <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>this that looks like a pasture +land is only coarse limestone covered with bitter, unnutritious +grass, which benefits neither beast nor man.</p> + +<p>At sunset we anchored in the current three miles from Boma, and at +daybreak we tied up to the iron wharf. As the capital of the +government Boma contains the residence and gardens of the governor, +who is the personal representative of Leopold, both as a shopkeeper +and as a king by divine right. He is a figurehead. The real +administrator is M. Vandamme, the Secrétaire-Général, the +ubiquitous, the mysterious, whose name before you leave Southampton +is in the air, of whom all men, whether they speak in French or +English, speak well. It is from Boma that M. Vandamme sends +collectors of rubber, politely labeled inspecteurs, directeurs, +judges, capitaines, and sous-lieutenants to their posts, and +distributes them over one million square miles.</p> + +<p>Boma is the capital of a country which is as large as six nations of +the European continent. For twenty-five years it has been the +capital. Therefore, the reader already guesses that <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>Boma has only +one wharf, and at that wharf there is no custom-house, no warehouse, +not even a canvas awning under which, during the six months of rainy +season, one might seek shelter for himself and his baggage.</p> + +<p>Our debarkation reminded me of a landing of filibusters. A wharf +forty yards long led from the steamer to the bank. Down this marched +the officers of the army, the clerks, the bookkeepers, and on the +bank and in the street each dumped his boxes, his sword, his +camp-bed, his full-dress helmet. It looked as though a huge eviction +had taken place, as though a retreating army, having gained the +river's edge, were waiting for a transport. It was not as though to +the government the coming of these gentlemen was a complete +surprise; regularly every three weeks at that exact spot a like +number disembark. But in years the State has not found it worth +while to erect for them even an open zinc shed. The cargo invoiced +to the State is given equal consideration.</p> + +<p>"Prisoners of the State," each wearing round his neck a steel ring +from which a chain stretches to the ring of another "prisoner," +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>carried the cargo to the open street, where lay the luggage of the +officers, and there dropped it. Mingled with steamer chairs, tin +bathtubs, gun-cases, were great crates of sheet iron, green boxes of +gin, bags of Teneriffe potatoes, boilers of an engine. Upon the +scene the sun beat with vicious, cruel persistence. Those officers +who had already served in the Congo dropped their belongings under +the shadow of a solitary tree. Those who for the first time were +seeing the capital of the country they had sworn to serve sank upon +their boxes and, with dismay in their eyes, mopped their red and +dripping brows.</p> + +<a name="img8" id="img8"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-08.jpg" width="500" height="308" alt=""Prisoners" of the State in Chains at Matadi." title=""Prisoners" of the State in Chains at Matadi."/> +</div> + +<p class="cap">"Prisoners" of the State in Chains at Matadi. </p> + +<p>Boma is built at the foot of a hill of red soil. It is a town of +scattered buildings made of wood and sheet-iron plates, sent out in +crates, and held together with screws. To Boma nature has been +considerate. She has contributed many trees, two or three long +avenues of palms, and in the many gardens caused flowers to blossom +and flourish. In the report of the "Commission of Enquiry" which +Leopold was forced to send out in 1904 to investigate the +atrocities, and each member of which, for his four months' work, +received <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>$20,000, Boma is described as possessing "the daintiness +and <i>chic</i> of a European watering-place."</p> + +<p>Boma really is like a seaport of one of the Central American republics. +It has a temporary sufficient-to-the-day-for-to-morrow-we-die air. +It looks like a military post that at any moment might be abandoned. +To remove this impression the State has certain exhibits which seem +to point to a stable and good government. There is a well-conducted +hospital and clean, well-built barracks; for the amusement of the +black soldiers even a theatre, and for the higher officials +attractive bungalows, a bandstand, where twice a week a negro band +plays by ear, and plays exceedingly well. There is even a +lawn-tennis court, where the infrequent visitor to the Congo is +welcomed, and, by the courteous Mr. Vandamme, who plays tennis as +well as he does every thing else, entertained. Boma is the shop +window of Leopold's big store. The good features of Boma are like +those attractive articles one sometimes sees in a shop window, but +which in the shop one fails to find—at least, I did not find them +in the shop. Outside of Boma <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>I looked in vain for a school +conducted by the State, like the one at Boma, such as those the +United States Government gave by the hundred to the Philippines. I +found not one. And I looked for such a hospital as the one I saw at +Boma, such as our government has placed for its employes along, and +at both ends of, the Isthmus of Panama, and, except for the one at +Leopoldville, I saw none.</p> + +<p>In spite of the fact that Boma is a "European watering-place," all +the servants of the State with whom I talked wanted to get away from +it, especially those who already had served in the interior. To +appreciate what Boma lacks one has only to visit the neighboring +seaports on the same coast; the English towns of Sierra Leone and +Calabar, the French town of Libreville in the French Congo, the +German seaport Duala in the Cameroons, but especially Calabar in +Southern Nigeria. In actual existence the new Calabar is eight years +younger than Boma, and in its municipal government, its +street-making, cleaning, and lighting, wharfs, barracks, prisons, +hospitals, it is a hundred years in advance. Boma is not a capital; +it is the distributing factory for a huge trading <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>concern, and a +particularly selfish one. There is, as I have said, only one wharf, +and at that wharf, without paying the State, only State boats may +discharge cargo, so the English, Dutch, and German boats are forced +to "tie up" along the river front. There the grass is eight feet +high and breeds mosquitoes and malaria, and conceals the wary +crocodile. At night, from the deck of the steamer, all one can see +of this capital is a fringe of this high grass in the light from the +air ports, and on shore three gas-lamps. No cafés are open, no +sailors carouse, no lighted window suggests that some one is giving +a dinner, that some one is playing bridge. Darkness, gloom, silence +mark this "European watering-place."</p> + +<p>"You ask me," demanded a Belgian lieutenant one night as we stood +together by the rail, "whether I like better the bush, where there +is no white man in a hundred miles, or to be stationed at Boma?"</p> + +<p>He threw out his hands at the gas-lamps, rapidly he pointed at each +of them in turn.</p> + +<p>"Voilà, Boma!" he said.</p> + +<p>From Boma we steamed six hours farther up the river to Matadi. On +the way we stopped <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>at Noqui, the home of Portuguese traders on the +Portuguese bank, which, as one goes up-stream, lies to starboard. +Here the current runs at from four to five miles an hour, and has so +sharply cut away the bank that we are able to run as near to it with +the stern of our big ship as though she were a canoe. To one used +more to ocean than to Congo traffic it was somewhat bewildering to +see the five-thousand-ton steamer make fast to a tree, a sand-bank +looming up three fathoms off her quarter, and the blades of her +propeller, as though they were the knives of a lawn-mower, cutting +the eel-grass.</p> + +<p>At Matadi the Congo makes one of her lightning changes. Her banks, +which have been low and woody, with, on the Portuguese side, +glimpses of boundless plateaux, become towering hills of rock. At +Matadi the cataracts and rapids begin, and for two hundred miles +continue to Stanley Pool, which is the beginning of the Upper Congo. +Leopoldville is situated on Stanley Pool, just to the right of where +the rapids start their race to the south. With Leopoldville above +and Boma below, still nearer the mouth of the river, Matadi makes a +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>centre link in the chain of the three important towns of the Lower +Congo.</p> + +<p>When Henry M. Stanley was halted by the cataracts and forced to +leave the river he disembarked his expedition on the bank opposite +Matadi, and a mile farther up-stream. It was from this point he +dragged and hauled his boats, until he again reached smooth water at +Stanley Pool. The wagons on which he carried the boats still can be +seen lying on the bank, broken and rusty. Like the sight of old gun +carriages and dismantled cannon, they give one a distinct thrill. +Now, on the bank opposite from where they lie, the railroad runs +from Matadi to Leopoldville.</p> + +<p>The Congo forces upon one a great admiration for Stanley. Unless +civilization utterly alters it, it must always be a monument to his +courage, and as you travel farther and see the difficulties placed +in his way, your admiration increases. There are men here who make +little of what Stanley accomplished; but they are men who seldom +leave their own compound, and, who, when they do go up the river, +travel at ease, not in a canoe, or on foot <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>through the jungle, but +in the smoking-room of the steamer and in a first-class railroad +carriage. That they are able so to travel is due to the man they +would belittle. The nickname given to Stanley by the natives is +to-day the nickname of the government. Matadi means rock. When +Stanley reached the town of Matadi, which is surrounded entirely by +rock, he began with dynamite to blast roads for his caravan. The +natives called him Bula Matadi, the Breaker of Rocks, and, as in +those days he was the Government, the Law, and the Prophets, Bula +Matadi, who then was the white man who governed, now signifies the +white man's government. But it is a very different government, and a +very different white man. With the natives the word is universal. +They say "Bula Matadi wood post." "Not traders' chop, Bula Matadi's +chop." "Him no missionary steamer, him Bula Matadi steamer."</p> + +<p>The town of Matadi is of importance as the place where, owing to the +rapids, passengers and cargoes are reshipped on the railroad to the +<i>haut Congo</i>. It is a railroad terminus only, and it looks it. The +railroad station and store-houses <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>are close to the river bank, and, +spread over several acres of cinders, are the railroad yard and +machine shops. Above those buildings of hot corrugated zinc and the +black soil rises a great rock. It is not so large as Gibraltar, or +so high as the Flatiron Building, but it is a little more steep than +either. Three narrow streets lead to its top. They are of flat +stones, with cement gutters. The stones radiate the heat of stove +lids. They are worn to a mirror-like smoothness, and from their +surface the sun strikes between your eyes, at the pit of your +stomach, and the soles of your mosquito boots. The three streets +lead to a parade ground no larger than and as bare as a brickyard. +It is surrounded by the buildings of Bula Matadi, the post-office, +the custom-house, the barracks, and the Café Franco-Belge. It has a +tableland fifty yards wide of yellow clay so beaten by thousands of +naked feet, so baked by the heat, that it is as hard as a brass +shield. Other tablelands may be higher, but this is the one nearest +the sun. You cross it wearily, in short rushes, with your heart in +your throat, and seeking shade, as a man crossing the zone of fire +seeks cover from the bullets. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>When you reach the cool, dirty +custom-house, with walls two feet thick, you congratulate yourself +on your escape; you look back into the blaze of the flaming plaza +and wonder if you have the courage to return.</p> + +<a name="img9" id="img9"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 336px;"> +<img src="images/img-09.jpg" width="336" height="450" alt="Bush Boys in the Plaza at Matadi Seeking Shade." +title="Bush Boys in the Plaza at Matadi Seeking Shade." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Bush Boys in the Plaza at Matadi Seeking Shade. </p> + +<p>At the custom-house I paid duty on articles I could not possibly +have bought anywhere in the Congo, as, for instance, a tent and a +folding-bed, and for a license to carry arms. A young man with a +hammer and tiny branding irons beat little stars and the number of +my license to <i>porter d'armes</i> on the stock of each weapon. Without +permission of Bula Matadi on leaving the Congo, one can not sell his +guns, or give them away. This is a precaution to prevent weapons +falling into the hands of the native. For some reason a native with +a gun alarms Bula Matadi. Just on the other bank of the river the +French, who do not seem to fear the black brother, sell him +flint-lock rifles, as many as his heart desires.</p> + +<p>On the steamer there was a mild young missionary coming out, for the +first time, to whom some unobserving friend had given a fox-terrier. +The young man did not care for the dog. He had never owned a dog, +and did not <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>know what to do with this one. Her name was "Fanny," +and only by the efforts of all on board did she reach the Congo +alive. There was no one, from the butcher to the captain, including +the passengers, who had not shielded Fanny from the cold, and later +from the sun, fed her, bathed her, forced medicine down her throat, +and raced her up and down the spar deck. Consequently we all knew +Fanny, and it was a great shock when from the custom-house I saw her +running around the blazing parade ground, her eyes filled with fear +and "lost dog" written all over her, from her drooping tongue to her +drooping tail. Captain Burton and I called "Fanny," and, not seeking +suicide for ourselves, sent half a dozen black boys to catch her. +But Fanny never liked her black uncles; on the steamer the Kroo boys +learned to give her the length of her chain, and so we were forced +to plunge to her rescue into the valley of heat. Perhaps she thought +we were again going to lock her up on the steamer, or perhaps that +it was a friendly game, for she ran from us as fast as from the +black boys. In Matadi no one ever had crossed the parade ground +except at a funeral march, and the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>spectacle of two large white +men playing tag with a small fox-terrier attracted an immense +audience. The officials and clerks left work and peered between the +iron-barred windows, the "prisoners" in chains ceased breaking rock +and stared dumbly from the barracks, the black "sentries" shrieked +and gesticulated, the naked bush boys, in from a long caravan +journey, rose from the side of their burdens and commented upon our +manœuvres in gloomy, guttural tones. I suspect they thought we +wanted Fanny for "chop." Finally Fanny ran into the legs of a German +trader, who grabbed her by the neck and held her up to us.</p> + +<p>"You want him? Hey?" he shouted.</p> + +<p>"Ay, man," gasped Burton, now quite purple, "did you think we were +trying to amuse the dog?"</p> + +<p>I made a leash of my belt, and the captain returned to the ship +dragging his prisoner after him. An hour later I met the youthful +missionary leading Fanny by a rope.</p> + +<p>"I must tell you about Fanny," he cried. "After I took her to the +Mission I forgot to tie her up—as I suppose I should have done—and +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>she ran away. But, would you believe it, she found her way straight +back to the ship. Was it not intelligent of her?"</p> + +<p>I was too far gone with apoplexy, heat prostration, and sunstroke to +make any answer, at least one that I could make to a missionary.</p> + +<p>The next morning Fanny, the young missionary, and I left for +Leopoldville on the railroad. It is a narrow-gauge railroad built +near Matadi through the solid rock and later twisting and turning so +often that at many places one can see the track on three different +levels. It is not a State road, but was built and is owned by a +Dutch company, and, except that it charges exorbitant rates and does +not keep its carriages clean, it is well run, and the road-bed is +excellent. But it runs a passenger train only three times a week, +and though the distance is so short, and though the train starts at +6:30 in the morning, it does not get you to Leopoldville the same +day. Instead, you must rest over night at Thysville and start at +seven the next morning. That afternoon at three you reach +Leopoldville. For the two hundred and fifty miles the fare is two +hundred francs, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>and one is limited to sixty pounds of luggage. That +was the weight allowed by the Japanese to each war correspondent, +and as they gave us six months in Tokio in which to do nothing else +but weigh our equipment, I left Matadi without a penalty. Had my +luggage exceeded the limit, for each extra pound I would have had to +pay the company ten cents. To the Belgian officers and agents who go +for three years to serve the State in the bush the regulation is +especially harsh, and in a company so rich, particularly mean. To +many a poor officer, and on the pay they receive there are no rich +ones, the tax is prohibitive. It forces them to leave behind +medicines, clothing, photographic supplies, all ammunition, which +means no chance of helping out with duck and pigeon the daily menu +of goat and tinned sausages, and, what is the greatest hardship, all +books. This regulation, which the State permitted to the +concessionaires of the railroad, sends the agents of the State into +the wilderness physically and mentally unequipped, and it is no +wonder the weaker brothers go mad, and act accordingly.</p> + +<p>My black boys travelled second-class, which <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>means an open car with +narrow seats very close together and a wooden roof. On these cars +passengers are allowed twenty pounds of luggage and permitted to +collect two hundred and fifty miles of heat and dust. To a black boy +twenty pounds is little enough, for he travels with much more +baggage than an average "blanc." I am not speaking of the Congo boy. +All the possessions the State leaves him he could carry in his +pockets, and he has no pockets. But wherever he goes the Kroo boy, +Mendi boy, or Sierra Leone boy carries all his belongings with him +in a tin trunk painted pink, green, or yellow. He is never separated +from his "box," and the recognized uniform of a Kroo boy at work, is +his breechcloth, and hanging from a ribbon around his knee, the key +to his box. If a boy has no box he generally carries three keys.</p> + +<p>In the first-class car were three French officers en route to +Brazzaville, the capital of the French Congo, and a dog, a sad +mongrel, very dirty, very hungry. On each side of the tiny toy car +were six revolving-chairs, so the four men, not to speak of the dog, +quite filled it. And to our own bulk each added hand-bags, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>cases of +beer, helmets, gun-cases, cameras, water-bottles, and, as the road +does not supply food of any kind, his chop-box. A chop-box is +anything that holds food, and for food of every kind, for the hours +of feeding, and the verb "to feed," on the West Coast, the only +word, the "lazy" word, is "chop."</p> + +<p>The absent-minded young missionary, with Fanny jammed between his +ankles, and looking out miserably upon the world, and two other +young missionaries, travelled second-class.</p> + +<p>They were even more crowded together than were we, but not so much +with luggage as with humanity. But as a protest against the high +charges of the railroad the missionaries always travel in the open +car. These three young men were for the first time out of England, +and in any fashion were glad to start on their long journey up the +Congo to Bolobo. To them whatever happened was a joke. It was a joke +even when the colored "wife" of one of the French officers used the +broad shoulders of one of them as a pillow and slept sweetly. She +was a large, good-natured, good-looking mulatto, and at the frequent +stations the French officer ran back to her with "white man's chop," +a tin <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>of sausages, a pineapple, a bottle of beer. She drank the +beer from the bottle, and with religious tolerance offered it to the +Baptists. They assured her without the least regret that they were +teetotalers. To the other blacks in the open car the sight of a +white man waiting on one of their own people was a thrilling +spectacle. They regarded the woman who could command such services +with respect. It would be interesting to know what they thought of +the white man. At each station the open car disgorged its occupants +to fill with water the beer bottle each carried, and to buy from the +natives kwango, the black man's bread, a flaky, sticky flour that +tastes like boiled chestnuts; and pineapples at a franc for ten. And +such pineapples! Not hard and rubber-like, as we know them at home, +but delicious, juicy, melting in the mouth like hothouse grapes, +and, also, after each mouthful, making a complete bath necessary. +One of the French officers had a lump of ice which he broke into +pieces and divided with the others. They saluted magnificently many +times, and as each drowned the morsel in his tin cup of beer, one of +them cried with <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>perfect simplicity: "C'est Paris!" This reminded me +that the ship's steward had placed much ice in my chop basket, and I +carried some of it to another car in which were five of the White +Sisters. For nineteen days I had been with them on the steamer, but +they had spoken to no one, and I was doubtful how they would accept +my offering. But the Mother Superior gave permission, and they took +the ice through the car window, their white hoods bristling with the +excitement of the adventure. They were on their way to a post still +two months' journey up the river, nearly to Lake Tanganyika, and for +three years or, possibly, until they died, that was the last ice +they would see.</p> + +<p>At Bongolo station the division superintendent came in the car and +everybody offered him refreshment, and in return he told us, in the +hope of interesting us, of a washout, and then casually mentioned +that an hour before an elephant had blocked the track. It seemed so +much too good to be true that I may have expressed some doubt, for +he said: "Why, of course and certainly. Already this morning one was +at Sariski Station and another at <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>Sipeto." And instead of looking +out of the window I had been reading an American magazine, filched +from the smoking-room, which was one year old!</p> + +<p>At Thysville the railroad may have opened a hotel, but when I was +there to hunt for a night's shelter it turned you out bag and +baggage. The French officers decided to risk a Portuguese trading +store known as the "Ideal Hotel," and the missionaries very kindly +gave me the freedom of their Rest House. It is kept open for +those of the Mission who pass between the Upper and Lower Congo. +At the station the young missionaries were met by two older +missionaries—Mr. Weekes, who furnished the "Commission of Enquiry" +with much evidence, which they would not, or were not allowed to, +print, and Mr. Jennings. With them were twenty "boys" from the +Mission and, with each of them carrying a piece of our baggage on +his head, we climbed the hill, and I was given a clean, comfortable, +completely appointed bedroom. Our combined chop we turned over to a +black brother. He is the custodian of the Rest House and an +excellent cook. While he was <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>preparing it my boys spread out my +folding rubber tub. Had I closed the door I should have smothered, +so, in the presence of twenty interested black Baptists, I took an +embarrassing but one of the most necessary baths I can remember.</p> + +<p>There still was a piece of the ice remaining, and as the interest in +the bathtub had begun to drag I handed it to one of my audience. He +yelled as though I had thrust into his hand a drop of vitriol, and, +leaping in the air, threw the ice on the floor and dared any one to +touch it. From the "personal" boys who had travelled to Matadi the +Mission boys had heard of ice. But none had ever seen it. They +approached it as we would a rattlesnake. Each touched it and then +sprang away. Finally one, his eyes starting from his head, +cautiously stroked the inoffensive brick and then licked his +fingers. The effect was instantaneous. He assured the others it was +"good chop," and each of them sat hunched about it on his heels, +stroking it, and licking his fingers, and then with delighted +thrills rubbing them over his naked body. The little block of ice +that at Liverpool was only a "<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>quart of water" had assumed the value +of a diamond.</p> + +<p>Dinner was enlivened by an incident. Mr. Weekes, with orders simply +to "fry these," had given to the assistant of the cook two tins of +sausages. The small <i>chef</i> presented them to us in the pan in which +he had cooked them, but he had obeyed instructions to the letter and +had fried the tins unopened.</p> + +<p>After dinner we sat until late, while the older men told the young +missionaries of atrocities of which, in the twenty years and within +the last three years, they had been witnesses. Already in Mr. +Morel's books I had read their testimony, but hearing from the men +themselves the tales of outrage and cruelty gave them a fresh and +more intimate value, and sent me to bed hot and sick with +indignation. But, nevertheless, the night I slept at Thysville was +the only cool one I knew in the Congo. It was as cool as is a night +in autumn at home. Thysville, between the Upper and the Lower Congo, +with its fresh mountain air, is an obvious site for a hospital for +the servants of the State. To the Congo it should be what <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>Simla is +to the sick men of India; but the State is not running hospitals. It +is in the rubber business.</p> + +<p>All steamers for the Upper Congo and her great tributaries, whether +they belong to the State or the Missions, start from Leopoldville. +There they fit out for voyages, some of which last three and four +months. So it is a place of importance, but, like Boma, it looks as +though the people who yesterday built it meant to-morrow to move +out. The river-front is one long dump-heap. It is a grave-yard for +rusty boilers, deck-plates, chains, fire-bars. The interior of the +principal storehouse for ships' supplies, directly in front of the +office of the captain of the port, looks like a junk-shop for old +iron and newspapers. I should have enjoyed taking the captain of the +port by the neck and showing him the water-front and marine shops at +Calabar; the wharfs and quays of stone, the open places spread with +gravel, the whitewashed cement gutters, the spare parts of +machinery, greased and labeled in their proper shelves, even the +condemned scrap-iron in orderly piles; the whole yard as trim as a +battleship.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>On the river-front at Leopoldville a grossly fat man, collarless, +coatless, purple-faced, perspiring, was rushing up and down. He was +the captain of the port. Black women had assembled to greet +returning black soldiers, and the captain was calling upon the black +sentries to drive them away. The sentries, yelling, fell upon the +women with their six-foot staves and beat them over the head and +bare shoulders, and as they fled, screaming, the captain of the port +danced in the sun shaking his fists after them and raging violently. +Next morning I was told he had tried to calm his nerves with +absinthe, which is not particularly good for nerves, and was +exceedingly unwell. I was sorry for him. The picture of discipline +afforded by the glazed-eyed official, reeling and cursing in the +open street, had been illuminating.</p> + +<p>Although at Leopoldville the State has failed to build wharfs, the +esthetic features of the town have not been neglected, and there is +a pretty plaza called Stanley Park. In the centre of this plaza is a +pillar with, at its base, a bust of Leopold, and on the top of the +pillar a plaster-of-Paris lady, nude, and, not unlike <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>the +Bacchante of MacMonnies. Not so much from the likeness as from +history, I deduced that the lady must be Cléo de Mérode. But whether +the monument is erected to her or to Leopold, or to both of them, I +do not know.</p> + +<a name="img10" id="img10"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 258px;"> +<img src="images/img-10.jpg" width="258" height="450" alt="The Monument in Stanley Park, Erected, not to +Stanley, but to Leopold." title= "The Monument in Stanley Park, Erected, not to +Stanley, but to Leopold." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Monument in Stanley Park, Erected, not to +Stanley, but to Leopold. </p> + +<p>I left Leopoldville in the <i>Deliverance</i>. Some of the State boats +that make the long trip to Stanleyville are very large ships. They +have plenty of deck room and many cabins. With their flat, raft-like +hull, their paddle-wheel astern, and the covered sun deck, they +resemble gigantic house-boats. Of one of these boats the +<i>Deliverance</i> was only one-third the size, but I took passage on her +because she would give me a chance to see not only something of the +Congo, but also one of its great tributaries, the less travelled +Kasai. The <i>Deliverance</i> was about sixty-five feet over all and drew +three feet of water. She was built like a mud-scow, with a deck of +iron plates. Amidships, on this deck, was a tiny cabin with berths +for two passengers and standing room for one. The furnaces and +boiler were forward, banked by piles of wood. All the river boats +burn only wood. Her engines were in the stern. These engines and the +driving-rod <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>to the paddle-wheel were uncovered. This gives the +<i>Deliverance</i> the look of a large automobile without a tonneau. You +were constantly wondering what had gone wrong with the carbureter, +and if it rained what would happen to her engines. Supported on iron +posts was an upper deck, on which, forward, stood the captain's box +of a cabin and directly in front of it the steering-wheel. The +telegraph, which signalled to the openwork engine below, and a +dining table as small as a chess-board, completely filled the +"bridge." When we sat at table the captain's boy could only just +squeeze himself between us and the rail. It was like dining in a +private box. And certainly no theatre ever offered such scenery, nor +did any menagerie ever present so many strange animals.</p> + +<p>We were four white men: Captain Jensen, his engineer, and the other +passenger, Captain Anfossi, a young Italian. Before he reached his +post he had to travel one month on the <i>Deliverance</i> and for another +month walk through the jungle. He was the most cheerful and amusing +companion, and had he been returning after three years of exile to +his home <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>he could not have been more brimful of spirits. Captain +Jensen was a Dane (almost every river captain is a Swede or a Dane) +and talked a little English, a little French, and a little Bangala. +The mechanician was a Finn and talked the native Bangala, and +Anfossi spoke French. After chop, when we were all assembled on the +upper deck, there would be the most extraordinary talks in four +languages, or we would appoint one man to act as a clearing-house, +and he would translate for the others.</p> + +<p>On the lower deck we carried twenty "wood boys," whose duty was to +cut wood for the furnace, and about thirty black passengers. They +were chiefly soldiers, who had finished their period of service for +the State, with their wives and children. They were crowded on the +top of the hatches into a space fifteen by fifteen feet between our +cabin door and the furnace. Around the combings of the hatches, and +where the scuppers would have been had the <i>Deliverance</i> had +scuppers, the river raced over the deck to a depth of four or five +inches. When the passengers wanted to wash their few clothes or +themselves they carried on their ablutions and laundry work where +they happened <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>to be sitting. But for Anfossi and myself to go from +our cabin to the iron ladder of the bridge it was necessary to wade +both in the water and to make stepping stones of the passengers. I +do not mean that we merely stepped over an occasional arm or leg. I +mean we walked on them. You have seen a football player, in a hurry +to make a touchdown, hurdle without prejudice both friends and foes. +Our progress was like this. But by practice we became so expert that +without even awakening them we could spring lightly from the plump +stomach of a black baby to its mother's shoulder, from there leap to +the father's ribs, and rebound upon the rungs of the ladder.</p> + +<a name="img11" id="img11"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-11.jpg" width="500" height="318" alt="The Deliverance." title="The Deliverance." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The <i>Deliverance</i>. </p> + +<p>The river marched to the sea at the rate of four to five miles an +hour. The <i>Deliverance</i> could make about nine knots an hour, so we +travelled at the average rate of five miles; but for the greater +part of each day we were tied to a bank while the boys went ashore +and cut enough wood to carry us farther. And we never travelled at +night. Owing to the changing currents, before the sun set we ran +into shore and made fast to a tree. I explained how in America the +river boats used search-lights, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>and was told that on one boat the +State had experimented with a searchlight, but that particular +searchlight having got out of order the idea of night travelling was +condemned.</p> + +<p>Ours was a most lazy progress, but one with the most beautiful +surroundings and filled with entertainment. From our private box we +looked out upon the most wonderful of panoramas. Sometimes we were +closely hemmed in by mountains of light-green grass, except where, +in the hollows, streams tumbled in tiny waterfalls between gigantic +trees hung with strange flowering vines and orchids. Or we would +push into great lakes of swirling brown water, dotted with flat +islands overgrown with reed grass higher than the head of a man. +Again the water turned blue and the trees on the banks grew into +forests with the look of cultivated, well-cared-for parks, but with +no sign of man, not even a mud hut or a canoe; only the strangest of +birds and the great river beasts. Sometimes the sky was overcast and +gray, the warm rain shut us in like a fog, and the clouds hid the +peaks of the hills, or there would come a swift black tornado and +the rain beat into our private box, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>and each would sit crouched in +his rain coat, while the engineer smothered his driving-rods in palm +oil, and the great drops drummed down upon the awning and drowned +the fire in our pipes. After these storms, as though it were being +pushed up from below, the river seemed to rise in the centre, to +become convex. By some optical illusion, it seemed to fall away on +either hand to the depth of three or four feet.</p> + +<p>But as a rule we had a brilliant, gorgeous sunshine that made the +eddying waters flash and sparkle, and caused the banks of sand to +glare like whitewashed walls, and turn the sharp, hard fronds of the +palms into glittering sword-blades. The movement of the boat +tempered the heat, and in lazy content we sat in our lookout box and +smiled upon the world. Except for the throb of the engine and the +slow splash, splash, splash of the wheel there was no sound. We +might have been adrift in the heart of a great ocean. So complete +was the silence, so few were the sounds of man's presence, that at +times one almost thought that ours was the first boat to disturb the +Congo.</p> + +<p>Although we were travelling by boat, we <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>spent as much time on land +as on the water. Because the <i>Deliverance</i> burnt wood and, like an +invading army, "lived on the country," she was always stopping to +lay in a supply. That gave Anfossi and myself a chance to visit the +native villages or to hunt in the forest.</p> + +<p>To feed her steamers the State has established along the river-bank +posts for wood, and in theory at these places there always is a +sufficient supply of wood to carry a steamer to the next post. But +our experience was either that another steamer had just taken all +the wood or that the boys had decided to work no more and had hidden +themselves in the bush. The State posts were "clearings," less than +one hundred yards square, cut out of the jungle. Sometimes only +black men were in charge, but as a rule the <i>chef de poste</i> was a +lonely, fever-ridden white, whose only interest in our arrival was +his hope that we might spare him quinine. I think we gave away as +many grains of quinine as we received logs of wood. Empty-handed we +would turn from the wood post and steam a mile or so farther up the +river, where we would run into a bank, and a boy with a steel hawser +would leap overboard <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>and tie up the boat to the roots of a tree. +Then all the boys would disappear into the jungle and attack the +primeval forest. Each was supplied with a machete and was expected +to furnish a <i>bras</i> of wood. A <i>bras</i> is a number of sticks about as +long and as thick as your arm, placed in a pile about three feet +high and about three feet wide. To fix this measure the head boy +drove poles into the bank three feet apart, and from pole to pole at +the same distance from the ground stretched a strip of bark. When +each boy had filled one of these openings all the wood was carried +on board, and we would unhitch the <i>Deliverance</i>, and she would +proceed to burn up the fuel we had just collected. It took the +twenty boys about four hours to cut the wood, and the <i>Deliverance</i> +the same amount of time to burn it. It was distinctly a +hand-to-mouth existence. As I have pointed out, when it is too dark +to see the currents, the Congo captains never attempt to travel. So +each night at sunset Captain Jensen ran into the bank, and as soon +as the plank was out all the black passengers and the crew passed +down it and spent the night on shore. In five minutes the women +would have <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>the fires lighted and the men would be cutting grass +for bedding and running up little shelters of palm boughs and +hanging up linen strips that were both tents and mosquito nets.</p> + +<a name="img12" id="img12"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 290px;"> +<img src="images/img-12.jpg" width="290" height="450" alt="The Native Wife of a Chef de Poste." +title="The Native Wife of a Chef de Poste." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Native Wife of a <i>Chef de Poste</i>. </p> + +<p>In the moonlight the natives with their camp-fires and torches made +most wonderful pictures. Sometimes for their sleeping place the +captain would select a glade in the jungle, or where a stream had +cut a little opening in the forest, or a sandy island, with tall +rushes on either side and the hot African moon shining on the white +sand and turning the palms to silver, or they would pitch camp in a +buffalo wallow, where the grass and mud had been trampled into a +clay floor by the hoofs of hundreds of wild animals. But the fact +that they were to sleep where at sunrise and at sunset came +buffaloes, elephants, and panthers, disturbed the women not at all, +and as they bent, laughing, over the iron pots, the firelight shone +on their bare shoulders and was reflected from their white teeth and +rolling eyes and brazen bangles.</p> + +<p>Until late in the night the goats would bleat, babies cry, and the +"boys" and "mammies" talked, sang, quarrelled, beat tom-toms, and +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>squeezed mournful groans out of the accordion of civilization. One +would have thought we had anchored off a busy village rather than at +a place where, before that night, the inhabitants had been only the +beasts of the jungle and the river.</p> + + + +<hr class="short" /> +<br /> + + +<h2><a name="IV" id="IV"></a>IV</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span> + +<h3>AMERICANS IN THE CONGO</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>In trying to sum up what I found in the Congo Free State, I think +what one fails to find there is of the greatest significance. To +tell what the place is like, you must tell what it lacks. One must +write of the Congo always in the negative. It is as though you +asked: "What sort of a house is this one Jones has built?" and were +answered: "Well, it hasn't any roof, and it hasn't any cellar, and +it has no windows, floors, or chimneys. It's that kind of a house."</p> + +<p>When first I arrived in the Congo the time I could spend there +seemed hopelessly inadequate. After I'd been there a month, it +seemed to me that in a very few days any one could obtain a +painfully correct idea of the place, and of the way it is +administered. If an orchestra starts on an piece of music with all +the instruments out of tune, it need not <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>play through the entire +number for you to know that the instruments are out of tune.</p> + +<p>The charges brought against Leopold II, as King of the Congo, are +three:</p> + +<p>(<i>a</i>) That he has made slaves of the twenty million blacks he +promised to protect.</p> + +<p>(<i>b</i>) That, in spite of his promise to keep the Congo open to trade, +he has closed it to all nations.</p> + +<p>(<i>c</i>) That the revenues of the country and all of its trade he has +retained for himself.</p> + +<p>Any one who visits the Congo and remains only two weeks will be +convinced that of these charges Leopold is guilty. In that time he +will not see atrocities, but he will see that the natives are +slaves, that no foreigner can trade with them, that in the interest +of Leopold alone the country is milked.</p> + +<p>He will see that the government of Leopold is not a government. It +preserves the perquisites and outward signs of government. It coins +money, issues stamps, collects taxes. But it assumes none of the +responsibilities of government. The Congo Free State is only a great +trading house. And in it Leopold is the only wholesale and retail +trader. He gives a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>bar of soap for rubber, and makes a "turn-over" +of a cup of salt for ivory. He is not a monarch. He is a shopkeeper.</p> + +<p>And were the country not so rich in rubber and ivory, were the +natives not sweated so severely, he also would be a bankrupt +shopkeeper. For the Congo is not only one vast trading post, but +also it is a trading post badly managed. Even in the republics of +Central America where the government changes so frequently, and +where each new president is trying to make hay while he can, there +is better administration, more is done for the people, the rights of +other nations are better respected.</p> + +<p>Were the Congo properly managed, it would be one of the richest +territories on the surface of the earth. As it is, through ignorance +and cupidity, it is being despoiled and its people are the most +wretched of human beings. In the White Book containing the reports +of British vice-consuls on conditions in the Congo from April of +last year to January of this year, Mr. Mitchell tells how the +enslavement of the people still continues, how "they" (the +conscripts, as they are <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>called) "are hunted in the forest by +soldiers, and brought in chained by the neck like criminals." They +then, though conscripted to serve in the army, are set to manual +labor. They are slaves. The difference between the slavery under +Leopold and the slavery under the Arab raiders is that the Arab was +the better and kinder master. He took "prisoners" just as Leopold +seizes "conscripts," but he had too much foresight to destroy whole +villages, to carry off all the black man's live stock, and to uproot +his vegetable gardens. He purposed to return. And he did not wish to +so terrify the blacks that to escape from him they would penetrate +farther into the jungle. His motive was purely selfish, but his +methods, compared with those of Leopold, were almost considerate. +The work the State to-day requires of the blacks is so oppressive +that they have no time, no heart, to labor for themselves.</p> + +<p>In every other colony—French, English, German—in the native +villages I saw vegetable gardens, goats, and chickens, large, +comfortable, three-room huts, fences, and, especially in the German +settlement of the Cameroons <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>at Duala, many flower gardens. In Bell +Town at Duala I walked for miles through streets lined with such +huts and gardens, and saw whole families, the very old as well as +the very young, sitting contentedly in the shade of their trees, or +at work in their gardens. In the Congo native villages I saw but one +old person, of chickens or goats that were not to be given to the +government as taxes I saw none, and the vegetable gardens, when +there were any such, were cultivated for the benefit of the <i>chef de +poste</i>, and the huts were small, temporary, and filthy. The dogs in +the kennels on my farm are better housed, better fed, and much +better cared for, whether ill or well, than are the twenty millions +of blacks along the Congo River. And that these human beings are so +ill-treated is due absolutely to the cupidity of one man, and to the +apathy of the rest of the world. And it is due as much to the apathy +and indifference of whoever may read this as to the silence of Elihu +Root or Sir Edward Grey. No one can shirk his responsibility by +sneering, "Am I my brother's keeper?" The Government of the United +States and the thirteen other countries have promised <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>to protect +these people, to care for their "material and moral welfare," and +that promise is morally binding upon the people of those countries. +How much Leopold cares for the material welfare of the natives is +illustrated by the prices he pays the "boys" who worked on the +government steamer in which I went up the Kasai. They were bound on +a three months' voyage, and for each month's work on this trip they +were given in payment their rice and eighty cents. That is, at the +end of the trip they received what in our money would be equivalent +to two dollars and forty cents. And that they did not receive in +money, but in "trade goods," which are worth about ten per cent less +than their money value. So that of the two dollars and eighty cents +that is due them, these black boys, who for three months sweated in +the dark jungle cutting wood, are robbed by this King of twenty-four +cents. One would dislike to grow rich at that price.</p> + +<a name="img13" id="img13"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-13.jpg" width="500" height="318" alt="English Missionaries, and Some of Their Charges." +title="English Missionaries, and Some of Their Charges." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">English Missionaries, and Some of Their Charges. </p> + +<p>In the French Congo I asked the traders at Libreville what they paid +their boys for cutting mahogany. I found the price was four francs a +day without "chop," or three and a half <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span>francs with "chop." That +is, on one side of the river the French pay in cash for one day's +work what Leopold pays in trade goods for the work of a month. As a +result the natives run away to the French side, and often, I might +almost say invariably, when at the <i>poste de bois</i> on the Congo side +we would find two cords of wood, on the other bank at the post for +the French boats we would count two hundred and fifty cords of wood. +I took photographs of the native villages in all the colonies, in +order to show how they compared—of the French and Belgian wood +posts, the one well stocked and with the boys lying about asleep or +playing musical instruments, or alert to trade and barter, and on +the Belgian side no wood, and the unhappy white man alone, and +generally shivering with fever. Had the photographs only developed +properly they would have shown much more convincingly than one can +write how utterly miserable is the condition of the Congo negro. And +the condition of the white man at the wood posts is only a little +better. We found one man absolutely without supplies. He was only +twenty-four hours distant from Leopoldville, but no <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>supplies had +been sent him. He was ill with fever, and he could eat nothing but +milk. Captain Jensen had six cans of condensed milk, which the State +calculated should suffice for him and his passengers for three +months. He turned the lot over to the sick man.</p> + +<p>We found another white man at the first wood post on the Kasai just +above where it meets the Congo. He was in bed and dangerously ill +with enteric fever. He had telegraphed the State at Leopoldville and +a box of medicines had been sent to him; but the State doctors had +forgotten to enclose any directions for their use. We were as +ignorant of medicines as the man himself, and, as it was impossible +to move him, we were forced to leave him lying in his cot with the +row of bottles and tiny boxes, that might have given him life, +unopened at his elbow. It was ten days before the next boat would +touch at his post. I do not know that it reached him in time. One +could tell dozens of such stories of cruelty to natives and of +injustice and neglect to the white agents.</p> + +<p>The fact that Leopold has granted to American syndicates control +over two great <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>territories in the Congo may bring about a better +state of affairs, and, in any event, it may arouse public interest +in this country. It certainly should be of interest to Americans +that some of the most prominent of their countrymen have gone into +close partnership with a speculator as unscrupulous and as notorious +as is Leopold, and that they are to exploit a country which as yet +has been developed only by the help of slavery, with all its +attendant evils of cruelty and torture.</p> + +<p>That Leopold has no right to give these concessions is a matter +which chiefly concerns the men who are to pay for them, but it is an +interesting fact.</p> + +<p>The Act of Berlin expressly states: <i>"No Power which exercises, or +shall exercise, sovereign rights in the above-mentioned regions, +shall be allowed to grant therein a monopoly or favor of any kind in +matters of trade."</i></p> + +<p>Leopold is only a steward placed by the Powers over the Congo. He is +a janitor. And he has no more authority to give even a foot of +territory to Belgians, Americans, or Chinamen than the janitor of an +apartment house has authority to fill the rooms with his <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>wife's +relations or sell the coal in the basement.</p> + +<p>The charge that the present concessionaires have no title that any +independent trader or miner need respect is one that is sure to be +brought up when the Powers throw Leopold out, and begin to clean +house. The concessionaires take a sporting chance that Leopold will +not be thrown out. It should be remembered that it is to his and to +their advantage to see that he is not.</p> + +<p>In November of 1906, Leopold gave the International Forestry and +Mining Company of the Congo mining rights in territories adjoining +his private park, the <i>Domaine de la Couronne</i>, and to the American +Congo Company he granted the right to work rubber along the Congo +River to where it joins the Kasai. This latter is a territory of +four thousand square miles. The company also has the option within +the next eleven years of buying land in any part of a district which +is nearly one-half of the entire Congo. Of the Forestry and Mining +Company one-half of the profits go to Leopold, one-fourth to +Belgians, and the remaining fourth to the Americans. Of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>profits +of the American Congo Company, Leopold is entitled to one-half and +the Americans to the other half. This company was one originally +organized to exploit a new method of manufacturing crude rubber from +the plant. The company was taken over by Thomas F. Ryan and his +associates. Back of both companies are the Guggenheims, who are to +perform the actual work in the mines and in the rubber plantation. +Early in March a large number of miners and engineers were selected +by John Hays Hammond, the chief engineer of the Guggenheim +Exploration Companies, and A. Chester Beatty, and were sent to +explore the territory granted in the mining concession. Another +force of experts are soon to follow. The legal representative of the +syndicates has stated that in the Congo they intend to move "on +commercial lines." By that we take it they mean they will give the +native a proper price for his labor; and instead of offering +"bonuses" and "commissions" to their white employees will pay them +living wages. The exact terms of the concessions are wrapped in +mystery. Some say the territories ceded to the concessionaires <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>are +to be governed by them, policed by them, and that within the +boundaries of these concessions the Americans are to have absolute +control. If this be so the syndicates are entering upon an +experiment which for Americans is almost without precedent. They +will be virtually what in England is called a chartered company, +with the difference that the Englishmen receive their charter from +their own government, while the charter under which the Americans +will act will be granted by a foreign Power, and for what they may +do in the Congo their own government could not hold them +responsible. They are answerable only to the Power that issued the +charter; and that Power is the just, the humane, the merciful +Leopold.</p> + +<p>The history of the early days of chartered companies in Africa, +notoriously those of the Congo, Northern Nigeria, Rhodesia, and +German Central Africa does not make pleasant reading. But until the +Americans in the Congo have made this experiment, it would be most +unfair (except that the company they choose to keep leaves them open +to suspicion) not to give them the benefit of the doubt. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>One can at +least say for them that they seem to be absolutely ignorant of the +difficulties that lie before them. At least that is true of all of +them to whom I have talked.</p> + +<p>The attorney of the Rubber Company when interviewed by a +representative of a New York paper is reported to have said: "We +have purchased a privilege from a Sovereign State and propose to +operate it along purely commercial lines. With King Leopold's +management of Congo affairs in the past, or, with <i>what he may do in +an administrative way in the future, we have absolutely nothing to +do</i>." The italics are mine.</p> + +<p>When asked: "Under your concessions are you given similar powers +over the native blacks as are enjoyed by other concessionaires?" the +answer of the attorney, as reported, was: "The problem of labor is +not mentioned in the concession agreement, neither is the question +of local administration. We are left to solve the labor problem in +our own way, on a purely commercial basis, and with the question of +government we have absolutely nothing whatever to do. The labor +problem will not be formidable. Our mills are simple affairs. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>One +man can manage them, and the question of the labor on the rubber +concession is reduced to the minimum." This answer of the learned +attorney shows an ignorance of "labor" conditions in the Congo which +is, unless assumed, absolutely abject.</p> + +<p>If the American syndicates are not to police and govern the +territories ceded them, but if these territories are to continue to +be administered by Leopold, it is not possible for the Americans to +have "absolutely nothing to do" with that administration. Leopold's +sole idea of administration is that every black man is his slave, in +other words, the only men the Americans can depend upon for labor +are slaves. Of the profits of these American companies Leopold is to +receive one-half. He will work his rubber with slaves.</p> + +<p>Are the Americans going to use slaves also, or do they intend "on +commercial lines" to pay those who work for them living wages? And +if they do, at the end of the fiscal year, having paid a fair price +for labor, are they prepared to accept a smaller profit than will +their partner Leopold, who obtains his labor with the aid of a chain +and a whip?</p> + +<a name="img14" id="img14"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 287px;"> +<img src="images/img-14.jpg" width="287" height="450" alt="The Laboring Man Upon Whom the American +Concessionaires Must Depend." title="The Laboring Man Upon Whom the American +Concessionaires Must Depend." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Laboring Man Upon Whom the American +Concessionaires Must Depend. </p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>The attorney for the company airily says: "The labor problem will +not be formidable."</p> + +<p>If the man knows what he is talking about, he can mean but one +thing.</p> + +<p>The motives that led Leopold to grant these concessions are possibly +various. The motives that induced the Americans to take his offer +were probably less complicated. With them it was no question of +politics. They wanted the money; they did not need it, for they all +are rich—they merely wanted it. But Leopold wants more than the +half profits he will obtain from the Americans. If the Powers should +wake from their apathy and try to cast him out of the Congo, he +wants, through his American partners, the help of the United States. +Should he be "dethroned," by granting these concessions now on a +share and share alike basis with Belgians, French, and Americans, he +still, through them, hopes to draw from the Congo a fair income. And +in the meanwhile he looks to these Americans to kill any action +against him that may be taken in our Senate and House of +Representatives, even in the White House and Department of State.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>For the last two years Chester A. Beatty has been visiting Leopold +at Belgium, and has obtained the two concessions, and Leopold has +obtained, or hopes he has obtained, the influence of many American +shareholders. The fact that the people of the United States +possessed no "vested interest" in the Congo was the important fact +that placed any action on our part in behalf of that distressed +country above suspicion. If we acted, we did so because the United +States, as one of the signatory Powers of the Berlin Act, had +promised to protect the natives of the Congo; and we could truly +claim that we acted only in the name of humanity. Leopold has now +robbed us of that claim. He hopes that the enormous power wielded by +the Americans with whom he is associated, will prevent any action +against him in this country.</p> + +<p>But the deal has already been made public, and the motives of those +who now oppose improvement of conditions in the Congo, and who +support Leopold, will be at once suspected.</p> + +<p>To me the most interesting thing about the tract of land ceded to +Mr. Ryan, apart from <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>the number of hippopotamuses I saw on it, was +that the people living along the Congo say that it is of no value. +They told me that two years ago, after working it for some time, +Leopold abandoned it as unprofitable, and they added that, when +Leopold cannot whip rubber out of the forest, it is hard to believe +that it can be obtained there legitimately by any one else. On the +bank I saw the "factories" to which the unprofitable rubber had been +carried from the interior. They had formerly belonged to Leopold, +now they are the property of Mr. Ryan and of the American Congo +Company. In only two years they already are in ruins, and the jungle +has engulfed them.</p> + +<p>I was on the land owned by the company a dozen times or more, but I +did not go into the interior. Even had I done so, I am not an expert +on rubber, and would have understood nothing of Para trees, Lagos +silk, and liane. I am speaking not of my own knowledge, only of what +was told me by people who live on the spot. I found that this +particular concession was well known, because, unlike the land given +to the Forestry and Mines <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>Company, it is not an inaccessible tract, +but is situated only eight miles from Leopoldville. In our language, +that is about as far as is the Battery to 160th Street. Leopoldville +is the chief place on the Congo River, and every one there who spoke +to me of the concession knew where it was situated, and repeated +that it had been given up by Leopold as unprofitable, and that he +had unloaded it on Mr. Ryan. They seem to think it very clever of +the King to have got rid of it to the American millionaire. To one +knowing Mr. Ryan only from what he reads of him in the public press, +he does not seem to be the sort of man to whom Leopold could sell a +worthless rubber plantation. However, it is a matter which concerns +only Mr. Ryan and those who may think of purchasing shares in the +company. The Guggenheims, who are to operate this rubber, say that +Leopold did not know how to get out the full value of the land, and +that they, by using the machinery they will install, will be able to +make a profit, where Leopold, using only native labor, suffered a +loss.</p> + +<p>To the poor the ways of the truly rich are past finding out. After a +man has attained a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>fortune sufficient to keep him in yachts and +automobiles, one would think he could afford to indulge himself in +the luxury of being squeamish; that as to where he obtained any +further increase of wealth, he would prefer to pick and choose.</p> + +<p>On the contrary, these Americans go as far out of their way as +Belgium to make a partner of the man who has wrung his money from +wretched slaves, who were beaten, starved, and driven in chains. +This concession cannot make them rich. It can only make them richer. +And not richer in fact, for all the money they may whip out of the +Congo could not give them one thing that they cannot now command, +not an extra taste to the lips, not a fresh sensation, not one added +power for good. To them it can mean only a figure in ink on a page +of a bank-book. But what suffering, what misery it may mean to the +slaves who put it there! Why should men as rich as these elect to go +into partnership with one who sweats his dollars out of the naked +black? How really fine, how really wonderful it would be if these +same men, working together, decided to set free these twenty million +people—if, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span>instead of joining hands with Leopold, they would +overthrow him and march into the Congo free men, without his chain +around their ankles, and open it to the trade of the world, and give +justice and a right to live and to work and to sell and buy to +millions of miserable human beings. These Americans working together +could do it. They could do it from Washington. Or five hundred men +with two Maxim guns could do it. The "kingdom" of the Congo is only +a house of cards. Five hundred filibusters could take Boma, proclaim +the Congo open to the traders of the world, as the Act of Berlin +declares it to be, and in a day make of Leopold the jest of Europe. +They would only be taking possession of what has always belonged to +them.</p> + +<p>Down in the Congo I talked to many young officers of Leopold's army. +They had been driven to serve him by the whips of failure, poverty, +or crime. I do not know that the American concessionaires are driven +by any such scourge. These younger men, who saw the depths of their +degradation, who tasted the dirty work they were doing, were daily +risking <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>life by fever, through lack of food, by poisoned arrows, +and for three hundred dollars a year. Their necessity was great. +They had the courage of their failure. They were men one could pity. +One of them picked at the band of blue and gold braid around the +wrist of his tunic, and said: "Look, it is our badge of shame."</p> + +<p>To me those foreign soldiers of fortune, who, sooner than starve at +home or go to jail, serve Leopold in the jungle, seem more like men +and brothers than these truly rich, who, of their own free will, +safe in their downtown offices, become partners with this blackguard +King.</p> + +<p>What will be the outcome of the American advance into the Congo? +Will it prove the salvation of the Congo? Will it be, if that were +possible, a greater evil?</p> + +<p>E.R. Morel, who is the leader in England of the movement for the +improvement of the Congo, has written: "It is a little difficult to +imagine that the trust magnates are moulded upon the unique model of +Leopold II, and are prepared for the asking to become associates in +slave-driving. The trouble is that they probably know nothing about +African <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>conditions, that they have been primed by the King with his +detestable theories, and are starting their enterprises on the basis +that the natives of Central Africa must be regarded as mere +'laborers' for the white man's benefit, possessing no rights in land +nor in the produce of the soil. If Mr. Ryan and his colleagues are +going to acquire their rubber over four thousand square miles, by +'commercial methods,' we welcome their advent. But we would point +out to them that, in such a case, they had better at once abandon +all idea of three or four hundred per cent dividends with which the +wily autocrat at Brussels has doubtless primed them. No such +monstrous profits are to be acquired in tropical Africa under a +trade system. If, on the other hand, the methods they are prepared +to adopt are the methods King Leopold and his other concessionaires +have adopted for the past thirteen years, devastation and +destruction, and the raising of more large bodies of soldiers, are +their essential accompaniments; and the widening of the area of the +Congo hell is assured."</p> + +<p>The two things in the American invasion of the Congo that promise +good to that <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>unhappy country are that our country is represented at +Boma by a most intelligent, honest, and fearless young man in the +person of James A. Smith, our Consul-General, and that the actual +work of operating the mines and rubber is in the hands of the +Guggenheims. They are well known as men upright in affairs, and as +philanthropists and humanitarians of the common-sense type. Like +other rich men of their race, they have given largely to charity and +to assist those less fortunate than themselves.</p> + +<p>For thirteen years in mines in Mexico, in China, and Alaska, they +have had to deal with the problem of labor, and they have met it +successfully. Workmen of three nationalities they have treated with +fairness.</p> + +<p>"Why should you suppose," Mr. Daniel Guggenheim asked me, "that in +the Congo we will treat the negroes harshly? In Mexico we found the +natives ill-paid and ill-fed. We fed them and paid them well. Not +from any humanitarian idea, but because it was good business. It is +not good business to cut off a workman's hands or head. We are not +ashamed of the way we have always treated <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>our workmen, and in the +Congo we are not going to spoil our record."</p> + +<p>I suggested that in Mexico he did not have as his partner Leopold, +tempting him with slave labor, and that the distance from Broadway +to his concessions in the Congo was so great that as to what his +agents might do there he could not possibly know. To this Mr. +Guggenheim answered that "Neither Leopold nor anyone else can +dictate how we shall treat the native labor," that if his agents +were cruel they would be instantly dismissed, and that for what +occurred in the Congo on the land occupied by the American Congo +Company his brothers and himself alone were responsible, and that +they accepted that responsibility.</p> + +<p>But already on his salary list he has men who are sure to get him +into trouble, men of whose <i>dossiers</i> he is quite ignorant.</p> + +<p>From Belgium, Leopold has unloaded on the American companies several +of his "valets du roi," press agents, and tools, men who for years +have been defenders of his dirty work in the Congo; and of the +Americans, one, who is prominently <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>exploited by the Belgians, had +to leave Africa for theft.</p> + +<p>That Mr. Guggenheim wishes and intends to give to the black in the +Congo fair treatment there is no possible doubt. But that on +Broadway, removed from the scene of operations in time some four to +six months, and in actual distance eight thousand miles, he can +control the acts of his agents and his partners, remains to be +proved. He is attacking a problem much more momentous than the +handling of Mexican <i>peons</i> or Chinese coolies, and every step of +the working out of this problem will be watched by the people of +this country.</p> + +<p>And should they find that the example of the Belgian concessionaires +in their treatment of the natives is being imitated by even one of +the American Congo Company the people of this country will know it, +and may the Lord have mercy on his soul!</p> + + + +<hr class="short" /> +<br /> + +<h2><a name="V" id="V"></a>V</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span> + +<h3>HUNTING THE HIPPO</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>Except once or twice in the Zoo, I never had seen a hippopotamus, +and I was most anxious, before I left the Congo, to meet one. I +wanted to look at him when he was free, and his own master, without +iron bars or keepers; when he believed he was quite alone, and was +enjoying his bath in peace and confidence. I also wanted to shoot +him, and to hang in my ancestral halls his enormous head with the +great jaws open and the inside of them painted pink and the small +tusks hungrily protruding. I had this desire, in spite of the fact +that for every hippo except the particular one whose head I coveted, +I entertained the utmost good feeling.</p> + +<p>As a lad, among other beasts the hippopotamus had appealed to my +imagination. Collectively, I had always looked upon them as <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>most +charming people. They come of an ancient family. Two thousand four +hundred years ago they were mentioned by Herodotus. And Herodotus to +the animal kingdom is what Domesday Book is to the landed gentry. To +exist beautifully for twenty-four hundred years without a single +mésalliance, without having once stooped to trade, is certainly a +strong title to nobility. Other animals by contact with man have +become degraded. The lion, the "King of Beasts," now rides a +bicycle, and growls, as previously rehearsed, at the young woman in +spangles, of whom he is secretly afraid. And the elephant, the +monarch of the jungle, and of a family as ancient and noble as that +of the hippopotamus, the monarch of the river, has become a beast of +burden and works for his living. You can see him in Phœnix Park +dragging a road-roller, in Siam and India carrying logs, and at +Coney Island he bends the knee to little girls from Brooklyn. The +royal proboscis, that once uprooted trees, now begs for peanuts.</p> + +<p>But, you never see a hippopotamus chained to a road-roller, or +riding a bicycle. He is still the gentleman, the man of elegant +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>leisure, the aristocrat of aristocrats, harming no one, and, in his +ancestral river, living the simple life.</p> + +<p>And yet, I sought to kill him. At least, one of him, but only one. +And, that I did not kill even one, while a bitter disappointment, is +still a source of satisfaction.</p> + +<p>In the Congo River we saw only two hippos, and both of them were +dead. They had been shot from a steamer. If the hippo is killed in +the water, it is impossible to recover the body at once. It sinks +and does not rise, some say, for an hour, others say for seven +hours. As in an hour the current may have carried the body four +miles below where it sank, the steamer does not wait, and the +destruction of the big beast is simple murder. There should be a law +in the Congo to prevent their destruction, and, no doubt, if the +State thought it could make a few francs out of protecting the +hippo, as it makes many million francs by preserving the elephant, +which it does for the ivory, such a law would exist. We soon saw +many hippos, but although we could not persuade the only other +passenger not to fire at them, there are a few hippos still alive in +the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>Congo. For, the only time the Captain and I were positive he +hit anything, was when he fired over our heads and blew off the roof +of the bridge.</p> + +<p>When first we saw the two dead hippos, one of them was turning and +twisting so violently that we thought he was alive. But, as we drew +near, we saw the strange convulsions were due to two enormous and +ugly crocodiles, who were fiercely pulling at the body. Crocodiles +being man-eaters, we had no feelings about shooting them, either in +the water or up a tree; and I hope we hit them. In any event, after +we fired the body drifted on in peace.</p> + +<p>On my return trip, going with the stream, when the boat covers about +four times the distance she makes when steaming against it, I saw +many hippos. In one day I counted sixty-nine. But on our way up the +Congo, until we turned into the Kasai River, we saw none.</p> + +<p>So, on the first night we camped in the Kasai I had begun to think I +never would see one, and I went ashore both skeptical and +discouraged. We had stopped, not at a wood post, but at a place on +the river's bank previously <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>untouched by man, where there was a +stretch of beach, and then a higher level with trees and tall +grasses. Driven deep in this beach were the footprints of a large +elephant. They looked as though some one had amused himself by +sinking a bucket in the mud, and then pulling it out. For sixty +yards I followed the holes and finally lost them in a confusion of +other tracks. The place had been so trampled upon that it was beaten +into a basin. It looked as though every animal in the Kasai had met +there to hold a dance. There were the deep imprints of the hippos +and the round foot of the elephant, with the marks of the big toes +showing as clearly as though they had been scooped out of the mud +with a trowel, the hoofs of buffalo as large as the shoe of a cart +horse, and the arrow-like marks of the antelope, some in dainty +little Vs, others measuring three inches across, and three inches +from the base to the point. They came from every direction, down the +bank and out of the river; and crossed and recrossed, and beneath +the fresh prints that had been made that morning at sunrise, were +those of days before rising up sharply out of the sun-dried clay, +like <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>bas-reliefs in stucco. I had gone ashore in a state of mind so +skeptical that I was as surprised as Crusoe at the sight of +footprints. It was as though the boy who did not believe in fairies +suddenly stumbled upon them sliding down the moonbeams. One felt +distinctly apologetic—as though uninvited he had pushed himself +into a family gathering. At the same time there was the excitement +of meeting in their own homes the strange peoples I had seen only in +the springtime, when the circus comes to New York, in the basement +of Madison Square Garden, where they are our pitiful prisoners, +bruising their shoulders against bars. Here they were monarchs of +all they surveyed. I was the intruder; and, looking down at the +marks of the great paws and delicate hoofs, I felt as much out of +place as would a grizzly bear in a Fifth Avenue club. And I behaved +much as would the grizzly bear. I rushed back for my rifle intent on +killing something.</p> + +<p>The sun had just set; the moon was shining faintly: it was the +moment the beasts of the jungle came to the river to drink. Anfossi, +although he had spent three years in the Congo and had three years' +contract still to work out, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>was as determined to kill something as +was the tenderfoot from New York.</p> + +<p>Sixty yards from the stern of the <i>Deliverance</i> was the basin I had +discovered; at an equal distance from her bow, a stream plunged into +the river. Anfossi argued the hippos would prefer to drink the clear +water of the stream, to the muddy water of the basin, and elected to +watch at the stream. I carried a deck chair to the edge of my basin +and placed it in the shadow of the trees. Anfossi went into our +cabin for his rifle. At that exact moment a hippopotamus climbed +leisurely out of the river and plunged into the stream. One of the +soldiers on shore saw him and rushed for the boat. Anfossi sent my +boy on the jump for me and, like a gentleman, waited until I had +raced the sixty yards. But when we reached the stream there was +nothing visible but the trampled grass and great holes in the mud +and near us in the misty moonlight river something that puffed and +blew slowly and luxuriously, as would any fat gentleman who had been +forced to run for it. Had I followed Anfossi's judgment and gone +along the bank sixty yards ahead, instead of sixty yards astern <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>of +the <i>Deliverance</i>, at the exact moment at which I sank into my deck +chair, the hippo would have emerged at my feet. It is even betting +as to which of us would have been the more scared.</p> + +<p>The next day, and for days after, we saw nothing but hippos. We saw +them floating singly and in family groups, with generally four or +five cows to one bull, and sometimes in front a baby hippo no larger +than a calf, which the mother with her great bulk would push against +the swift current, as you see a tugboat in the lee of a great liner. +Once, what I thought was a spit of rocks suddenly tumbled apart and +became twenty hippos, piled more or less on top of each other. +During that one day, as they floated with the current, enjoying +their afternoon's nap, we saw thirty-four. They impressed me as the +most idle, and, therefore, the most aristocratic of animals. They +toil not, neither do they spin; they had nothing to do but float in +the warm water and the bright sunshine; their only effort was to +open their enormous jaws and yawn luxuriously, in the pure content +of living, in absolute boredom. They reminded you only of fat gouty +old <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>gentlemen, puffing and blowing in the pool at the Warm Springs.</p> + +<p>The next chance we had at one of them on shore came on our first +evening in the Kasai just before sunset. Captain Jensen was steering +for a flat island of sand and grass where he meant to tie up for the +night. About fifty yards from the spot for which we were making, was +the only tree on the island, and under it with his back to us, and +leisurely eating the leaves of the lower branches, exactly as though +he were waiting for us by appointment, was a big gray hippo. His +back being toward us, we could not aim at his head, and he could not +see us. But the <i>Deliverance</i> is not noiseless, and, hearing the +paddle-wheel, the hippo turned, saw us, and bolted for the river. +The hippopotamus is as much at home in the water as the seal. To get +to the water, if he is surprised out of it, and to get under it, if +he is alarmed while in it, is instinct. If he does venture ashore, +he goes only a few rods from the bank and then only to forage. His +home is the river, and he rushes to bury himself in it as naturally +as the squirrel makes for a tree. This particular hippo ran for the +river as fast <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>as a horse coming at a slow trot. He was a very badly +scared hippo. His head was high in the air, his fat sides were +shaking, and the one little eye turned toward us was filled with +concern. Behind him the yellow sun was setting into the lagoons. On +the flat stretch of sand he was the only object, and against the +horizon loomed as large as a freight car. That must be why we both +missed him. I tried to explain that the reason I missed him was +that, never before having seen so large an animal running for his +life, I could not watch him do it and look at the gun sights. No one +believed that was why I missed him. I did not believe it myself. In +any event neither of us hit his head, and he plunged down the bank +to freedom, carrying most of the bank with him. But, while we still +were violently blaming each other, at about two hundred yards below +the boat, he again waddled out of the river and waded knee deep up +the little stream. Keeping the bunches of grass between us, I ran up +the beach, aimed at his eye and this time hit him fairly enough. +With a snort he rose high in the air, and so, for an instant, +balanced his enormous bulk. The action was like that of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>a horse +that rears on his hind legs, when he is whipped over the nose. And +apparently my bullet hurt him no more than the whip the horse, for +he dropped heavily to all fours, and again disappeared into the +muddy river. Our disappointment and chagrin were intense, and at +once Anfossi and I organized a hunt for that evening. To encourage +us, while we were sitting on the bridge making a hasty dinner, +another hippopotamus had the impertinence to rise, blowing like a +whale, not ten feet from where we sat. We could have thrown our tin +cups and hit him; but he was in the water, and now we were seeking +only those on land.</p> + +<a name="img15" id="img15"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 324px;"> +<img src="images/img-15.jpg" width="324" height="450" alt="Mr. Davis and Native "Boy," on the Kasai River." +title="Mr. Davis and Native "Boy," on the Kasai River." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Mr. Davis and Native "Boy," on the Kasai River. </p> + +<p>Two years ago when the atrocities along the Kasai made the natives +fear the white man and the white man fear the natives, each of the +river boats was furnished with a stand of Albini rifles. Three of +the black soldiers, who were keen sportsmen, were served with these +muskets, and as soon as the moon rose, the soldiers and Anfossi, my +black boy, with an extra gun, and I set forth to clear the island of +hippos. To the stranger it was a most curious hunt. The island was +perfectly flat and bare, and the river had eaten into it and +overflowed it with <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>tiny rivulets and deep, swift-running streams. +Into these rivulets and streams the soldiers plunged, one in front, +feeling the depth of the water with a sounding rod, and as he led we +followed. The black men made a splendid picture. They were naked but +for breech-cloths, and the moonlight flashed on their wet skins and +upon the polished barrels of the muskets. But, as a sporting +proposition, as far as I could see, we had taken on the hippopotamus +at his own game. We were supposed to be on an island, but the water +was up to our belts and running at five miles an hour. I could not +understand why we had not openly and aboveboard walked into the +river. Wading waist high in the water with a salmon rod I could +understand, but not swimming around in a river with a gun. The force +of the shallowest stream was the force of the great river behind it, +and wherever you put your foot, the current, on its race to the sea, +annoyed at the impediment, washed the sand from under the sole of +your foot and tugged at your knees and ankles. To add to the +interest the three soldiers held their muskets at full cock, and as +they staggered for a footing each pointed his <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>gun at me. There also +was a strange fish about the size of an English sole that sprang out +of the water and hurled himself through space. Each had a white +belly, and as they skimmed past us in the moonlight it was as though +some one was throwing dinner plates. After we had swum the length of +the English Channel, we returned to the boat. As to that midnight +hunt I am still uncertain as to whether we were hunting the hippos +or the hippos were hunting us.</p> + +<p>The next morning we had our third and last chance at a hippo.</p> + +<p>It is distinctly a hard-luck story. We had just gone on the bridge +for breakfast when we saw him walking slowly from us along an island +of white sand as flat as your hand, and on which he loomed large as +a haystack. Captain Jensen was a true sportsman. He jerked the bell +to the engine-room, and at full speed the <i>Deliverance</i> raced for +the shore. The hippo heard us, and, like a baseball player caught +off base, tried to get back to the river. Captain Jensen danced on +the deck plates:</p> + +<p>"Schoot it! schoot it!" he yelled, "Gotfurdamn! schoot it!" When +Anfossi and I fired, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>the <i>Deliverance</i> was a hundred yards from the +hippo, and the hippo was not five feet from the bank. In another +instant, he would have been over it and safe. But when we fired, he +went down as suddenly as though a safe had dropped on him. Except +that he raised his head, and rolled it from side to side, he +remained perfectly still. From his actions, or lack of actions, it +looked as though one of the bullets had broken his back; and when +the blacks saw he could not move they leaped and danced and +shrieked. To them the death of the big beast promised much chop.</p> + +<p>But Captain Jensen was not so confident. "Schoot it," he continued +to shout, "we lose him yet! Gotfurdamn! schoot it!"</p> + +<p>My gun was an American magazine rifle, holding five cartridges. We +now were very near the hippo, and I shot him in the head twice, and, +once, when he opened them, in the jaws. At each shot his head would +jerk with a quick toss of pain, and at the sight the blacks screamed +with delight that was primitively savage. After the last shot, when +Captain Jensen had brought the <i>Deliverance</i> broadside to the bank, +the hippo ceased to move. The <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>boat had not reached the shore before +the boys with the steel hawser were in the water; the gangplank was +run out, and the black soldiers and wood boys, with their knives, +were dancing about the hippo and hacking at his tail. Their idea was +to make him the more quickly bleed to death. I ran to the cabin for +more cartridges. It seemed an absurd precaution. I was as sure I had +the head of that hippo as I was sure that my own was still on my +neck. My only difficulty was whether to hang the head in the front +hall or in the dining-room. It might be rather too large for the +dining-room. That was all that troubled me. After three minutes, +when I was back on deck, the hippo still lay immovable. Certainly +twenty men were standing about him; three were sawing off his tail, +and the women were chanting triumphantly a song they used to sing in +the days when the men were allowed to hunt, and had returned +successful with food.</p> + +<p>On the bridge was Anfossi with his camera. Before the men had +surrounded the hippo he had had time to snap one picture of it. I +had just started after my camera, when from the blacks there was a +yell of alarm, of rage, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>amazement. The hippo had opened his +eyes and raised his head. I shoved the boys out of the way, and, +putting the gun close to his head, fired pointblank. I wanted to put +him out of pain. I need not have distressed myself. The bullet +affected him no more than a quinine pill. What seemed chiefly to +concern him, what apparently had brought him back to life, was the +hacking at his tail. That was an indignity he could not brook.</p> + +<p>His expression, and he had a perfectly human expression, was one of +extreme annoyance and of some slight alarm, as though he were +muttering: "This is no place for <i>me</i>," and, without more ado, he +began to roll toward the river. Without killing some one, I could +not again use the rifle. The boys were close upon him, prying him +back with the gangplank, beating him with sticks of firewood, trying +to rope him with the steel hawser. On the bridge Captain Jensen and +Anfossi were giving orders in Danish and Italian, and on the bank I +swore in American. Everybody shoved and pushed and beat at the great +bulk, and the great bulk rolled steadily on. We might as well have +tried to budge the Fifth Avenue <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>Hotel. He reached the bank, he +crushed it beneath him, and, like a suspension bridge, splashed into +the water. Even then, we who watched him thought he would stick fast +between the boat and the bank, that the hawser would hold him. But +he sank like a submarine, and we stood gaping at the muddy water and +saw him no more. When I recovered from my first rage I was glad he +was still alive to float in the sun and puff and blow and open his +great jaws in a luxurious yawn. I could imagine his joining his +friends after his meeting with us, and remarking in reference to our +bullets: "I find the mosquitoes are quite bad this morning."</p> + +<p>With this chapter is published the photograph Anfossi took, from the +deck of the steamer, of our hippo—the hippo that was too stupid to +know when he was dead. It is not a good photograph, but of our hippo +it is all we have to show. I am still undecided whether to hang it +in the hall or the dining-room. +</p> + +<a name="img16" id="img16"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-16.jpg" width="500" height="345" alt="The Hippopotamus that Did Not Know He Was Dead." +title="The Hippopotamus that Did Not Know He Was Dead." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Hippopotamus that Did Not Know He Was Dead. </p> + +<p>The days I spent on my trip up the river were of delightful +sameness, sunshine by day, with the great panorama drifting past, +and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>quiet nights of moonlight. For diversion, there were many +hippos, crocodiles, and monkeys, and, though we saw only their +tracks and heard them only in the jungle, great elephants. And +innumerable strange birds—egrets, eagles, gray parrots, crimson +cranes, and giant flamingoes—as tall as a man and from tip to tip +measuring eight feet.</p> + +<p>Each day the programme was the same. The arrival at the wood post, +where we were given only excuses and no wood, and where once or +twice we unloaded blue cloth and bags of salt, which is the currency +of the Upper Congo, and the halt for hours to cut wood in the +forest.</p> + +<p>Once we stopped at a mission and noted the contrast it made with the +bare, unkempt posts of the State. It was the Catholic mission at +Wombali, and it was a beauty spot of flowers, thatched houses, +grass, and vegetables. There was a brickyard, and schools, and +sewing-machines, and the blacks, instead of scowling at us, nodded +and smiled and looked happy and contented. The Father was a great +red-bearded giant, who seemed to have still stored up in him all the +energy of the North. While <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>the steamer was unloaded he raced me +over the vegetable garden and showed me his farm. I had seen other +of the Catholic Missions, and I spoke of how well they looked, of +the signs they gave of hard work, and of consideration for the +blacks.</p> + +<p>"I am not of that Order," the Father said gravely. He was speaking +in English, and added, as though he expected some one to resent it: +"We are Jesuits." No one resented it, and he added: "We have our +Order in your country. Do you know Fordham College?"</p> + +<p>Did I know it? If you are trying to find our farm, the automobile +book tells you to leave Fordham College on your left after Jerome +Avenue.</p> + +<p>"Of course, I know it," I said. "They have one of the best baseball +nines near New York; they play the Giants every spring."</p> + +<p>The Reverend Father started.</p> + +<p>"They play with Giants!" he gasped.</p> + +<p>I did not know how to say "baseball nines" in French, but at least +he was assured that whatever it was, it was one of the best near New +York.</p> + +<p>Then Captain Jensen's little black boy ran <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>up to tell me the +steamer was waiting, and began in Bangalese to beg something of the +Father. The priest smiled and left us, returning with a rosary and +crucifix, which the boy hung round his neck, and then knelt, and the +red-bearded Father laid his fingers on the boy's kinky head. He was +a very happy boy over his new possession, and it was much coveted by +all the others. One of the black mammies, to ward off evil from the +little naked baby at her breast, offered an arm's length of blue +cloth for "the White Man's fetish."</p> + +<a name="img17" id="img17"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-17.jpg" width="500" height="304" alt="The Jesuit Brothers at the Wombali Mission." +title="The Jesuit Brothers at the Wombali Mission." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Jesuit Brothers at the Wombali Mission. </p> + +<p>My voyage up the Kasai ended at Dima, the headquarters of the Kasai +Concession. I had been told that at Dima I would find a rubber +plantation, and I had gone there to see it. I found that the +plantation was four days distant, and that the boat for the +plantation did not start for six days. I also had been told by the +English missionaries at Dima, that I would find an American mission. +When I reached Dima I learned that the American mission was at a +station further up the river, which could not be reached sooner than +a month. That is the sort of information upon which in the Congo +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>one is forced to regulate his movements. As there was at Dima +neither mission nor plantation, and as the only boat that would +leave it in ten days was departing the next morning, I remained +there only one night. It was a place cut out of the jungle, two +hundred yards square, and of all stations I saw in the Congo, the +best managed. It is the repair shop for the steamers belonging to +the Kasai Concession, as well as the headquarters of the company and +the residence of the director, M. Dryepoint. He and Van Damme seemed +to be the most popular officials in the Congo. M. Dryepoint was up +the river, so I did not meet him, but I was most courteously and +hospitably entertained by M. Fumière. He gave me a whole house to +myself, and personally showed me over his small kingdom. All the +houses were of brick, and the paths and roads were covered with +gravel and lined with flowers. Nothing in the Congo is more curious +than this pretty town of suburban villas and orderly machine shops; +with the muddy river for a street and the impenetrable jungle for a +back yard. The home of the director at Dima is the proud boast of +the entire Congo. And all <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span>they say of it is true. It did have a +billiard table and ice, and a piano, and M. Fumière invited me to +join his friends at an excellent dinner. In furnishing this +celebrated house, the idea had apparently been to place in it the +things one would least expect to find in the jungle, or, without +wishing to be ungracious, anywhere. So, although there are no women +at Dima, there are great mirrors in brass frames, chandeliers of +glass with festoons and pendants of glass, metal lamps with shades +of every color, painted plaster statuettes and carved silk-covered +chairs. In the red glow of the lamps, surrounded by these Belgian +atrocities, M. Fumière sat down to the pianola. The heat of Africa +filled the room; on one side we could have touched the jungle, on +the other in the river the hippopotamus puffed and snorted. M. +Fumière pulled out the stops, and upon the heat and silence of the +night, floated the "Evening Star," Mascagni's "Intermezzo," and +"Chin-chin Chinaman."</p> + +<p>Next morning I left for Leopoldville in a boat much larger than the +<i>Deliverance</i>, but with none of her cheer or good-fellowship. This +boat was run by the black wife of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>captain. Trailing her velvet +gown, and cleaning her teeth with a stick of wood, she penetrated to +every part of the steamer, making discipline impossible and driving +the crew out of control.</p> + +<p>I was glad to escape at Kinchassa to the clean and homelike bungalow +and beautiful gardens of the only Englishman still in the employ of +the State, Mr. Cuthbert Malet, who gave me hospitably of his scanty +store of "Scotch," and, what was even more of a sacrifice, of his +precious handful of eggs. A week later I was again in Boma, waiting +for the <i>Nigeria</i> to take me back to Liverpool.</p> + +<p>Before returning to the West Coast and leaving the subject of the +Congo, I wish to testify to what seemed to me the enormously +important work that is being done by the missionaries. I am not +always an admirer of the missionary. Some of those one meets in +China and Japan seem to be taking much more interest in their own +bodies than in the souls of others. But, in the Congo, almost the +only people who are working in behalf of the natives are those +attached to the missions. Because they bear witness against Leopold, +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>much is said by his hired men and press agents against them. But +they are deserving of great praise. Some of them are narrow and +bigoted, and one could wish they were much more tolerant of their +white brothers in exile, but compared with the good they do, these +faults count for nothing. It is due to them that Europe and the +United States know the truth about the Congo. They were the first to +bear witness, and the hazardous work they still are doing for their +fellow men is honest, practical Christianity.</p> + + + +<hr class="short" /> +<br /> + +<h2><a name="VI" id="VI"></a>VI</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span> + +<h3>OLD CALABAR</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>While I was up the Congo and the Kasai rivers, Mrs. Davis had +remained at Boma, and when I rejoined her, we booked passage home on +the <i>Nigeria</i>. We chose the <i>Nigeria</i>, which is an Elder-Dempster +freight and passenger steamer, in preference to the fast mail +steamer because of the ports of the West Coast we wished to see as +many as possible. And, on her six weeks' voyage to Liverpool, the +<i>Nigeria</i> promised to spend as much time at anchor as at sea. On the +Coast it is a more serious matter to reserve a cabin than in New +York. You do not stop at an uptown office, and on a diagram of the +ship's insides, as though you were playing roulette, point at a +number. Instead, as you are to occupy your cabin, not for one, but +for six, weeks, you search, as vigilantly as a navy officer looking +for contraband, the ship herself and each cabin.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>But going aboard was a simple ceremony. The Hôtel Splendide stands +on the bank of the Congo River. After saying "Good-by" to her +proprietor, I walked to the edge of the water and waved my helmet. +In the Congo, a white man standing in the sun without a hat is a +spectacle sufficiently thrilling to excite the attention of all, and +at once Captain Hughes of the <i>Nigeria</i> sent a cargo boat to the +rescue, and on the shoulders of naked Kroo boys Mrs. Davis and the +maid, and the trunks, spears, tents, bathtubs, carved idols, native +mats, and a live mongoos were dropped into it, and we were paddled +to the gangway.</p> + +<p>"If that's all, we might as well get under way," said Captain +Hughes. The anchor chains creaked, from the bank the proprietor of +the Splendide waved his hand, and the long voyage to Liverpool had +begun. It was as casual as halting and starting a cable-car.</p> + +<p>According to schedule, after leaving the Congo, we should have gone +south and touched at Loanda. But on this voyage, outward bound, the +<i>Nigeria</i> had carried, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>to help build the railroad at Lobito Bay, a +deckload of camels. They had proved trying passengers, and instead +of first touching at the Congo, Captain Hughes had continued on +south and put them ashore. So we were robbed of seeing both Loanda +and the camels.</p> + +<p>This line, until Calabar is reached, carries but few passengers, +and, except to receive cargo, the ship is not fully in commission. +During this first week she is painted, and holystoned, her carpets +are beaten, her cabins scrubbed and aired, and the passengers mess +with the officers. So, of the ship's life, we acquired an intimate +knowledge, her interests became our own, and the necessity of +feeding her gaping holds with cargo was personal and acute. On a +transatlantic steamer, when once the hatches are down, the captain +need think only of navigation; on these coasters, the hatches never +are down, and the captain, that sort of captain dear to the heart of +the owners, is the man who fills the holds.</p> + +<p>A skipper going ashore to drum up trade was a novel spectacle. +Imagine the captain of one of the Atlantic greyhounds prying among +the warehouses on West Street, demanding of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>the merchants: +"Anything going my way, this trip?" He would scorn to do it. Before +his passengers have passed the custom officers, he is in mufti, and +on his way to his villa on Brooklyn Heights, or to the Lambs Club, +and until the Blue Peter is again at the fore, little he cares for +passengers, mails, or cargo. But the captain of a "coaster" must be +sailor and trader, too. He is expected to navigate a coast, the +latest chart of which is dated somewhere near 1830, and at which the +waves rush in walls of spray, sometimes as high as a three-story +house. He must speak all the known languages of Europe, and all the +unknown tongues of innumerable black brothers. At each port he must +entertain out of his own pocket the agents of all the trading +houses, and, in his head, he must keep the market price, "when laid +down in Liverpool," of mahogany, copra, copal, rubber, palm oil, and +ivory. To see that the agent has not overlooked a few bags of ground +nuts, or a dozen puncheons of oil, he must go on shore and peer into +the compound of each factory, and on board he must keep peace +between the Kroo boys and the black deck passengers, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>and see that +the white passengers with a temperature of 105, do not drink more +than is good for them. At least, those are a few of the duties the +captains on the ships controlled by Sir Alfred Jones, who is Elder +and Dempster, are expected to perform. No wonder Sir Alfred is +popular.</p> + +<p>Our first port of call was Landana, in Portuguese territory, but two +ships of the Woermann Line were there ahead of us and had gobbled up +all the freight. So we could but up anchor and proceed to +Libreville, formerly the capital of the French Congo. At five in the +morning by the light of a ship's lantern, we were paddled ashore to +drum up trade. We found two traders, Ives and Thomas, who had +waiting for the <i>Nigeria</i> at the mouth of the Gabun River six +hundred logs of mahogany, and, in consequence, there was general +rejoicing, and Scotch and "sparklets," and even music from a German +music-box that would burst into song only after it had been fed with +a copper. One of the clerks said that Ives had forgotten how to +extract the coppers and in consequence was using the music-box as a +savings bank.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>In the French Congo the natives are permitted to trade; in the +Congo Free State they are not, or, rather, they have nothing with +which to trade, and the contrast between the empty "factories" of +the Congo and those of Libreville, crowded with natives buying and +selling, was remarkable. There also was a conspicuous difference in +the quality and variety of the goods. In Leopold's Congo "trade" +goods is a term of contempt. It describes articles manufactured only +for those who have no choice and must accept whatever is offered. +When your customers must take what you please to give them the +quality of your goods is likely to deteriorate. Salt of the poorest +grade, gaudy fabrics that neither "wear" nor "wash," bars of coarse +soap (the native is continually washing his single strip of cloth), +and axe-heads made of iron, are what Leopold thinks are a fair +exchange for the forced labor of the black.</p> + +<p>But the articles I found in the factories in Libreville were what, +in the Congo, are called "white man's goods" and were of excellent +quality and in great variety. There were even French novels and +cigars. Some of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span>latter, called the Young American on account of +the name and the flag on the lid, tempted me, until I saw they were +manufactured by Dusseldorffer and Vanderswassen, and one suspected +Rotterdam.</p> + +<p>In Ives's factory I saw for the first time a "trade" rifle, or Tower +musket. In the vernacular of the Coast, they are "gas-pipe" guns. +They are put together in England, and to a white man are a most +terrifying weapon. The original Tower muskets, such as, in the days +of '76, were hung over the fireplace of the forefathers of the Sons +of the Revolution, were manufactured in England, and stamped with +the word "Tower," and for the reigning king G.R. I suppose at that +date at the Tower of London there was an arsenal; but I am ready to +be corrected. To-day the guns are manufactured at Birmingham, but +they still have the flint lock, and still are stamped with the word +"Tower" and the royal crown over the letters G.R., and with the +arrow which is supposed to mark the property of the government. The +barrel is three feet four inches long, and the bore is that of an +artesian well. The native fills four inches of this <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>cavity with +powder and the remaining three feet with rusty nails, barbed wire, +leaden slugs, and the legs and broken parts of iron pots. An officer +of the W.A.F.F.'s, in a fight in the bush in South Nigeria, had one +of these things fired at him from a distance of fifteen feet. He +told me all that saved him was that when the native pulled the +trigger the recoil of the gun "kicked" the muzzle two feet in the +air and the native ten feet into the bush. I bought a Tower rifle at +the trade price, a pound, and brought it home. But although my +friends have offered to back either end of the gun as being the more +destructive, we have found no one with a sufficient sporting spirit +to determine the point.</p> + +<p>Libreville is a very pretty town, but when it was laid out the +surveyors just missed placing the Equator in its main street. It is +easy to understand why with such a live wire in the vicinity +Libreville is warm. From the same cause it also is rich in flowers, +vines, and trees growing in generous, undisciplined abundance, +making of Libreville one vast botanical garden, and burying the town +and its bungalows <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>under screens of green and branches of scarlet +and purple flowers. Close to the surf runs an avenue bordered by +giant cocoanut palms and, after the sun is down, this is the +fashionable promenade. Here every evening may be seen in their +freshest linen the six married white men of Libreville, and, in the +latest Paris frocks, the six married ladies, while from the verandas +of the factories that line the sea front and from under the paper +lanterns of the Café Guion the clerks and traders sip their absinthe +and play dominoes, and cast envious glances at the six fortunate +fellow exiles.</p> + +<p>For several days we lay a few miles south of Libreville, off the +mouth of the Gabun River, taking in the logs of mahogany. It was a +continuous performance of the greatest interest. I still do not +understand why all those engaged in it were not drowned, or pounded +to a pulp. Just before we touched at the Gabun River, two tramp +steamers, chartered by Americans, carried off a full cargo of this +mahogany to the States. It was an experiment the result of which the +traders of Libreville are awaiting with interest. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>The mahogany that +the reader sees in America probably comes from Hayti, Cuba, or +Belize, and is of much finer quality than that of the Gabun River, +which latter is used for making what the trade calls "fancy" +cigar-boxes and cheap furniture. But before it becomes a cigar-box +it passes through many adventures. Weeks before the steamer arrives +the trader, followed by his black boys, explores the jungle and +blazes the trees. Then the boys cut trails through the forest, and, +using logs for rollers, drag and push the tree trunks to the bank of +the river. There the tree is cut into huge cubes, weighing about a +ton, and measuring twelve to fifteen feet in length and three feet +across each face. A boy can "shape" one of these logs in a day.</p> + +<p>Although his pay varies according to whether the tributaries of the +river are full or low, so making the moving of the logs easy or +difficult, he can earn about three pounds ten shillings a month, +paid in cash. Compared with the eighty cents a month paid only a few +miles away in the Congo Free State, and in "trade" goods, these are +good wages. When the log is shaped the mark of the trader is branded +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>on it with an iron, just as we brand cattle, and it is turned loose +on the river. At the mouth of the river there is little danger of +the log escaping, for the waves are stronger than the tide, and +drive the logs upon the shore. There, in the surf, we found these +tons of mahogany pounding against each other. In the ship's +steam-launch were iron chains, a hundred yards long, to which, at +intervals, were fastened "dogs," or spikes. These spikes were driven +into the end of a log, the brand upon the log was noted by the +captain and trader, and the logs, chained together like the vertebræ +of a great sea serpent, were towed to the ship's side. There they +were made fast, and three Kroo boys knocked the spike out of each +log, warped a chain around it, and made fast that chain to the steel +hawser of the winch. As it was drawn to the deck a Senegalese +soldier, acting for the Customs, gave it a second blow with a +branding hammer, and, thundering and smashing, it swung into the +hold.</p> + +<a name="img18" id="img18"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 333px;"> +<img src="images/img-18.jpg" width="333" height="450" alt="There, in the Surf, We Found These Tons of Mahogany, +Pounding Against Each Other." title="There, in the Surf, We Found These Tons of Mahogany, +Pounding Against Each Other." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">There, in the Surf, We Found These Tons of Mahogany, +Pounding Against Each Other. </p> + +<p>In the "round up" of the logs the star performers were the three +Kroo boys at the ship's side. For days, in fascinated horror, the +six passengers watched them, prayed for <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>them, and made bets as to +which would be the first to die. One understands that a Kroo boy is +as much at home in the sea as on shore, but these boys were neither +in the sea nor on shore. They were balancing themselves on blocks of +slippery wood that weighed a ton, but which were hurled about by the +great waves as though they were life-belts. All night the hammering +of the logs made the ship echo like a monster drum, and all day +without an instant's pause each log reared and pitched, spun like a +barrel, dived like a porpoise, or, broadside, battered itself +against the iron plates. But, no matter what tricks it played, a +Kroo boy rode it as easily as though it were a horse in a +merry-go-round.</p> + +<p>It was a wonderful exhibition. It furnished all the thrills that one +gets when watching a cowboy on a bucking bronco, or a trained seal. +Again and again a log, in wicked conspiracy with another log, would +plan to entice a Kroo boy between them, and smash him. At the sight +the passengers would shriek a warning, the boy would dive between +the logs, and a mass of twelve hundred pounds of mahogany would +crash against a mass <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>weighing fifteen hundred with a report like +colliding freight cars.</p> + +<p>And then, as, breathless, we waited to see what once was a Kroo boy +float to the surface, he would appear sputtering and grinning, and +saying to us as clearly as a Kroo smile can say it: "He never +touched me!"</p> + +<a name="img19" id="img19"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 376px;"> +<img src="images/img-19.jpg" width="376" height="450" alt="A Log of Mahogany Jammed in the Anchor Chains." +title="A Log of Mahogany Jammed in the Anchor Chains." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">A Log of Mahogany Jammed in the Anchor Chains. </p> + +<p>Two days after we had stored away the mahogany we anchored off +Duala, the capital of the German Cameroons. Duala is built upon a +high cliff, and from the water the white and yellow buildings with +many pillars gave it the appearance of a city. Instead, it is a +clean, pretty town. With the German habit of order, it has been laid +out like barracks, but with many gardens, well-kept, shaded streets, +and high, cool houses, scientifically planned to meet the +necessities of the tropics. At Duala the white traders and officials +were plump and cheerful looking, and in the air there was more of +prosperity than fever. The black and white sentry boxes and the +native soldiers practising the stork march of the Kaiser's army were +signs of a rigid military rule, but the signs of Germany's efforts +in trade were more conspicuous. No<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>where on the coast did we see as +at Duala such gorgeous offices as those of the great trading house +of Woermann, the hated rivals of "Sir Alfred," such carved +furniture, such shining brass railings, and nowhere else did we see +plate-glass windows, in which, with unceasing wonder, the natives +stared at reflections of their own persons. In the river there was a +private dry dock of the Woermanns, and along the wharfs for acres +was lumber for the Woermanns, boxes of trade goods, puncheons and +casks for the Woermanns, private cooper shops and private machine +shops and private banks for the Woermanns. The house flag of the +Woermanns became as significant as that of a reigning sovereign. One +felt inclined to salute it.</p> + +<p>The success of the German merchant on the East Coast and over all +the world appears to be a question of character. He is patient, +methodical, painstaking; it is his habit of industry that is helping +him to close port after port to English, French, and American goods. +The German clerks do not go to the East Coast or to China and South +America to drink absinthe or whiskey, or to play dominoes or +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>cricket. They work twice as long as do the other white men, and +during those longer office hours they toil twice as hard. One of our +passengers was a German agent returning for his vacation. I used to +work in the smoking-room and he always was at the next table, also +at work, on his ledgers and account books. He was so industrious +that he bored me, and one day I asked him why, instead of spoiling +his vacation with work, he had not balanced his books before he left +the Coast.</p> + +<p>"It is an error," he said; "I can not find him." And he explained +that in the record of his three years' stewardship, which he was to +turn over to the directors in Berlin, there was somewhere a mistake +of a sixpence.</p> + +<p>"But," I protested, "what's sixpence to you? You drink champagne all +day. You begin at nine in the morning!"</p> + +<p>"I drink champagne," said the clerk, "because for three years I have +myself alone in the bush lived, but, can I to my directors go with a +book not balanced?" He laid his hand upon his heart and shook his +head. "It is my heart that tells me 'No!'"</p> + +<p>After three weeks he gave a shout, his face <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>blushed with pleasure, +and actual tears were in his eyes. He had dug out the error, and at +once he celebrated the recovery of the single sixpence by giving me +twenty-four shillings' worth of champagne. It is a true story, and +illustrates, I think, the training and method of the German mind, of +the industry of the merchants who are trading over all the seas. As +a rule the "trade" goods "made in Germany" are "shoddy." They do not +compare in quality with those of England or the States; in every +foreign port you will find that the English linen is the best, that +the American agricultural implements, American hardware, saws, axes, +machetes, are superior to those manufactured in any other country. +But the German, though his goods are poorer, cuts the coat to please +the customer. He studies the wishes of the man who is to pay. He is +not the one who says: "Take it, or leave it."</p> + +<p>The agent of one of the largest English firms on the Ivory Coast, +one that started by trading in slaves, said to me: "Our largest +shipment to this coast is gin. This is a French colony, and if the +French traders and I were patriots instead of merchants we would +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>buy from our own people, but we buy from the Germans, because trade +follows no flag. They make a gin out of potatoes colored with rum or +gin, and label it 'Demerara' and 'Jamaica.' They sell it to us on +the wharf at Antwerp for ninepence a gallon, and we sell it at nine +francs per dozen bottles. Germany is taking our trade from us +because she undersells us, and because her merchants don't wait for +trade to come to them, but go after it. Before the Woermann boat is +due their agent here will come to my factory and spy out all I have +in my compound. 'Why don't you ship those logs with us?' he'll ask.</p> + +<p>"'Can't spare the boys to carry them to the beach,' I'll say.</p> + +<p>"'I'll furnish the boys,' he'll answer. That's the German way.</p> + +<p>"The Elder-Dempster boats lie three miles out at sea and blow a +whistle at us. They act as though by carrying our freight they were +doing us a favor. These German ships, to save you the long pull, +anchor close to the beach and lend you their own shore boats and +their own boys to work your cargo. And if you give them a few tons +to carry, like as <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>not they'll 'dash' you to a case of 'fizz.' And +meanwhile the English captain is lying outside the bar tooting his +whistle and wanting to know if you think he's going to run his ship +aground for a few bags of rotten kernels. And he can't see, and the +people at home can't see, why the Germans are crowding us off the +Coast."</p> + +<p>Just outside of Duala, in the native village of Bell Town, is the +palace and the harem of the ruler of the tribe that gave its name to +the country, Mango Bell, King of the Cameroons. His brother, Prince +William, sells photographs and "souvenirs." We bought photographs, +and on the strength of that hinted at a presentation at court. +Brother William seemed doubtful, so we bought enough postal cards to +establish us as <i>étrangers de distinction</i>, and he sent up our +names. With Pivani, Hatton & Cookson's chief clerk we were escorted +to the royal presence. The palace is a fantastic, pagoda-like +building of three stories; and furnished with many mirrors, carved +oak sideboards, and lamp-shades of colored glass. Mango Bell, King +of the Cameroons, sounds like a character in a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>comic opera, but the +king was an extremely serious, tall, handsome, and self-respecting +negro. Having been educated in England, he spoke much more correct +English than any of us. Of the few "Kings I Have Met," both tame and +wild, his manners were the most charming. Back of the palace is an +enormously long building under one roof. Here live his thirty-five +queens. To them we were not presented.</p> + +<a name="img20" id="img20"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-20.jpg" width="500" height="394" alt="The Palace of the King of the Cameroons." +title="The Palace of the King of the Cameroons." /></div> + +<p class="cap">The Palace of the King of the Cameroons. </p> + +<p>Prince William asked me if I knew where in America there was a +street called Fifth Avenue. I suggested New York. He referred to a +large Bible, and finding, much to his surprise, that my guess was +correct, commissioned me to buy him, from a firm on that street, +just such another Bible as the one in his hand. He forgot to give me +the money to pay for it, but loaned us a half-dozen little princes +to bear our purchases to the wharf. For this service their royal +highnesses graciously condescended to receive a small "dash," and +with the chief clerk were especially delighted. He, being a +sleight-of-hand artist, apparently took five-franc pieces out of +their Sunday clothes and from their kinky hair. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span>When we left they +were rapidly disrobing to find if any more five-franc pieces were +concealed about their persons.</p> + +<p>The morning after we sailed from Duala we anchored in the river in +front of Calabar, the capital of Southern Nigeria. Of all the ports +at which we touched on the Coast, Calabar was the hottest, the best +looking, and the best administered. It is a model colony, but to +bring it to the state it now enjoys has cost sums of money entirely +out of proportion to those the colony has earned. The money has been +spent in cutting down the jungle, filling in swamps that breed +mosquitoes and fever, and in laying out gravel walks, water mains, +and open cement gutters, and in erecting model hospitals, barracks, +and administrative offices. Even grass has been made to grow, and +the high bluff upon which are situated the homes of the white +officials and Government House has been trimmed and cultivated and +tamed until it looks like an English park. It is a complete +imitation, even to golf links and tennis courts. But the fight that +has been made against the jungle has not stopped with golf links. In +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>1896 the death rate was ten men out of every hundred. That +corresponds to what in warfare is a decimating fire, upon which an +officer, without danger of reproof, may withdraw his men. But at +Calabar the English doctors did not withdraw, and now the death rate +is as low as three out of every hundred. That Calabar, or any part +of the West Coast, will ever be made entirely healthy is doubtful. +Man can cut down a forest and fill in a swamp, but he can not reach +up, as to a gas jet, and turn off the sun. And at Calabar, even at +night when the sun has turned itself off, the humidity and the heat +leave one sweating, tossing, and gasping for air. In Calabar the +first thing a white man learns is not to take any liberties with the +sun. When he dresses, eats, drinks, and moves about the sun is as +constantly on his mind, as it is on the face of the sun-dial. The +chief ascent to the top of the bluff where the white people live is +up a steep cement walk about eighty yards long. At the foot of this +a white man will be met by four hammock-bearers, and you will see +him get into the hammock and be carried in it the eighty yards.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>For even that short distance he is taking no chances. But while he +nurses his vitality and cares for his health he does not use the sun +as an excuse for laziness or for slipshod work. I have never seen a +place in the tropics where, in spite of the handicap of damp, fierce +heat, the officers and civil officials are so keenly and constantly +employed, where the bright work was so bright, and the whitewash so +white.</p> + +<p>Out at the barracks of the West African Frontier Force, the +W.A.F.F.'s, the officers, instead of from the shade of the veranda +watching the non-coms. teach a native the manual, were themselves at +work, and each was howling orders at the black recruits and smashing +a gun against his hip and shoulder as smartly as a drill sergeant. I +found the standard maintained at Calabar the more interesting +because the men were almost entirely their own audience. If they +make the place healthy, and attractive-looking, and dress for +dinner, and shy at cocktails, and insist that their tan shoes shall +glow like meershaum pipes, it is not because of the refining +presence of lovely women, but because the men themselves like things +that way. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>The men of Calabar have learned that when the sun is at +110, morals, like material things, disintegrate, and that, though +the temptation is to go about in bath-room slippers and pajamas, one +is wiser to bolster up his drenched and drooping spirit with a stiff +shirt front and a mess jacket. They tell that in a bush station in +upper Nigeria, one officer got his D.S.O. because with an audience +of only a white sergeant he persisted in a habit of shaving twice a +day.</p> + + +<a name="img21" id="img21"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-21.jpg" width="500" height="326" alt="The Home of the Thirty Queens of King Mango Bell." +title="The Home of the Thirty Queens of King Mango Bell." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Home of the Thirty Queens of King Mango Bell. </p> + +<p>There are very few women in Calabar. There are three or four who are +wives of officials, two nurses employed by the government, and the +Mother Superior and Sisters of the Order of St. Joseph, and, of +course, all of them are great belles. For the Sisters, especially +the officers, the government people, the traders, the natives, even +the rival missionaries, have the most tremendous respect and +admiration. The sacrifice of the woman who, to be near her husband +on the Coast, consents to sicken and fade and grow old before her +time, and of the nurse who, to preserve the health of others, risks +her own, is very great; but the sacrifice of the Sisters, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>who have +renounced all thought of home and husband, and who have exiled +themselves to this steaming swamp-land, seems the most unselfish. In +order to support the 150 little black boys and girls who are at +school at the mission, the Sisters rob themselves of everything +except the little that will keep them alive. Two, in addition to +their work at the mission, act as nurses in the English hospital, +and for that they receive together $600. This forms the sole regular +income of the five women; for each $120 a year. With anything else +that is given them in charity, they buy supplies for the little +converts. They live in a house of sandstone and zinc that holds the +heat like a flat-iron, they are obliged to wear a uniform that is of +material and fashion so unsuited to the tropics that Dr. Chichester, +in charge of the hospital, has written in protest against it to +Rome, and on many days they fast, not because the Church bids them +so to do, but because they have no food. And with it all, these five +gentlewomen are always eager, cheerful, sweet of temper, and a +living blessing to all who meet them. What now troubles them is that +they have no room to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>accommodate the many young heathen who come to +them to be taught to wear clothes, and to be good little boys and +girls. This is causing the Sisters great distress. Any one who does +not believe in that selfish theory, that charity begins at home, but +who would like to help to spread Christianity in darkest Africa and +give happiness to five noble women, who are giving their lives for +others, should send a postal money order to Marie T. Martin, the +Reverend Mother Superior of the Catholic Mission of Old Calabar, +Southern Nigeria.</p> + +<p>And if you are going to do it, as they say in the advertising pages, +"Do it now!"</p> + +<a name="img22" id="img22"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-22.jpg" width="500" height="320" alt="The Mother Superior and Sisters of St. Joseph and +Their Converts at Old Calabar." title= "The Mother Superior and Sisters of St. Joseph and +Their Converts at Old Calabar." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Mother Superior and Sisters of St. Joseph and +Their Converts at Old Calabar. </p> + +<p>At Calabar there is a royal prisoner, the King of Benin. He is not +an agreeable king like His Majesty of the Cameroons, but a grossly +fat, sensual-looking young man, who, a few years ago, when he was at +war with the English, made "ju ju" against them by sacrificing three +hundred maidens, his idea being that the ju ju would drive the +English out of Benin. It was poor ju ju, for it drove the young man +himself out of Benin, and now he is a king in exile. As far as I +could see, the social position of the king is insecure, and +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>certainly in Calabar he does not move in the first circles. One +afternoon, when the four or five ladies of Calabar and Mr. Bedwell, +the Acting Commissioner, and the officers of the W.A.F.F.'s were at +the clubhouse having ice-drinks, the king at the head of a retinue +of cabinet officers, high priests, and wives bore down upon the +club-house with the evident intention of inviting himself to tea. +Personally, I should like to have met a young man who could murder +three hundred girls and worry over it so little that he had not lost +one of his three hundred pounds, but the others were considerably +annoyed and sent an A.D.C. to tell him to "Move on!" as though he +were an organ-grinder, or a performing bear.</p> + +<p>"These kings," exclaimed a subaltern of the W.A.F.F.'s, indignantly, +"are trying to push in everywhere!"</p> + +<p>When we departed from Calabar, the only thing that reconciled me to +leaving it and its charming people, was the fact that when the ship +moved there was a breeze. While at anchor in the river I had found +that not being able to breathe by day or to sleep by night in time +is trying, even to the stoutest constitution.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>One of the married ladies of Calabar, her husband, an officer of +the W.A.F.F.'s, and the captain of the police sailed on the +<i>Nigeria</i> "on leave," and all Calabar came down to do them honor. +There was the commissioner's gig, and the marine captain's gig, and +the police captain's gig, and the gig from "Matilda's," the English +trading house, and one from the Dutch house and the French house, +and each gig was manned by black boys in beautiful uniforms and +fezzes, and each crew fought to tie up to the foot of the +accommodation ladder. It was as gay as a regatta. On the +quarter-deck the officers drank champagne, in the captain's cabin +Hughes treated the traders to beer, in the "square" the non-coms. of +the W.A.F.F.'s drank ale. The men who were going away on leave tried +not to look too happy, and those who were going back to the shore +drank deep and tried not to appear too carelessly gay. A billet on +the West Coast is regarded by the man who accepts it as a sort of +sporting proposition, as a game of three innings of nine months +each, during which he matches his health against the Coast. If he +lives he wins; if he dies the Coast wins.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>After Calabar, at each port off which we anchored, at Ponny, +Focardos, Lagos, Accra, Cape Coast Castle, and Sekonni, it was +always the same. Always there came over the side the man going +"Home," the man who had fought with the Coast and won. He was as +excited, as jubilant as a prisoner sentenced to death who had +escaped his executioners. And always the heartiest in their +congratulations were the men who were left behind, his brother +officers, or his fellow traders, the men of the Sun Hat Brigade, in +their unofficial uniforms, in shirtwaists, broad belts from which +dangled keys and a whistle, beautifully polished tan boots, and with +a wand-like whip or stick of elephant hide. They swarmed the decks +and overwhelmed the escaping refugee with good wishes. He had +cheated their common enemy. By merely keeping alive he had achieved +a glorious victory. In their eyes he had performed a feat of +endurance like swimming the English Channel. They crowded to +congratulate him as people at the pit-mouth congratulate the +entombed miner, who, after many days of breathing noisome gases, +drinks the pure air. Even the black boys seem to feel <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>the triumph +of the white master, and their paddles never flashed so bravely, and +their songs never rang so wildly, as when they were racing him away +from the brooding Coast with its poisonous vapors toward the big +white ship that meant health and home.</p> + +<p>Although most of the ports we saw only from across a mile or two of +breakers, they always sent us something of interest. Sometimes all +the male passengers came on board drunk. With the miners of the Gold +Coast and the "Palm Oil Ruffians" it used to be a matter of +etiquette not to leave the Coast in any other condition. Not so to +celebrate your escape seemed ungenerous and ungrateful. At Sekondi +one of the miners from Ashanti was so completely drunk, that he was +swung over the side, tied up like a plum-pudding, in a bag.</p> + +<p>When he emerged from the bag his expression of polite inquiry was +one with which all could sympathize. To lose consciousness on the +veranda of a café, and awake with a bump on the deck of a steamer +many miles at sea, must strengthen one's belief in magic carpets.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>Another entertainment for the white passengers was when the boat +boys fought for the black passengers as they were lowered in the +mammy-chair. As a rule, in the boats from shore, there were twelve +boys to paddle and three or four extra men to handle and unhook the +mammy-chair and the luggage. While the boys with the paddles +manœuvred to bring their boat next to the ship's side, the extra +boys tried to pull their rivals overboard, dragging their hands from +ropes and gunwales, and beating them with paddles. They did this +while every second the boat under them was spinning in the air or +diving ten feet into the hollow of the waves, and trying to smash +itself and every other boat into driftwood. From the deck the second +officer would swing a mammy-chair over the side with the idea of +dropping it into one of these boats. But before the chair could be +lowered, a rival boat would shove the first one away, and with a +third boat would be fighting for its place. Meanwhile, high above +the angry sea, the chair and its cargo of black women would be +twirling like a weathercock and banging against the ship's side. The +mammies were <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span>too terrified to scream, but the ship's officers +yelled and swore, the boat's crews shrieked, and the black babies +howled. Each baby was strapped between the shoulders of the mother. +A mammy-chair is like one of those two-seated swings in which people +sit facing one another. If to the shoulders of each person in the +swing was tied a baby, it is obvious that should the swing bump into +anything, the baby would get the worst of it. That is what happened +in the mammy-chair. Every time the chair spun around, the head of a +baby would come "crack!" against the ship's side. So the babies +howled, and no one of the ship's passengers, crowded six deep along +the rail, blamed them. The skull of the Ethiopian may be hard, but +it is most unfair to be swathed like a mummy so that you can neither +kick nor strike back, and then have your head battered against a +five-thousand-ton ship.</p> + +<p>How the boys who paddled the shore boats live long enough to learn +how to handle them is a great puzzle. We were told that the method +was to take out one green boy with a crew of eleven experts. But how +did the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>original eleven become experts? At Accra, where the waves +are very high and rough, are the best boat boys on the coast. We +watched the Custom House boat fight her way across the two miles of +surf to the shore. The fight lasted two hours. It was as thrilling +as watching a man cross Niagara Falls on a tight-rope. The greater +part of the two hours the boat stood straight in the air, as though +it meant to shake the crew into the sea, and the rest of the time it +ran between walls of water ten feet high and was entirely lost to +sight. Two things about the paddling on the West Coast make it +peculiar; the boys sit, not on the thwarts, but on the gunwales, as +a woman rides a side-saddle, and in many parts of the coast the boys +use paddles shaped like a fork or a trident. One asks how, sitting +as they do, they are able to brace themselves, and how with their +forked paddles they obtained sufficient resistance. A coaster's +explanation of the split paddle was that the boys did not want any +more resistance than they could prevent.</p> + +<a name="img23" id="img23"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 397px;"> +<img src="images/img-23.jpg" width="397" height="450" alt="The Kroo Boys Sit, Not On the Thwarts, but On the +Gunwales, as a Woman Rides a Side Saddle." title= "The Kroo Boys Sit, Not On the Thwarts, but On the +Gunwales, as a Woman Rides a Side Saddle." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Kroo Boys Sit, Not On the Thwarts, but On the +Gunwales, as a Woman Rides a Side Saddle. </p> + +<p>There is no more royal manner of progress than when one of these +boats lifts you over <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>the waves, with the boys chanting some wild +chorus, with their bare bodies glistening, their teeth and eyes +shining, the splendid muscles straining, and the dripping paddles +flashing like twelve mirrors.</p> + +<p>Some of the chiefs have canoes of as much as sixty men-power, +and when these men sing, and their bodies and voices are in +unison, a war canoe seems the only means of locomotion, and a +sixty-horse-power racing car becomes a vehicle suited only to the +newly rich.</p> + +<p>I knew I had left the West Coast when, the very night we sailed from +Sierra Leone, for greater comfort, I reached for a linen bed-spread +that during four stifling, reeking weeks had lain undisturbed at the +foot of the berth. During that time I had hated it as a monstrous +thing; as something as hot and heavy as a red flannel blanket, as a +buffalo robe. And when, on the following night, I found the +wind-screen was not in the air port, and that, nevertheless, I still +was alive, I knew we had passed out of reach of the Equator, and +that all that followed would be as conventional as the "trippers" +who <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>joined us at the Canary Isles; and as familiar as the low, gray +skies, the green, rain-soaked hills, and the complaining Channel +gulls that convoyed us into Plymouth Harbor.</p> + + + +<hr class="short" /> +<br /> + +<h2><a name="VII" id="VII"></a>VII</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span> + +<h3>ALONG THE EAST COAST</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>Were a man picked up on a flying carpet and dropped without warning +into Lorenço Marquez, he might guess for a day before he could make +up his mind where he was, or determine to which nation the place +belonged.</p> + +<p>If he argued from the adobe houses with red-tiled roofs and walls of +cobalt blue, the palms, and the yellow custom-house, he might think +he was in Santiago; the Indian merchants in velvet and gold +embroideries seated in deep, dark shops which breathe out dry, +pungent odors, might take him back to Bombay; the Soudanese and +Egyptians in long blue night-gowns and freshly ironed fezzes would +remind him of Cairo; the dwarfish Portuguese soldiers, of Madeira, +Lisbon, and Madrid, and the black, bare-legged policemen in khaki +with great numerals on their chests, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>of Benin, Sierra Leone, or +Zanzibar. After he had noted these and the German, French, and +English merchants in white duck, and the Dutch man-of-warsmen, who +look like ship's stewards, the French marines in coal-scuttle +helmets, the British Jack-tars in their bare feet, and the native +Kaffir women, each wrapped in a single, gorgeous shawl with a black +baby peering from beneath her shoulder-blades, he would decide, by +using the deductive methods of Sherlock Holmes, that he was in the +Midway of the Chicago Fair.</p> + +<p>Several hundred years ago Da Gama sailed into Delagoa Bay and +founded the town of Lorenço Marquez, and since that time the +Portuguese have always felt that it is only due to him and to +themselves to remain there. They have great pride of race, and they +like the fact that they possess and govern a colony. So, up to the +present time, in spite of many temptations to dispose of it, they +have made the ownership of Delagoa Bay an article of their national +religion. But their national religion does not require of them to +improve their property. And to-day it is much as it <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>was when the +sails of Da Gama's fleet first stirred its poisonous vapors.</p> + +<p>The harbor itself is an excellent one and the bay is twenty-two +miles along, but there is only one landing-pier, and that such a +pier as would be considered inconsistent with the dignity of the +Larchmont Yacht Club. To the town itself Portugal has been content +to contribute as her share the gatherers of taxes, collectors of +customs and dispensers of official seals. She is indifferent to the +fact that the bulk of general merchandise, wine, and machinery that +enter her port is brought there by foreigners. She only demands that +they buy her stamps. Her importance in her own colony is that of a +toll-gate at the entrance of a great city.</p> + +<p>Lorenço Marquez is not a spot which one would select for a home. +When I was first there, the deaths from fever were averaging fifteen +a day, and men who dined at the club one evening were buried +hurriedly before midnight, and when I returned in the winter months, +the fever had abated, but on the night we arrived twenty men were +robbed. The fact that we complained to the police about <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>one of the +twenty robberies struck the commandant as an act of surprising and +unusual interest. We gathered from his manner that the citizens of +Lorenço Marquez look upon being robbed as a matter too personal and +selfish with which to trouble the police. It was perhaps credulous +of us, as our hotel was liberally labelled with notices warning its +patrons that "Owing to numerous robberies in this hotel, our guests +will please lock their doors." This was one of three hotels owned by +the same man. One of the others had been described to us as the +"tough" hotel, and at the other, a few weeks previous, a friend had +found a puff-adder barring his bedroom door. The choice was somewhat +difficult.</p> + +<p>On her way from Lorenço Marquez to Beira our ship, the <i>Kanzlar</i>, +kept close to the shore, and showed us low-lying banks of yellow +sand and coarse green bushes. There was none of the majesty of +outline which reaches from Table Bay to Durban, none of the blue +mountains of the Colony, nor the deeply wooded table-lands and great +inlets of Kaffraria. The rocks which stretch along the southern +coast and against which the waves <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>break with a report like the +bursting of a lyddite shell, had disappeared, and along Gazaland and +the Portuguese territory only swamps and barren sand-hills +accompanied us in a monotonous yellow line. From the bay we saw +Beira as a long crescent of red-roofed houses, many of them of four +stories with verandas running around each story, like those of the +summer hotels along the Jersey coast. It is a town built upon the +sands, with a low stone breakwater, but without a pier or jetty, the +lack of which gives it a temporary, casual air as though it were +more a summer resort than the one port of entry for all Rhodesia. It +suggested Coney Island to one, and to others Asbury Park and the +board-walk at Atlantic City. When we found that in spite of her +Portuguese flags and naked blacks, Beira reminded us of nothing +except an American summer-resort, we set to discovering why this +should be, and decided it was because, after the red dust of the +Colony and the Transvaal, we saw again stretches of white sand, and +instead of corrugated zinc, flimsy houses of wood, which you felt +were only opened for the summer season and which for <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>the rest of +the year remained boarded up against driven sands and equinoctial +gales. Beira need only to have added to her "Sea-View" and "Beach" +hotels, a few bathing-suits drying on a clothes-line, a tin-type +artist, and a merry-go-round, to make us feel perfectly at home. +Beira being the port on the Indian Ocean which feeds Mashonaland and +Matabeleland and the English settlers in and around Buluwayo and +Salisbury, English influence has proclaimed itself there in many +ways. When we touched, which was when the British soldiers were +moving up to Rhodesia, the place, in comparison with Lorenço +Marquez, was brisk, busy, and clean. Although both are ostensibly +Portuguese, Beira is to Lorenço Marquez what the cleanest street of +Greenwich Village, of New York City, is to "Hell's Kitchen" and the +Chinese Quarter. The houses were well swept and cool, the shops were +alluring, the streets were of clean shifting white sand, and the +sidewalks, of gray cement, were as well kept as a Philadelphia +doorstep. The most curious feature of Beira is her private tram-car +system. These cars run on tiny tracks which rise out of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span>sand +and extend from one end of the town to the other, with branch lines +running into the yards of shops and private houses. The motive power +for these cars is supplied by black boys who run behind and push +them. Their trucks are about half as large as those on the hand-cars +we see flying along our railroad tracks at home, worked by gangs of +Italian laborers. On some of the trucks there is only a bench, +others are shaded by awnings, and a few have carriage-lamps and +cushioned seats and carpets. Each of them is a private conveyance; +there is not one which can be hired by the public. When a merchant +wishes to go down town to the port, his black boys carry his private +tram-car from his garden and settle it on the rails, the merchant +seats himself, and the boys push him and his baby-carriage to +whatever part of the city he wishes to go. When his wife is out +shopping and stops at a store the boys lift her car into the sand in +order to make a clear track for any other car which may be coming +behind them. One would naturally suppose that with the tracks and +switch-boards and sidings already laid, the next step <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>would be to +place cars upon them for the convenience of the public, but this is +not the case, and the tracks through the city are jealously reserved +for the individuals who tax themselves five pounds a year to extend +them and to keep them in repair. After the sleds on the island of +Madeira these private street-cars of Beira struck me as being the +most curious form of conveyance I had ever seen.</p> + +<a name="img24" id="img24"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 298px;"> +<img src="images/img-24.jpg" width="298" height="450" alt="Going Visiting in Her Private Tram-car at Beira." +title="Going Visiting in Her Private Tram-car at Beira." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Going Visiting in Her Private Tram-car at Beira. </p> + +<p>Beira was occupied by the Companhia de Mozambique with the idea of +feeding Salisbury and Buluwayo from the north, and drawing away some +of the trade which at that time was monopolized by the merchants of +Cape Town and Durban. But the tse-tse fly belt lay between Beira on +the coast and the boundary of the Chartered Company's possessions, +and as neither oxen nor mules could live to cross this, it was +necessary, in order to compete with the Cape-Buluwayo line, to build +a railroad through the swamp and jungle. This road is now in +operation. It is two hundred and twenty miles in length, and in the +brief period of two months, during the long course of its progress +through the marshes, two hundred of the men working <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>on it died of +fever. Some years ago, during a boundary dispute between the +Portuguese and the Chartered Company, there was a clash between the +Portuguese soldiers and the British South African police. How this +was settled and the honor of the Portuguese officials satisfied, +Kipling has told us in the delightful tale of "Judson and the +Empire." It was off Beira that Judson fished up a buoy and anchored +it over a sand-bar upon which he enticed the Portuguese gunboat. A +week before we touched at Beira, the Portuguese had rearranged all +the harbor buoys, but, after the casual habits of their race, had +made no mention of the fact. The result was that the <i>Kanzlar</i> was +hung up for twenty-four hours. We tried to comfort ourselves by +thinking that we were undoubtedly occupying the same mud-bank which +had been used by the strategic Judson to further the course of +empire.</p> + +<p>The <i>Kanzlar</i> could not cross the bar to go to Chinde, so the +<i>Adjutant</i>, which belongs to the same line and which was created for +these shallow waters, came to the <i>Kanzlar</i>, bringing Chinde with +her. She brought every white <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span>man in the port, and those who could +not come on board our ship remained contentedly on the <i>Adjutant</i>, +clinging to her rail as she alternately sank below, or was tossed +high above us. For three hours they smiled with satisfaction as +though they felt that to have escaped from Chinde, for even that +brief time, was sufficient recompense for a thorough ducking and the +pains of sea-sickness. On the bridge of the <i>Adjutant</i>, in white +duck and pith helmets, were the only respectable members of Chinde +society. We knew that they were the only respectable members of +Chinde society, because they told us so themselves. On her lower +deck she brought two French explorers, fully dressed for the part as +Tartarin of Tarascon might have dressed it in white havelocks and +gaiters buckled up to the thighs, and clasping express rifles in new +leather cases. From her engine-room came stokers from Egypt, and +from her forward deck Malays in fresh white linen, Mohammedans in +fez and turban, Portuguese officials, chiefly in decorations, Indian +coolies and Zanzibari boys, very black and very beautiful, who wound +and unwound long blue strips of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>cotton about their shoulders, or +ears, or thighs as the heat, or the nature of the work of unloading +required. Among these strange peoples were goats, as delicately +colored as a meerschaum pipe, and with the horns of our red deer, +strange white oxen with humps behind the shoulders, those that are +exhibited in cages at home as "sacred buffalo," but which here are +only patient beasts of burden, and gray monkeys, wildcats, snakes +and crocodiles in cages addressed to "Hagenbeck, Hamburg." The +freight was no less curious; assegais in bundles, horns stretching +for three feet from point to point, or rising straight, like +poignards; skins, ground-nuts, rubber, and heavy blocks of bees-wax +wrapped in coarse brown sacking, and which in time will burn before +the altars of Roman Catholic churches in Italy, Spain, and France.</p> + +<p>People of the "Bromide" class who run across a friend from their own +city in Paris will say, "Well, to think of meeting <i>you</i> here. How +small the world is after all!" If they wish a better proof of how +really small it is, how closely it is knit together, how the +existence of one canning-house in Chicago supports <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>twenty stores in +Durban, they must follow, not the missionary or the explorers, not +the punitive expeditions, but the man who wishes to buy, and the man +who brings something to sell. Trade is what has brought the +latitudes together and made the world the small department store it +is, and forced one part of it to know and to depend upon the other.</p> + +<p>The explorer tells you, "I was the first man to climb Kilamajaro." +"I was the first to cut a path from the shores of Lake Nyassa into +the Congo Basin." He even lectures about it, in front of a wet sheet +in the light of a stereopticon, and because he has added some miles +of territory to the known world, people buy his books and learned +societies place initials after his distinguished name. But before +his grandfather was born and long before he ever disturbed the +waters of Nyassa the Phœnicians and Arabs and Portuguese and men +of his own time and race had been there before him to buy ivory, +both white and black, to exchange beads and brass bars and +shaving-mirrors for the tusks of elephants, raw gold, copra, rubber, +and the feathers of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>the ostrich. Statesmen will modestly say that a +study of the map showed them how the course of empire must take its +way into this or that undiscovered wilderness, and that in +consequence, at their direction, armies marched to open these tracts +which but for their prescience would have remained a desert. But +that was not the real reason. A woman wanted three feathers to wear +at Buckingham Palace, and to oblige her a few unimaginative traders, +backed by a man who owned a tramp steamer, opened up the East Coast +of Africa; another wanted a sealskin sacque, and fleets of ships +faced floating ice under the Northern Lights. The bees of the Shire +Riverway help to illuminate the cathedrals of St. Peters and Notre +Dame, and back of Mozambique thousands of rubber-trees are being +planted to-day, because, at the other end of the globe, people want +tires for their automobiles; and because the fashionable ornament of +the natives of Swaziland is, for no reason, no longer blue-glass +beads, manufacturers of beads in Switzerland and Italy find +themselves out of pocket by some thousands and thousands of pounds.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>The traders who were making the world smaller by bringing cotton +prints to Chinde to cover her black nakedness, her British Majesty's +consul at that port, and the boy lieutenant of the paddle-wheeled +gunboat which patrols the Zambesi River, were the gentlemen who +informed me that they were the only respectable members of Chinde +society. They came over the side with the gratitude of sailors whom +the <i>Kanzlar</i> might have picked up from a desert island, where they +had been marooned and left to rot. They observed the gilded glory of +the <i>Kanzlar</i> smoking-room, its mirrors and marble-topped tables, +with the satisfaction and awe of the California miner, who found all +the elegance of civilization in the red plush of a Broadway omnibus. +The boy-commander of the gunboat gazed at white women in the saloon +with fascinated admiration.</p> + +<p>"I have never," he declared, breathlessly, "I have never seen so +many beautiful women in one place at the same time! I'd forgotten +that there were so many white people in the world."</p> + +<p>"If I stay on board this ship another min<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>ute I shall go home," said +Her Majesty's consul, firmly. "You will have to hold me. It's coming +over me—I feel it coming. I shall never have the strength to go +back." He appealed to the sympathetic lieutenant. "Let's desert +together," he begged.</p> + +<a name="img25" id="img25"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 385px;"> +<img src="images/img-25.jpg" width="385" height="450" alt="One-half of the Street Cleaning Department of +Mozambique." title="One-half of the Street Cleaning Department of +Mozambique." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">One-half of the Street Cleaning Department of +Mozambique. </p> + +<p>In the swamps of the East Coast the white exiles lay aside the +cloaks and masks of crowded cities. They do not try to conceal their +feelings, their vices, or their longings. They talk to the first +white stranger they meet of things which in the great cities a man +conceals even from his room-mate, and men they would not care to +know, and whom they would never meet in the fixed social pathways of +civilization, they take to their hearts as friends. They are too few +to be particular, they have no choice, and they ask no questions. It +is enough that the white man, like themselves, is condemned to +exile. They do not try to find solace in the thought that they are +the "foretrekkers" of civilization, or take credit to themselves +because they are the path-finders and the pioneers who bear the heat +and burden of the day. They are sorry for themselves, because they +know, more keenly <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>than any outsider can know, how good is the life +they have given up, and how hard is the one they follow, but they do +not ask anyone else to be sorry. They would be very much surprised +if they thought you saw in their struggle against native and +Portuguese barbarism, fever, and savage tribes, a life of great good +and value, full of self-renunciation, heroism, and self-sacrifice.</p> + +<p>On the day they boarded the <i>Kanzlar</i> the pains of nostalgia were +sweeping over the respectable members of Chinde society like waves +of nausea, and tearing them. With a grim appreciation of their own +condition, they smiled mockingly at the ladies on the quarter-deck, +as you have seen prisoners grin through the bars; they were even +boisterous and gay, but their gayety was that of children at recess, +who know that when the bell rings they are going back to the desk.</p> + +<p>A little English boy ran through the smoking-room, and they fell +upon him, and quarrelled for the privilege of holding him on their +knees. He was a shy, coquettish little English boy, and the +boisterous, noisy men did not appeal to him. To them he meant home +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span>and family and the old nursery, papered with colored pictures from +the Christmas <i>Graphic</i>. His stout, bare legs and tangled curls and +sailor's hat, with "H.M.S. Mars" across it, meant all that was clean +and sweet-smelling in their past lives.</p> + +<p>"I'll arrest you for a deserter," said the lieutenant of the +gunboat. "I'll make the consul send you back to the <i>Mars</i>." He held +the boy on his knee fearfully, handling him as though he were some +delicate and precious treasure that might break if he dropped it.</p> + +<p>The agent of the Oceanic Development Company, Limited, whose +business in life is to drive savage Angonis out of the jungle, where +he hopes in time to see the busy haunts of trade, begged for the boy +with eloquent pleading.</p> + +<p>"You've had the kiddie long enough now," he urged. "Let me have him. +Come here, Mr. Mars, and sit beside me, and I'll give you fizzy +water—like lemon-squash, only nicer." He held out a wet bottle of +champagne alluringly.</p> + +<p>"No, he is coming to his consul," that youth declared. "He's coming +to his consul <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>for protection. You are not fit characters to +associate with an innocent child. Come to me, little boy, and do not +listen to those degraded persons." So the "innocent child" seated +himself between the consul and the chartered trader, and they patted +his fat calves and red curls and took his minute hands in their +tanned fists, eying him hungrily, like two cannibals. But the little +boy was quite unconscious and inconsiderate of their hunger, and, +with the cruelty of children, pulled himself free and ran away.</p> + +<p>"He was such a nice little kiddie," they said, apologetically, as +though they felt they had been caught in some act of weakness.</p> + +<p>"I haven't got a card with me; I haven't needed one for two years," +said the lieutenant, genially. "But fancy your knowing Sparks! He +has the next station to mine; I'm at one end of the Shire River and +he's at the other; he patrols from Fort Johnson up to the top of the +lake. I suppose you've heard him play the banjo, haven't you? That's +where we hit it off—we're both terribly keen about the banjo. I +suppose if it wasn't for my banjo, I'd go quite off my head down +here. I know <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>Sparks would. You see, I have these chaps at Chinde to +talk to, and up at Tete there's the Portuguese governor, but Sparks +has only six white men scattered along Nyassa for three hundred +miles."</p> + +<p>I had heard of Sparks and the six white men. They grew so lonely +that they agreed to meet once a month at some central station and +spend the night together, and they invited Sparks to attend the +second meeting. But when he arrived he found that they had organized +a morphine club, and the only six white men on Lake Nyassa were +sitting around a table with their sleeves rolled up, giving +themselves injections. Sparks told them it was a "disgusting +practice," and put back to his gunboat. I recalled the story to the +lieutenant, and he laughed mournfully.</p> + +<p>"Yes," he said; "and what's worse is that we're here for two years +more, with all this fighting going on at the Cape and in China. +Still, we have our banjos, and the papers are only six weeks old, +and the steamer stops once every month."</p> + +<a name="img26" id="img26"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-26.jpg" width="500" height="366" alt="Custom House, Zanzibar." +title="Custom House, Zanzibar." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Custom House, Zanzibar. </p> + +<p>Fortunately there were many bags of bees-wax to come over the side, +so we had time in <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>which to give the exiles the news of the outside +world, and they told us of their present and past lives: of how one +as an American filibuster had furnished coal to the Chinese Navy; +how another had sold "ready to wear" clothes in a New York +department store, and another had been attaché at Madrid, and +another in charge of the forward guns of a great battle-ship. We +exchanged addresses and agreed upon the restaurant where we would +meet two years hence to celebrate their freedom, and we emptied many +bottles of iced-beer, and the fact that it was iced seemed to affect +the exiles more than the fact that it was beer.</p> + +<p>But at last the ship's whistle blew with raucous persistence. It was +final and heartless. It rang down the curtain on the mirage which +once a month comes to mock Chinde with memories of English villages, +of well-kept lawns melting into the Thames, of London asphalt and +flashing hansoms. With a jangling of bells in the engine-room the +mirage disappeared, and in five minutes to the exiles of Chinde the +<i>Kanzlar</i> became a gray tub with a pennant of smoke on the horizon +line.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>I have known some men for many years, smoked and talked with them +until improper hours of the morning, known them well enough to +borrow their money, even their razors, and parted from them with +never a pang. But when our ship abandoned those boys to the unclean +land behind them, I could see them only in a blurred and misty +group. We raised our hats to them and tried to cheer, but it was +more of a salute than a cheer. I had never seen them before, I shall +never meet them again—we had just burned signals as our ships +passed in the night—and yet, I must always consider among the +friends I have lost, those white-clad youths who are making the ways +straight for others through the dripping jungles of the Zambesi, +"the only respectable members of Chinde Society."<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1"> *</a></p> + +<p class="foot"><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1">*</a> +N<small>OTE</small>—I did not lose the white-clad youths. The +lieutenant now is the commander of a cruiser, and the consul, a +consul-general; and they write me that the editor of the Chinde +newspaper, on his editorial page, has complained that he, also, +should be included among the respectable members of Chinde Society. +He claims his absence at Tete, at the time of the visit of the +<i>Kanzlar</i>, alone prevented his social position being publicly +recognized. That justice may be done, he, now, is officially, though +tardily, created a member of Chinde's respectable society. R.H.D.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>The profession of the slave-trader, unless it be that of his +contemporary, the pirate preying under his black flag, is the one +which holds you with the most grewsome and fascinating interest. Its +inhumanity, its legends of predatory expeditions into unknown +jungles of Africa, the long return marches to the Coast, the +captured blacks who fall dead in the trail, the dead pulling down +with their chains those who still live, the stifling holds of the +slave-ships, the swift flights before pursuing ships-of-war, the +casting away, when too closely chased, of the ship's cargo, and the +sharks that followed, all of these come back to one as he walks the +shore-wall of Mozambique. From there he sees the slave-dhows in the +harbor, the jungles on the mainland through which the slaves came by +the thousands, and still come one by one, and the ancient palaces of +the Portuguese governors, dead now some hundreds of years, to whom +this trade in human agony brought great wealth, and no loss of +honor.</p> + +<a name="img27" id="img27"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-27.jpg" width="500" height="363" alt="Chain-gangs of Petty Offenders Outside of Zanzibar." +title="Chain-gangs of Petty Offenders Outside of Zanzibar." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Chain-gangs of Petty Offenders Outside of Zanzibar. </p> + +<p>Mozambique in the days of her glory was, with Zanzibar, the great +slave-market of East Africa, and the Portuguese and the Arabs who +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>fattened on this traffic built themselves great houses there, and a +fortress capable, in the event of a siege, of holding the garrison +and all the inhabitants as well. To-day the slave-trade brings to +those who follow it more of adventure than of financial profit, but +the houses and the official palaces and the fortress still remain, +and they are, in color, indescribably beautiful. Blue and pink and +red and light yellow are spread over their high walls, and have been +so washed and chastened by the rain and sun, that the whole city has +taken on the faint, soft tints of a once brilliant water-color. The +streets themselves are unpeopled, empty and strangely silent. Their +silence is as impressive as their beauty. In the heat of the day, +which is from sunrise to past sunset, you see no one, you hear no +footfall, no voices, no rumble of wheels or stamp of horses' hoofs. +The bare feet of the native, who is the only human being who dares +to move abroad, makes no sound, and in Mozambique there are no +carriages and no horses. Two bullock-carts, which collect scraps and +refuse from the white staring streets, are the only carts in the +city, and with <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>the exception of a dozen 'rikshas are the only +wheeled vehicles the inhabitants have seen.</p> + +<p>I have never visited a city which so impressed one with the fact +that, in appearance, it had remained just as it was four hundred +years before. There is no decay, no ruins, no sign of disuse; it is, +on the contrary, clean and brilliantly beautiful in color, with +dancing blue waters all about it, and with enormous palms moving +above the towering white walls and red tiled roofs, but it is a city +of the dead. The open-work iron doors, with locks as large as +letter-boxes, are closed, the wooden window-shutters are barred, and +the wares in the shops are hidden from the sidewalk by heavy +curtains. There is a park filled with curious trees and with flowers +of gorgeous color, but the park is as deserted as a cemetery; along +the principal streets stretch mosaic pavements formed of great +blocks of white and black stone, they look like elongated +checker-boards, but no one walks upon them, and though there are +palaces painted blue, and government buildings in Pompeiian red, and +churches in chaste gray and white, there are no sentries to guard +the palaces, nor no black-robed priests enter <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>or leave the +churches. They are like the palaces of a theatre, set on an empty +stage, and waiting for the actors. It will be a long time before the +actors come to Mozambique. It is, and will remain, a city of the +fifteenth century. It is now only a relic of a cruel and barbarous +period, when the Portuguese governors, the "gentlemen adventurers," +and the Arab slave-dealers, under its blue skies, and hidden within +its barred and painted walls, led lives of magnificent debauchery, +when the tusks of ivory were piled high along its water-front, and +the dhows at anchor reeked with slaves, and when in the +market-place, where the natives now sit bargaining over a bunch of +bananas or a basket of dried fish, their forefathers were themselves +bought and sold.</p> + +<p>In the five hundred years in which he has claimed the shore line of +East Africa from south of Lorenço Marquez to north of Mozambique, +and many hundreds of miles inland, the Portuguese has been the dog +in the manger among nations. In all that time he has done nothing to +help the land or the people whom he pretends to protect, and he +keeps those who would improve both from <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>gaining any hold or +influence over either. It is doubtful if his occupation of the East +Coast can endure much longer. The English and the Germans now +surround him on every side. Even handicapped as they are by the lack +of the seaports which he enjoys, they have forced their way into the +country which lies beyond his and which bounds his on every side. +They have opened up this country with little railroads, with lonely +lengths of telegraph wires, and with their launches and gunboats +they have joined, by means of the Zambesi and Chinde Rivers, new +territories to the great Indian Ocean. His strip of land, which bars +them from the sea, is still unsettled and unsafe, its wealth +undeveloped, its people untamed. He sits at his café at the coast +and collects custom-dues and sells stamped paper. For fear of the +native he dares not march five miles beyond his sea-port town, and +the white men who venture inland for purposes of trade or to +cultivate plantations do so at their own risk, he can promise them +no protection.</p> + +<p>The land back of Mozambique is divided into "holdings," and the rent +of each holding is based upon the number of native huts it +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>contains. The tax per hut is one pound a year, and these holdings +are leased to any Portuguese who promises to pay the combined taxes +of all the huts. He also engages to cut new roads, to keep those +already made in repair, and to furnish a sufficient number of police +to maintain order. The lessees of these holdings have given rise to +many and terrible scandals. In the majority of cases, the lessee, +once out of reach of all authority and of public opinion, and +wielding the power of life and death, becomes a tyrant and +task-master over his district, taxing the natives to five and ten +times the amount which each is supposed to furnish, and treating +them virtually as his bondsmen. Up along the Shire River, the +lessees punish the blacks by hanging them from a tree by their +ankles and beating their bare backs with rhinoceros hide, until, as +it has been described to me by a reputable English resident, the +blood runs in a stream over the negro's shoulders, and forms a pool +beneath his eyes.</p> + +<a name="img28" id="img28"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-28.jpg" width="500" height="329" alt="The Ivory on the Right, Covered Only with Sacking, Is +Ready for Shipment to Boston, U.S.A." +title="The Ivory on the Right, Covered Only with Sacking, Is +Ready for Shipment to Boston, U.S.A." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Ivory on the Right, Covered Only with Sacking, Is +Ready for Shipment to Boston, U.S.A. </p> + +<p>You hear of no legitimate enterprise fostered by these lessees, of +no development of natural resources, but, instead, you are told +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>tales of sickening cruelty, and you can read in the consular +reports others quite as true; records of heartless treatment of +natives, of neglect of great resources, and of hurried snatching at +the year's crop and a return to the Coast, with nothing to show of +sustained effort or steady development. The incompetence of Portugal +cannot endure. Now that England has taken the Transvaal from the +Boer, she will find the seaport of Lorenço Marquez too necessary to +her interests to much longer leave it in the itching palms of the +Portuguese officials. Beira she also needs to feed Rhodesia, and the +Zambesi and Chinde Rivers to supply the British Central African +Company. Farther north, the Germans will find that if they mean to +make German Central Africa pay, they must control the seaboard. It +seems inevitable that, between the two great empires, the little +kingdom of Portugal will be crowded out, and having failed to +benefit either herself or anyone else on the East Coast, she will +withdraw from it, in favor of those who are fitter to survive her.</p> + +<p>There is no more interesting contrast along <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>the coast of East +Africa than that presented by the colonies of England, Germany, and +Portugal. Of these three, the colonies of the Englishmen are, as one +expects to find them, the healthiest, the busiest, and the most +prosperous. They thrive under your very eyes; you feel that they +were established where they are, not by accident, not to gratify a +national vanity or a ruler's ambition, but with foresight and with +knowledge, and with the determination to make money; and that they +will increase and flourish because they are situated where the +natives and settlers have something to sell, and where the men can +bring, in return, something the natives and colonials wish to buy. +Port Elizabeth, Durban, East London, and Zanzibar belong to this +prosperous class, which gives good reason for the faith of those who +founded them.</p> + +<p>On the other hand, as opposed to these, there are the settlements of +the Portuguese, rotten and corrupt, and the German settlements of +Dar Es Salaam and Tanga which have still to prove their right to +exist. Outwardly, to the eye, they are model settlements. Dar Es +Salaam, in particular, is a beautiful <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>and perfectly appointed +colonial town. In the care in which it is laid out, in the +excellence of its sanitary arrangements, in its cleanliness, and in +the magnificence of its innumerable official residences, and in +their sensible adaptability to the needs of the climate, one might +be deceived into believing that Dar Es Salaam is the beautiful +gateway of a thriving and busy colony. But there are no ramparts of +merchandise along her wharves, no bulwarks of strangely scented +bales blocking her water-front; no lighters push hurriedly from the +shore to meet the ship, although she is a German ship, or to receive +her cargo of articles "made in Germany." On the contrary, her +freight is unloaded at the English ports, and taken on at English +ports. And the German traders who send their merchandise to Hamburg +in her hold come over the side at Zanzibar, at Durban, and at Aden, +where the English merchants find in them fierce competitors. There +is nothing which goes so far to prove the falsity of the saying that +"trade follows the flag" as do these model German colonies with +their barracks, governor's palace, officers' clubs, public <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>pleasure +parks, and with no trade; and the English colonies, where the German +merchants remain, and where, under the English flag, they grow +steadily rich. The German Emperor, believing that colonies are a +source of strength to an empire, rather than the weakness that they +are, has raised the German flag in Central East Africa, but the +ships of the German East African Company, subsidized by him, carry +their merchandize to the English ports, and his German subjects +remain where they can make the most money. They do not move to those +ports where the flag of their country would wave over them.</p> + +<p>Dar Es Salaam, although it lacks the one thing needful to make it a +model settlement, possesses all the other things which are needful, +and many which are pure luxuries. Its residences, as I have said, +have been built after the most approved scientific principles of +ventilation and sanitation. In no tropical country have I seen +buildings so admirably adapted to the heat and climatic changes and +at the same time more in keeping with the surrounding scenery. They +are handsome, cool-looking, white and clean, with broad <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>verandas, +high walls, and false roofs under which currents of air are lured in +spite of themselves. The residences are set back along the high bank +which faces the bay. In front of them is a public promenade, newly +planted shade-trees arch over it, and royal palms reach up to it +from the very waters of the harbor. At one end of this semicircle +are the barracks of the Soudanese soldiers, and at the other is the +official palace of the governor. Everything in the settlement is +new, and everything is built on the scale of a city, and with the +idea of accommodating a great number of people. Hotels and cafés, +better than any one finds in the older settlements along the coast, +are arranged on the water-front, and there is a church capable of +seating the entire white population at one time. If the place is to +grow, it can do so only through trade, and when trade really comes +all these palaces and cafés and barracks which occupy the entire +water-front will have to be pushed back to make way for warehouses +and custom-house sheds. At present it is populated only by +officials, and, I believe, twelve white women.</p> + +<a name="img29" id="img29"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-29.jpg" width="500" height="349" alt="The Late Sultan of Zanzibar in His State Carriage." +title="The Late Sultan of Zanzibar in His State Carriage." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Late Sultan of Zanzibar in His State Carriage. </p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>You feel that it is an experiment, that it has been sent out like a +box of children's building blocks, and set up carefully on this +beautiful harbor. All that Dar Es Salaam needs now is trade and +emigrants. At present it is a show place, and might be exhibited at +a world's fair as an example of a model village.</p> + +<p>In writing of Zanzibar I am embarrassed by the knowledge that I am +not an unprejudiced witness. I fell in love with Zanzibar at first +sight, and the more I saw of it the more I wanted to take my luggage +out of the ship's hold and cable to my friends to try and have me +made Vice-Consul to Zanzibar through all succeeding administrations.</p> + +<p>Zanzibar runs back abruptly from a white beach in a succession of +high white walls. It glistens and glares, and dazzles you; the sand +at your feet is white, the city itself is white, the robes of the +people are white. It has no public landing-pier. Your rowboat is run +ashore on a white shelving beach, and you face an impenetrable mass +of white walls. The blue waters are behind you, the lofty +fortress-like façade before you, and a strip of white sand is at +your feet.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>And while you are wondering where this hidden city may be, a kind +resident takes you by the hand and pilots you through a narrow crack +in the rampart, along a twisting fissure between white-washed walls +where the sun cannot reach, past great black doorways of carved oak, +and out suddenly into the light and laughter and roar of Zanzibar.</p> + +<p>In the narrow streets are all the colors of the Orient, gorgeous, +unshaded, and violent; cobalt blue, greens, and reds on framework, +windows, and doorways; red and yellow in the awnings and curtains of +the bazaars, and orange and black, red and white, yellow, dark blue, +and purple, in the long shawls of the women. It is the busiest, and +the brightest and richest in color of all the ports along the East +African coast. Were it not for its narrow streets and its towering +walls it would be a place of perpetual sunshine. Everybody is either +actively busy, or contentedly idle. It is all movement, noise, and +glitter, everyone is telling everyone else to make way before him; +the Indian merchants beseech you from the open bazaars; their +children, swathed in gorgeous silks and hung with jewels and +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>bangles, stumble under your feet, the Sultan's troops assail you +with fife and drum, and the black women, wrapped below their bare +shoulders in the colors of the butterfly, and with teeth and brows +dyed purple, crowd you to the wall. Outside the city there are long +and wonderful roads between groves of the bulky mango-tree of +richest darkest green and the bending palm, shading deserted palaces +of former Sultans, temples of the Indian worshippers, native huts, +and the white-walled country residences and curtained verandas of +the white exiles. It is absurd to write them down as exiles, for it +is a Mohammedan Paradise to which they have been exiled.</p> + +<p>The exiles themselves will tell you that the reason you think +Zanzibar is a paradise, is because you have your steamer ticket in +your pocket. But that retort shows their lack of imagination, and a +vast ingratitude to those who have preceded them. For the charm of +Zanzibar lies in the fact that while the white men have made it +healthy and clean, have given it good roads, good laws, protection +for the slaves, quick punishment for the slave-dealers, and a firm +government under a benign <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span>and gentle Sultan, they have done all of +this without destroying one flash of its local color, or one throb +of its barbaric life, which is the showy, sunshiny, and sumptuous +life of the Far East. The good things of civilization are there, but +they are unobtrusive, and the evils of civilization appear not at +all, the native does not wear a derby hat with a kimona, as he does +in Japan, nor offer you souvenirs of Zanzibar manufactured in +Birmingham; Reuter's telegrams at the club and occasional steamers +alone connect his white masters with the outer world, and so +infrequent is the visiting stranger that the local phrase-book for +those who wish to converse in the native tongue is compiled chiefly +for the convenience of midshipmen when searching a slave-dhow.</p> + +<a name="img30" id="img30"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 330px;"> +<img src="images/img-30.jpg" width="330" height="450" alt="H.S.H. Hamud bin Muhamad bin Said, the Late Sultan of +Zanzibar." title="H.S.H. Hamud bin Muhamad bin Said, the Late Sultan of +Zanzibar." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">H.S.H. Hamud bin Muhamad bin Said, the Late Sultan of +Zanzibar. </p> + +<p>Zanzibar is an "Arabian Nights" city, a comic-opera capital, a most +difficult city to take seriously. There is not a street, or any +house in any street, that does not suggest in its architecture and +decoration the untrammelled fancy of the scenic artist. You feel +sure that the latticed balconies are canvas, that the white adobe +walls are supported from behind by braces, that the sunshine is a +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>carbon light, that the chorus of boatmen who hail you on landing +will reappear immediately costumed as the Sultan's body-guard, that +the women bearing water-jars on their shoulders will come on in the +next scene as slaves of the harem, and that the national anthem will +prove to be Sousa's Typical Tune of Zanzibar.</p> + +<p>Several hundred years ago the Sultans of Zanzibar grew powerful and +wealthy through exporting slaves and ivory from the mainland. These +were not two separate industries, but one was developed by the other +and was dependent upon it. The procedure was brutally simple. A +slave-trader, having first paid his tribute to the Sultan, crossed +to the mainland, and marching into the interior made his bargain +with one of the local chiefs for so much ivory, and for so many men +to carry it down to the coast. Without some such means of transport +there could have been no bargain, so the chief who was anxious to +sell would select a village which had not paid him the taxes due +him, and bid the trader help himself to what men he found there. +Then would follow a hideous night attack, a massacre of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>women and +children, and the taking prisoners of all able-bodied males. These +men, chained together in long lines, and each bearing a heavy tooth +of ivory upon his shoulder, would be whipped down to the coast. It +was only when they had carried the ivory there, and their work was +finished, that the idea presented itself of selling them as well as +the ivory. Later, these bearers became of equal value with the +ivory, and the raiding of native villages and the capture of men and +women to be sold into slavery developed into a great industry. The +industry continues fitfully to-day, but it is carried on under great +difficulties, and at a risk of heavy punishments. What is called +"domestic slavery" is recognized on the island of Zanzibar, the vast +clove plantations which lie back of the port employing many hundreds +of these domestic slaves. It is not to free these from their slight +bondage that the efforts of those who are trying to suppress the +slave-trade is to-day directed, but to prevent others from being +added to their number. What slave-trading there is at present is by +Arabs and Indians. They convey the slaves in dhows from the mainland +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>to Madagascar, Arabia, or southern Persia, and to the Island of +Pemba, which lies north of Zanzibar, and only fifteen miles from the +mainland. If a slave can be brought this short distance in safety he +can be sold for five hundred dollars; on the mainland he is not +worth more than fifteen dollars. The channels, and the mouths of +rivers, and the little bays opening from the Island of Pemba are +patrolled more or less regularly by British gunboats, and junior +officers in charge of a cutter and a crew of half a dozen men, are +detached from these for a few months at a time on "boat service." It +seems to be an unprofitable pursuit, for one officer told me that +during his month of boat service he had boarded and searched three +hundred dhows, which is an average of ten a day, and found slaves on +only one of them. But as, on this occasion, he rescued four slaves, +and the slavers, moreover, showed fight, and wounded him and two of +his boat's crew, he was more than satisfied.</p> + +<p>The trade in ivory, which has none of these restrictions upon it, +still flourishes, and the cool, dark warerooms of Zanzibar are +stored <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span>high with it. In a corner of one little cellar they showed +us twenty-five thousand dollars worth of these tusks piled up as +carelessly as though they were logs in a wood-shed. One of the most +curious sights in Zanzibar is a line of Zanzibari boys, each +balancing a great tusk on his shoulder, worth from five hundred to +two thousand dollars, and which is unprotected except for a piece of +coarse sacking.</p> + +<a name="img31" id="img31"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-31.jpg" width="500" height="327" alt="A German "Factory" at Tanga, the Store Below, the +Living Apartments Above." title="A German "Factory" at Tanga, the Store Below, the +Living Apartments Above." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">A German "Factory" at Tanga, the Store Below, the +Living Apartments Above. </p> + +<p>The largest exporters of ivory in the world are at Zanzibar, and +though probably few people know it, the firm which carries on this +business belongs to New York City, and has been in the ivory trade +with India and Africa from as far back as the fifties. In their +house at Zanzibar they have entertained every distinguished African +explorer, and the stories its walls have heard of native wars, +pirate dhows, slave-dealers, the English occupation, and terrible +marches through the jungles of the Congo, would make valuable and +picturesque history. The firm has always held a semi-official +position, for the reason that the United States Consul at Zanzibar, +who should speak at least Swahili and Portuguese, is invariably +chosen for the post from a drug-store <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>in Yankton, Dakota, or a +post-office in Canton, Ohio. Consequently, on arriving at Zanzibar +he becomes homesick, and his first official act is to cable his +resignation, and the State Department instructs whoever happens to +be general manager of the ivory house to perform the duties of +acting-consul. So, the ivory house has nearly always held the eagle +of the consulate over its doorway. The manager of the ivory house, +who at the time of our visit was also consul, is Harris Robbins +Childs. Mr. Childs is well known in New York City, is a member of +many clubs there, and speaks at least five languages. He understands +the native tongue of Zanzibar so well that when the Prime Minister +of the Sultan took us to the palace to pay our respects, Childs +talked the language so much better than did the Sultan's own Prime +Minister that there was in consequence much joking and laughing. The +Sultan then was a most dignified, intelligent, and charming old +gentleman. He was popular both with his own people, who loved him +with a religious fervor, and with the English, who unobtrusively +conducted his affairs.</p> + +<p>There have been sultans who have acted <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>less wisely than does Hamud +bin Muhamad bin Said. A few years ago one of these, Said Khaled, +defied the British Empire as represented by several gunboats, and +dared them to fire on his ship of war, a tramp steamer which he had +converted into a royal yacht. The gunboats were anchored about two +hundred yards from the palace, which stands at the water's edge, and +at the time agreed upon, they sank the Sultan's ship of war in the +short space of three minutes, and in a brief bombardment destroyed +the greater part of his palace. The ship of war still rests where +she sank, and her topmasts peer above the water only three hundred +yards distant from the windows of the new palace. They serve as a +constant warning to all future sultans.</p> + +<p>The new palace is of somewhat too modern architecture, and is not +nearly as dignified as are the massive white walls of the native +houses which surround it. But within it is a fairy palace, hung with +silk draperies, tapestries, and hand-painted curtains; the floors +are covered with magnificent rugs from Persia and India, and the +reception-room is <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>crowded with treasures of ebony, ivory, lacquer +work, and gold and silver. There were two thrones made of silver +dragons, with many scales, and studded with jewels. The Sultan did +not seem to mind our openly admiring his treasures, and his +attendants, who stood about him in gorgeous-colored silks heavy with +gold embroideries, were evidently pleased with the deep impression +they made upon the visitors. The Sultan was very gentle and +courteous and human, especially in the pleasure he took over his son +and heir, who then was at school in England, and who, on the death +of his father, succeeded him. He seemed very much gratified when we +suggested that there was no better training-place for a boy than an +English public school; as Americans, he thought our opinion must be +unprejudiced. Before he sent us away, he gave Childs, and each of +us, a photograph of himself, one of which is reproduced in this +book.</p> + +<p>Our next port was the German settlement of Tanga. We arrived there +just as a blood-red sun was setting behind great and gloomy +mountains. The place itself was bathed in <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>damp hot vapors, and +surrounded even to the water's edge by a steaming jungle. It was +more like what we expected Africa to be than was any other place we +had visited, and the proper touch of local color was supplied by a +trader, who gave as his reason for leaving us so early in the +evening that he needed sleep, as on the night before at his camp +three lions had kept him awake until morning.</p> + +<a name="img32" id="img32"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-32.jpg" width="500" height="323" alt="Soudanese Soldiers Under a German Officer Outside of +Tanga." title="Soudanese Soldiers Under a German Officer Outside of +Tanga." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Soudanese Soldiers Under a German Officer Outside of +Tanga. </p> + +<p>The bubonic plague prevented our landing at other ports. We saw them +only through field-glasses from the ship's side, so that there is, +in consequence, much that I cannot write of the East Coast of +Africa. But the trip, which allows one merely to nibble at the +Coast, is worth taking again when the bubonic plague has passed +away. It was certainly worth taking once. If I have failed to make +that apparent, the fault lies with the writer. It is certainly not +the fault of the East Coast, not the fault of the Indian Ocean, that +"sets and smiles, so soft, so bright, so blooming blue," or of the +exiles and "remittance men," or of the engineers who are building +the railroad from Cape Town to Cairo, or of any lack of interest +which the East Coast <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>presents in its problem of trade, of conquest, +and of, among nations, the survival of the fittest.</p> + +<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14297 ***</div> +</body> +</html> diff --git a/14297-h/images/img-01.jpg b/14297-h/images/img-01.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..68c1ca1 --- /dev/null +++ b/14297-h/images/img-01.jpg diff --git a/14297-h/images/img-02.jpg b/14297-h/images/img-02.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..11bc8cf --- /dev/null +++ b/14297-h/images/img-02.jpg diff --git a/14297-h/images/img-03.jpg b/14297-h/images/img-03.jpg Binary files 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Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..37dff13 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #14297 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14297) diff --git a/old/14297-8.txt b/old/14297-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..17de802 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/14297-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,4717 @@ +Project Gutenberg's The Congo and Coasts of Africa, by Richard Harding Davis + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Congo and Coasts of Africa + +Author: Richard Harding Davis + +Release Date: December 8, 2004 [EBook #14297] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA *** + + + + +Produced by Janet Kegg and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed +Proofreading Team + + + + + + + + + +THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA + +By + +RICHARD HARDING DAVIS, F.R.G.S. + + +AUTHOR OF "SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE," "THE SCARLET CAR," + "WITH BOTH ARMIES IN SOUTH AFRICA," "FARCES," + "THE CUBAN AND PORTO RICAN CAMPAIGNS" + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + FROM PHOTOGRAPHS BY THE AUTHOR + AND OTHERS + + +CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS +NEW YORK +1907 + + + [Illustration (Frontispiece): Mr. Davis and "Wood Boys" of the + Congo.] + + + +TO + +CECIL CLARK DAVIS + +MY FELLOW VOYAGER ALONG +THE COASTS OF AFRICA + + + + + CONTENTS + + + I + THE COASTERS 3 + + II + MY BROTHER'S KEEPER 32 + + III + THE CAPITAL OF THE CONGO 55 + + IV + AMERICANS IN THE CONGO 93 + + V + HUNTING THE HIPPO 118 + + VI + OLD CALABAR 142 + + VII + ALONG THE EAST COAST 176 + + + + ILLUSTRATIONS + + + MR. DAVIS AND "WOOD BOYS" OF THE CONGO _Frontispiece_ + + MRS. DAVIS IN A BORROWED "HAMMOCK," THE LOCAL MEANS + OF TRANSPORT ON THE WEST COAST 10 + + A WHITE BUILDING, THAT BLAZED LIKE THE BASE OF A + WHITEWASHED STOVE AT WHITE HEAT 22 + + THE "MAMMY CHAIR" IS LIKE THOSE SWINGS YOU SEE + IN PUBLIC PLAYGROUNDS 28 + + A VILLAGE ON THE KASAI RIVER 42 + + "TENANTS" OF LEOPOLD, WHO CLAIMS THAT THE CONGO + BELONGS TO HIM, AND THAT THESE NATIVE PEOPLE + ARE THERE ONLY AS HIS TENANTS 52 + + THE FACILITIES FOR LANDING AT BANANA, THE PORT OF + ENTRY TO THE CONGO, ARE LIMITED 56 + + "PRISONERS" OF THE STATE IN CHAINS AT MATADI 60 + + BUSH BOYS IN THE PLAZA AT MATADI SEEKING SHADE 70 + + THE MONUMENT IN STANLEY PARK, ERECTED, NOT TO + STANLEY, BUT TO LEOPOLD 82 + + THE _Deliverance_. THE RIVER RACED OVER THE DECK + TO A DEPTH OF FOUR OR FIVE INCHES. BETWEEN + HER CABIN AND THE WOOD-PILE, WERE STORED FIFTY + HUMAN BEINGS 86 + + THE NATIVE WIFE OF A _Chef de Poste_ 90 + + ENGLISH MISSIONARIES, AND SOME OF THEIR CHARGES 98 + + THE LABORING MAN UPON WHOM THE AMERICAN CONCESSIONAIRES + MUST DEPEND 106 + + MR. DAVIS AND NATIVE "BOY," ON THE KASAI RIVER 128 + + THE HIPPOPOTAMUS THAT DID NOT KNOW HE WAS DEAD 134 + + THE JESUIT BROTHERS AT THE WOMBALI MISSION 138 + + THERE, IN THE SURF, WE FOUND THESE TONS OF MAHOGANY, + POUNDING AGAINST EACH OTHER 152 + + A LOG OF MAHOGANY JAMMED IN THE ANCHOR CHAINS 156 + + THE PALACE OF THE KING OF THE CAMEROONS 160 + + THE HOME OF THE THIRTY QUEENS OF KING MANGO BELL 164 + + THE MOTHER SUPERIOR AND SISTERS OF ST. JOSEPH AND + THEIR CONVERTS AT OLD CALABAR 168 + + THE KROO BOYS SIT, NOT ON THE THWARTS, BUT ON THE + GUNWALES, AS A WOMAN RIDES A SIDE SADDLE 172 + + GOING VISITING IN HER PRIVATE TRAM-CAR AT BEIRA 182 + + ONE-HALF OF THE STREET CLEANING DEPARTMENT OF + MOZAMBIQUE 190 + + CUSTOM HOUSE, ZANZIBAR 194 + + CHAIN-GANGS OF PETTY OFFENDERS OUTSIDE OF ZANZIBAR 198 + + THE IVORY ON THE RIGHT, COVERED ONLY WITH SACKING, + IS READY FOR SHIPMENT TO BOSTON, U.S.A. 202 + + THE LATE SULTAN OF ZANZIBAR IN HIS STATE CARRIAGE 206 + + H.S.H. HAMUD BIN MUHAMAD BIN SAID, THE LATE + SULTAN OF ZANZIBAR 210 + + A GERMAN "FACTORY" AT TANGA, THE STORE BELOW, THE + LIVING APARTMENTS ABOVE 214 + + SOUDANESE SOLDIERS UNDER A GERMAN OFFICER OUTSIDE + OF TANGA 218 + + + + +THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA + + +I + +THE COASTERS + + +No matter how often one sets out, "for to admire, and for to see, +for to behold this world so wide," he never quite gets over being +surprised at the erratic manner in which "civilization" distributes +itself; at the way it ignores one spot upon the earth's surface, and +upon another, several thousand miles away, heaps its blessings and +its tyrannies. Having settled in a place one might suppose the +"influences of civilization" would first be felt by the people +nearest that place. Instead of which, a number of men go forth in a +ship and carry civilization as far away from that spot as the winds +will bear them. + +When a stone falls in a pool each part of each ripple is equally +distant from the spot where the stone fell; but if the stone of +civilization were to have fallen, for instance, into New Orleans, +equally near to that spot we would find the people of New York City +and the naked Indians of Yucatan. Civilization does not radiate, or +diffuse. It leaps; and as to where it will next strike it is as +independent as forked lightning. During hundreds of years it passed +over the continent of Africa to settle only at its northern coast +line and its most southern cape; and, to-day, it has given Cuba all +of its benefits, and has left the equally beautiful island of Hayti, +only fourteen hours away, sunk in fetish worship and brutal +ignorance. + +One of the places it has chosen to ignore is the West Coast of +Africa. We are familiar with the Northern Coast and South Africa. We +know all about Morocco and the picturesque Raisuli, Lord Cromer, and +Shepheard's Hotel. The Kimberley Diamond Mines, the Boer War, +Jameson's Raid, and Cecil Rhodes have made us know South Africa, and +on the East Coast we supply Durban with buggies and farm wagons, +furniture from Grand Rapids, and, although we have nothing against +Durban, breakfast food and canned meats. We know Victoria Falls, +because they have eclipsed our own Niagara Falls, and Zanzibar, +farther up the Coast, is familiar through comic operas and rag-time. +Of itself, the Cape to Cairo Railroad would make the East Coast +known to us. But the West Coast still means that distant shore from +whence the "first families" of Boston, Bristol and New Orleans +exported slaves. Now, for our soap and our salad, the West Coast +supplies palm oil and kernel oil, and for automobile tires, rubber. +But still to it there cling the mystery, the hazard, the cruelty of +those earlier times. It is not of palm oil and rubber one thinks +when he reads on the ship's itinerary, "the Gold Coast, the Ivory +Coast, the Bight of Benin, and Old Calabar." + +One of the strange leaps made by civilization is from Southampton to +Cape Town, and one of its strangest ironies is in its ignoring all +the six thousand miles of coast line that lies between. Nowadays, in +winter time, the English, flying from the damp cold of London, go to +Cape Town as unconcernedly as to the Riviera. They travel in great +seagoing hotels, on which they play cricket, and dress for dinner. +Of the damp, fever-driven coast line past which, in splendid ease, +they are travelling, save for the tall peaks of Teneriffe and Cape +Verde, they know nothing. + +When last Mrs. Davis and I made that voyage from Southampton, the +decks were crowded chiefly with those English whose faces are +familiar at the Savoy and the Ritz, and who, within an hour, had +settled down to seventeen days of uninterrupted bridge, with, before +them, the prospect on landing of the luxury of the Mount Nelson and +the hospitalities of Government House. When, the other day, we again +left Southampton, that former departure came back in strange +contrast. It emphasized that this time we are not accompanying +civilization on one of her flying leaps. Instead, now, we are going +down to the sea in ships with the vortrekkers of civilization, those +who are making the ways straight; who, in a few weeks, will be +leaving us to lose themselves in great forests, who clear the paths +of noisome jungles where the sun seldom penetrates, who sit in +sun-baked "factories," as they call their trading houses, measuring +life by steamer days, who preach the Gospel to the cannibals of the +Congo, whose voices are the voices of those calling in the +wilderness. + +As our tender came alongside the _Bruxellesville_ at Southampton, we +saw at the winch Kroo boys of the Ivory Coast; leaning over the rail +the Soeurs Blanches of the Congo, robed, although the cold was +bitter and the decks black with soot-stained snow, all in white; +missionaries with long beards, a bishop in a purple biretta, and +innumerable Belgian officers shivering in their cloaks and wearing +the blue ribbon and silver star that tells of three years of service +along the Equator. This time our fellow passengers are no +pleasure-seekers, no Cook's tourists sailing south to avoid a +rigorous winter. They have squeezed the last minute out of their +leave, and they are going back to the station, to the factory, to +the mission, to the barracks. They call themselves "Coasters," and +they inhabit a world all to themselves. In square miles, it is a +very big world, but it is one of those places civilization has +skipped. + +Nearly every one of our passengers from Antwerp or Southampton knows +that if he keeps his contract, and does not die, it will be three +years before he again sees his home. So our departure was not +enlivening, and, in the smoking-room, the exiles prepared us for +lonely ports of call, for sickening heat, for swarming multitudes of +blacks. + +In consequence, when we passed Finisterre, Spain, which from New +York seems almost a foreign country, was a near neighbor, a dear +friend. And the Island of Teneriffe was an anticlimax. It was as +though by a trick of the compass we had been sailing southwest and +were entering the friendly harbor of Ponce or Havana. + +Santa Cruz, the port town of Teneriffe, like La Guayra, rises at the +base of great hills. It is a smiling, bright-colored, red-roofed, +typical Spanish town. The hills about it mount in innumerable +terraces planted with fruits and vegetables, and from many of these +houses on the hills, should the owner step hurriedly out of his +front door, he would land upon the roof of his nearest neighbor. +Back of this first chain of hills are broad farming lands and +plateaus from which Barcelona and London are fed with the earliest +and the most tender of potatoes that appear in England at the same +time Bermuda potatoes are being printed in big letters on the bills +of fare along Broadway. Santa Cruz itself supplies passing steamers +with coal, and passengers with lace work and post cards; and to the +English in search of sunshine, with a rival to Madeira. It should be +a successful rival, for it is a charming place, and on the day we +were there the thermometer was at 72°, and every one was complaining +of the cruel severity of the winter. In Santa Cruz one who knows +Spanish America has but to shut his eyes and imagine himself back in +Santiago de Cuba or Caracas. There are the same charming plazas, the +yellow churches and towered cathedral, the long iron-barred windows, +glimpses through marble-paved halls of cool patios, the same open +shops one finds in Obispo and O'Reilly Streets, the idle officers +with smart uniforms and swinging swords in front of cafés killing +time and digestion with sweet drinks, and over the garden walls +great bunches of purple and scarlet flowers and sheltering palms. +The show place in Santa Cruz is the church in which are stored the +relics of the sea-fight in which, as a young man, Nelson lost his +arm and England also lost two battleflags. As she is not often +careless in that respect, it is a surprise to find, in this tiny +tucked-away little island, what you will not see in any of the show +places of the world. They tell in Santa Cruz that one night an +English middy, single-handed, recaptured the captured flags and +carried them triumphantly to his battleship. He expected at the +least a K.C.B., and when the flags, with a squad of British marines +as a guard of honor, were solemnly replaced in the church, and the +middy himself was sent upon a tour of apology to the bishop, the +governor, the commandant of the fortress, the alcalde, the collector +of customs, and the captain of the port, he declared that monarchies +were ungrateful. The other objects of interest in Teneriffe are +camels, which in the interior of the island are common beasts of +burden, and which appearing suddenly around a turn would frighten +any automobile; and the fact that in Teneriffe the fashion in +women's hats never changes. They are very funny, flat straw hats; +like children's sailor hats. They need only "_U.S.S. Iowa_" on the +band to be quite familiar. Their secret is that they are built to +support baskets and buckets of water, and that concealed in each is +a heavy pad. + + [Illustration: Mrs. Davis in a Borrowed "Hammock," the Local Means + of Transport on the West Coast.] + +After Teneriffe the destination of every one on board is as +irrevocably fixed as though the ship were a government transport. We +are all going to the West Coast or to the Congo. Should you wish to +continue on to Cape Town along the South Coast, as they call the +vast territory from Lagos to Cape Town, although there is an +irregular, a very irregular, service to the Cape, you could as +quickly reach it by going on to the Congo, returning all the way to +Southampton, and again starting on the direct line south. + +It is as though a line of steamers running down our coast to Florida +would not continue on along the South Coast to New Orleans and +Galveston, and as though no line of steamers came from New Orleans +and Galveston to meet the steamers of the East Coast. + +In consequence, the West Coast of Africa, cut off by lack of +communication from the south, divorced from the north by the Desert +of Sahara, lies in the steaming heat of the Equator to-day as it +did a thousand years ago, in inaccessible, inhospitable isolation. + +Two elements have helped to preserve this isolation: the fever that +rises from its swamps and lagoons, and the surf that thunders upon +the shore. In considering the stunted development of the West Coast, +these two elements must be kept in mind--the sickness that strikes +at sunset and by sunrise leaves the victim dead, and the monster +waves that rush booming like cannon at the beach, churning the sandy +bottom beneath, and hurling aside the great canoes as a man tosses a +cigarette. The clerk who signs the three-year contract to work on +the West Coast enlists against a greater chance of death than the +soldier who enlists to fight only bullets; and every box, puncheon, +or barrel that the trader sends in a canoe through the surf is +insured against its never reaching, as the case may be, the shore or +the ship's side. + +The surf and the fever are the Minotaurs of the West Coast, and in +the year there is not a day passes that they do not claim and +receive their tribute in merchandise and human life. Said an old +Coaster to me, pointing at the harbor of Grand Bassam: "I've seen +just as much cargo lost overboard in that surf as I've seen shipped +to Europe." One constantly wonders how the Coasters find it good +enough. How, since 1550, when the Portuguese began trading, it has +been possible to find men willing to fill the places of those who +died. But, in spite of the early massacres by the natives, in spite +of attacks by wild beasts, in spite of pirate raids, of desolating +plagues and epidemics, of wars with other white men, of damp heat +and sudden sickness, there were men who patiently rebuilt the forts +and factories, fought the surf with great breakwaters, cleared +breathing spaces in the jungle, and with the aid of quinine for +themselves, and bad gin for the natives, have held their own. Except +for the trade goods it never would be held. It is a country where +the pay is cruelly inadequate, where but few horses, sheep, or +cattle can exist, where the natives are unbelievably lazy and +insolent, and where, while there is no society of congenial spirits, +there is a superabundance of animal and insect pests. Still, so +great are gold, ivory, and rubber, and so many are the men who will +take big chances for little pay, that every foot of the West Coast +is preëmpted. As the ship rolls along, for hours from the rail you +see miles and miles of steaming yellow sand and misty swamp where as +yet no white man has set his foot. But in the real estate office of +Europe some Power claims the right to "protect" that swamp; some +treaty is filed as a title-deed. + +As the Powers finally arranged it, the map of the West Coast is like +a mosaic, like the edge of a badly constructed patchwork quilt. In +trading along the West Coast a man can find use for five European +languages, and he can use a new one at each port of call. + +To the north, the West Coast begins with Cape Verde, which is +Spanish. It is followed by Senegal, which is French; but into +Senegal is tucked "a thin red line" of British territory called +Gambia. Senegal closes in again around Gambia, and is at once +blocked to the south by the three-cornered patch which belongs to +Portugal. This is followed by French Guinea down to another British +red spot, Sierra Leone, which meets Liberia, the republic of negro +emigrants from the United States. South of Liberia is the French +Ivory Coast, then the English Gold Coast; Togo, which is German; +Dahomey, which is French; Lagos and Southern Nigeria, which again +are English; Fernando Po, which is Spanish, and the German +Cameroons. + +The coast line of these protectorates and colonies gives no idea of +the extent of their hinterland, which spreads back into the Sahara, +the Niger basin, and the Soudan. Sierra Leone, one of the smallest +of them, is as large as Maine; Liberia, where the emigrants still +keep up the tradition of the United States by talking like end men, +is as large as the State of New York; two other colonies, Senegal +and Nigeria, together are 135,000 square miles larger than the +combined square miles of all of our Atlantic States from Maine to +Florida and including both. To partition finally among the Powers +this strip of death and disease, of uncountable wealth, of unnamed +horrors and cruelties, has taken many hundreds of years, has brought +to the black man every misery that can be inflicted upon a human +being, and to thousands of white men, death and degradation, or +great wealth. + +The raids made upon the West Coast to obtain slaves began in the +fifteenth century with the discovery of the West Indies, and it was +to spare the natives of these islands, who were unused and unfitted +for manual labor and who in consequence were cruelly treated by the +Spaniards, that Las Casas, the Bishop of Chiapa, first imported +slaves from West Africa. He lived to see them suffer so much more +terribly than had the Indians who first obtained his sympathy, that +even to his eightieth year he pleaded with the Pope and the King of +Spain to undo the wrong he had begun. But the tide had set west, and +Las Casas might as well have tried to stop the Trades. In 1800 +Wilberforce stated in the House of Commons that at that time British +vessels were carrying each year to the Indies and the American +colonies 38,000 slaves, and when he spoke the traffic had been going +on for two hundred and fifty years. After the Treaty of Utrecht, +Queen Anne congratulated her Peers on the terms of the treaty which +gave to England "the fortress of Gibraltar, the Island of Minorca, +and the monopoly in the slave trade for thirty years," or, as it was +called, the _asiento_ (contract). This was considered so good an +investment that Philip V of Spain took up one-quarter of the common +stock, and good Queen Anne reserved another quarter, which later she +divided among her ladies. But for a time she and her cousin of Spain +were the two largest slave merchants in the world. The point of view +of those then engaged in the slave trade is very interesting. When +Queen Elizabeth sent Admiral Hawkins slave-hunting, she presented +him with a ship, named, with startling lack of moral perception, +after the Man of Sorrows. In a book on the slave trade I picked up +at Sierra Leone there is the diary of an officer who accompanied +Hawkins. "After," he writes, "going every day on shore to take the +inhabitants by burning and despoiling of their towns," the ship was +becalmed. "But," he adds gratefully, "the Almighty God, who never +suffereth his elect to perish, sent us the breeze." + +The slave book shows that as late as 1780 others of the "elect" of +our own South were publishing advertisements like this, which is one +of the shortest and mildest. It is from a Virginia newspaper: "The +said fellow is outlawed, and I will give ten pounds reward for his +head severed from his body, or forty shillings if brought alive." + +At about this same time an English captain threw overboard, chained +together, one hundred and thirty sick slaves. He claimed that had he +not done so the ship's company would have also sickened and died, +and the ship would have been lost, and that, therefore, the +insurance companies should pay for the slaves. The jury agreed with +him, and the Solicitor-General said: "What is all this declamation +about human beings! This is a case of chattels or goods. It is +really so--it is the case of throwing over goods. For the +purpose--the purpose of the insurance, they are goods and property; +whether right or wrong, we have nothing to do with it." In 1807 +England declared the slave trade illegal. A year later the United +States followed suit, but although on the seas her frigates chased +the slavers, on shore a part of our people continued to hold slaves, +until the Civil War rescued both them and the slaves. + +As early as 1718 Raynal and Diderot estimated that up to that time +there had been exported from Africa to the North and South Americas +nine million slaves. Our own historian, Bancroft, calculated that in +the eighteenth century the English alone imported to the Americas +three million slaves, while another 2,500,000 purchased or kidnapped +on the West Coast were lost in the surf, or on the voyage thrown +into the sea. For that number Bancroft places the gross returns as +not far from four hundred millions of dollars. + +All this is history, and to the reader familiar, but I do not +apologize for reviewing it here, as without the background of the +slave trade, the West Coast, as it is to-day, is difficult to +understand. As we have seen, to kings, to chartered "Merchant +Adventurers," to the cotton planters of the West Indies and of our +South, and to the men of the North who traded in black ivory, the +West Coast gave vast fortunes. The price was the lives of millions +of slaves. And to-day it almost seems as though the sins of the +fathers were being visited upon the children; as though the juju of +the African, under the spell of which his enemies languish and die, +has been cast upon the white man. We have to look only at home. In +the millions of dead, and in the misery of the Civil War, and +to-day in race hatred, in race riots, in monstrous crimes and as +monstrous lynchings, we seem to see the fetish of the West Coast, +the curse, falling upon the children to the third and fourth +generation of the million slaves that were thrown, shackled, into +the sea. + +The first mention in history of Sierra Leone is when in 480 B.C., +Hanno, the Carthaginian, anchored at night in its harbor, and then +owing to "fires in the forests, the beating of drums, and strange +cries that issued from the bushes," before daylight hastened away. +We now skip nineteen hundred years. This is something of a gap, but +except for the sketchy description given us by Hanno of the place, +and his one gaudy night there, Sierra Leone until the fifteenth +century utterly disappears from the knowledge of man. Happy is the +country without a history! + +Nineteen hundred years having now supposed to elapse, the second act +begins with De Cintra, who came in search of slaves, and instead +gave the place its name. Because of the roaring of the wind around +the peak that rises over the harbor he called it the Lion Mountain. + +After the fifteenth century, in a succession of failures, five +different companies of "Royal Adventurers" were chartered to trade +with her people, and, when convenient, to kidnap them; pirates in +turn kidnapped the British governor, the French and Dutch were +always at war with the settlement, and native raids, epidemics, and +fevers were continuous. The history of Sierra Leone is the history +of every other colony along the West Coast, with the difference that +it became a colony by purchase, and was not, as were the others, a +trading station gradually converted into a colony. During the war in +America, Great Britain offered freedom to all slaves that would +fight for her, and, after the war, these freed slaves were conveyed +on ships of war to London, where they were soon destitute. They +appealed to the great friend of the slave in those days, Granville +Sharp, and he with others shipped them to Sierra Leone, to +establish, with the aid of some white emigrants, an independent +colony, which was to be a refuge and sanctuary for others like +themselves. Liberia, which was the gift of philanthropists of +Baltimore to American freed slaves, was, no doubt, inspired by this +earlier effort. The colony became a refuge for slaves from every +part of the Coast, the West Indies and Nova Scotia, and to-day in +that one colony there are spoken sixty different coast dialects and +those of the hinterland. + +Sierra Leone, as originally purchased in 1786, consisted of twenty +square miles, for which among other articles of equal value King +Naimbanna received a "crimson satin embroidered waistcoat, one +puncheon of rum, ten pounds of beads, two cheeses, one box of +smoking pipes, a mock diamond ring, and a tierce of pork." + +What first impressed me about Sierra Leone was the heat. It does not +permit one to give his attention wholly to anything else. I always +have maintained that the hottest place on earth is New York, and I +have been in other places with more than a local reputation for +heat; some along the Equator, Lourenço Marquez, which is only +prevented from being an earthen oven because it is a swamp; the Red +Sea, with a following breeze, and from both shores the baked heat of +the desert, and Nagasaki, on a rainy day in midsummer. + +But New York in August radiating stored-up heat from iron-framed +buildings, with the foul, dead air shut in by the skyscrapers, with +a humidity that makes you think you are breathing through a +steam-heated sponge, is as near the lower regions as I hope any of +us will go. And yet Sierra Leone is no mean competitor. + +We climbed the moss-covered steps to the quay to face a great white +building that blazed like the base of a whitewashed stove at white +heat. Before it were some rusty cannon and a canoe cut out of a +single tree, and, seated upon it selling fruit and sun-dried fish, +some native women, naked to the waist, their bodies streaming with +palm oil and sweat. At the same moment something struck me a blow on +the top of the head, at the base of the spine and between the +shoulder blades, and the ebony ladies and the white "factory" were +burnt up in a scroll of flame. + + [Illustration: A White Building, that Blazed Like the Base of a + Whitewashed Stove at White Heat.] + +I heard myself in a far-away voice asking where one could buy a sun +helmet and a white umbrella, and until I was under their protection, +Sierra Leone interested me no more. + +One sees more different kinds of black people in Sierra Leone than +in any other port along the Coast; Senegalese and Senegambians, +Kroo boys, Liberians, naked bush boys bearing great burdens from the +forests, domestic slaves in fez and colored linen livery, carrying +hammocks swung from under a canopy, the local electric hansom, +soldiers of the W.A.F.F., the West African Frontier Force, in Zouave +uniform of scarlet and khaki, with bare legs; Arabs from as far in +the interior as Timbuctu, yellow in face and in long silken robes; +big fat "mammies" in well-washed linen like the washerwomen of +Jamaica, each balancing on her head her tightly rolled umbrella, and +in the gardens slim young girls, with only a strip of blue and white +linen from the waist to the knees, lithe, erect, with glistening +teeth and eyes, and their sisters, after two years in the mission +schools, demurely and correctly dressed like British school marms. +Sierra Leone has all the hall marks of the crown colony of the +tropics; good wharfs, clean streets, innumerable churches, public +schools operated by the government as well as many others run by +American and English missions, a club where the white "mammies," as +all women are called, and the white officers--for Sierra Leone is a +coaling station on the Cape route to India, and is garrisoned +accordingly--play croquet, and bowl into a net. + +When the officers are not bowling they are tramping into the +hinterland after tribes on the warpath from Liberia, and coming +back, perhaps wounded or racked with fever, or perhaps they do not +come back. On the day we landed they had just buried one of the +officers. On Saturday afternoon he had been playing tennis, during +the night the fever claimed him, and Sunday night he was dead. + +That night as we pulled out to the steamer there came toward us in +black silhouette against the sun, setting blood-red into the lagoon, +two great canoes. They were coming from up the river piled high with +fruit and bark, with the women and children lying huddled in the +high bow and stern, while amidships the twelve men at the oars +strained and struggled until we saw every muscle rise under the +black skin. + +As their stroke slackened, the man in the bow with the tom-tom beat +more savagely upon it, and shouted to them in shrill sharp cries. +Their eyes shone, their teeth clenched, the sweat streamed from +their naked bodies. They might have been slaves chained to the +thwarts of a trireme. + +Just ahead of them lay at anchor the only other ship beside our own +in port, a two-masted schooner, the _Gladys E. Wilden_, out of +Boston. Her captain leaned upon the rail smoking his cigar, his +shirt-sleeves held up with pink elastics, on the back of his head a +derby hat. As the rowers passed under his bows he looked critically +at the streaming black bodies and spat meditatively into the water. +His own father could have had them between decks as cargo. Now for +the petroleum and lumber he brings from Massachusetts to Sierra +Leone he returns in ballast. + +Because her lines were so home-like and her captain came from Cape +Cod, we wanted to call on the _Gladys E. Wilden_, but our own +captain had different views, and the two ships passed in the night, +and the man from Boston never will know that two folks from home +were burning signals to him. + +Because our next port of call, Grand Bassam, is the chief port of +the French Ivory Coast, which is 125,000 square miles in extent, we +expected quite a flourishing seaport. Instead, Grand Bassam was a +bank of yellow sand, a dozen bungalows in a line, a few wind-blown +cocoanut palms, an iron pier, and a French flag. Beyond the cocoanut +palms we could see a great lagoon, and each minute a wave leaped +roaring upon the yellow sand-bank and tried to hurl itself across +it, eating up the bungalows on its way, into the quiet waters of the +lake. Each time we were sure it would succeed, but the yellow bank +stood like rock, and, beaten back, the wave would rise in white +spray to the height of a three-story house, hang glistening in the +sun and then, with the crash of a falling wall, tumble at the feet +of the bungalows. + +We stopped at Grand Bassam to put ashore a young English girl who +had come out to join her husband. His factory is a two days' launch +ride up the lagoon, and the only other white woman near it does not +speak English. Her husband had wished her, for her health's sake, to +stay in his home near London, but her first baby had just died, and +against his unselfish wishes, and the advice of his partner, she had +at once set out to join him. She was a very pretty, sad, unsmiling +young wife, and she spoke only to ask her husband's partner +questions about the new home. His answers, while they did not seem +to daunt her, made every one else at the table wish she had remained +safely in her London suburb. + +Through our glasses we all watched her husband lowered from the iron +pier into a canoe and come riding the great waves to meet her. + +The Kroo boys flashed their trident-shaped paddles and sang and +shouted wildly, but he sat with his sun helmet pulled over his eyes +staring down into the bottom of the boat; while at his elbow, +another sun helmet told him yes, that now he could make out the +partner, and that, judging by the photograph, that must be She in +white under the bridge. + +The husband and the young wife were swung together over the side to +the lifting waves in a two-seated "mammy chair," like one of those +_vis-à-vis_ swings you see in public playgrounds and picnic groves, +and they carried with them, as a gift from Captain Burton, a fast +melting lump of ice, the last piece of fresh meat they will taste in +many a day, and the blessings of all the ship's company. And then, +with inhospitable haste there was a rattle of anchor chains, a quick +jangle of bells from the bridge to the engine-room, and the +_Bruxellesville_ swept out to sea, leaving the girl from the London +suburb to find her way into the heart of Africa. Next morning we +anchored in a dripping fog off Sekondi on the Gold Coast, to allow +an English doctor to find his way to a fever camp. For nine years he +had been a Coaster, and he had just gone home to fit himself, by a +winter's vacation in London, for more work along the Gold Coast. It +is said of him that he has "never lost a life." On arriving in +London he received a cable telling him three doctors had died, the +miners along the railroad to Ashanti were rotten with fever, and +that he was needed. + + [Illustration: The "Mammy Chair" is Like Those Swings You See in + Public Playgrounds.] + +So he and his wife, as cheery and bright as though she were setting +forth on her honeymoon, were going back to take up the white man's +burden. We swung them over the side as we had the other two, and +that night in the smoking-room the Coasters drank "Luck to him," +which, in the vernacular of this unhealthy shore, means "Life to +him," and to the plucky, jolly woman who was going back to fight +death with the man who had never lost a life. + +As the ship was getting under way, a young man in "whites" and a sun +helmet, an agent of a trading company, went down the sea ladder by +which I was leaning. He was smart, alert; his sleeves, rolled +recklessly to his shoulders, showed sinewy, sunburnt arms; his +helmet, I noted, was a military one. Perhaps I looked as I felt; +that it was a pity to see so good a man go back to such a land, for +he looked up at me from the swinging ladder and smiled understanding +as though we had been old acquaintances. + +"You going far?" he asked. He spoke in the soft, detached voice of +the public-school Englishman. + +"To the Congo," I answered. + +He stood swaying with the ship, looking as though there were +something he wished to say, and then laughed, and added gravely, +giving me the greeting of the Coast: "Luck to you." + +"Luck to YOU," I said. + +That is the worst of these gaddings about, these meetings with men +you wish you could know, who pass like a face in the crowded street, +who hold out a hand, or give the password of the brotherhood, and +then drop down the sea ladder and out of your life forever. + + + + +II + +MY BROTHER'S KEEPER + + +To me, the fact of greatest interest about the Congo is that it is +owned, and the twenty millions of people who inhabit it are owned by +one man. The land and its people are his private property. I am not +trying to say that he governs the Congo. He does govern it, but that +in itself would not be of interest. His claim is that he owns it. +Though backed by all the mailed fists in the German Empire, and all +the _Dreadnoughts_ of the seas, no other modern monarch would make +such a claim. It does not sound like anything we have heard since +the days and the ways of Pharaoh. And the most remarkable feature of +it is, that the man who makes this claim is the man who was placed +over the Congo as a guardian, to keep it open to the trade of the +world, to suppress slavery. That, in the Congo, he has killed trade +and made the products of the land his own, that of the natives he +did not kill he has made slaves, is what to-day gives the Congo its +chief interest. It is well to emphasize how this one man stole a +march on fourteen Powers, including the United States, and stole +also an empire of one million square miles. + +Twenty-five years ago all of Africa was divided into many parts. The +part which still remained to be distributed among the Powers was +that which was watered by the Congo River and its tributaries. + +Along the north bank of the Congo River ran the French Congo; the +Portuguese owned the lands to the south, and on the east it was shut +in by protectorates and colonies of Germany and England. It was, and +is, a territory as large, were Spain and Russia omitted, as Europe. +Were a map of the Congo laid upon a map of Europe, with the mouth of +the Congo River where France and Spain meet at Biarritz, the +boundaries of the Congo would reach south to the heel of Italy, to +Greece, to Smyrna; east to Constantinople and Odessa; northeast to +St. Petersburg and Finland, and northwest to the extreme limits of +Scotland. Distances in this country are so enormous, the means of +progress so primitive, that many of the Belgian officers with whom I +came south and who already had travelled nineteen days from Antwerp, +had still, before they reached their posts, to steam, paddle, and +walk for three months. + +In 1844 to dispose amicably of this great territory, which was much +desired by several of the Powers, a conference was held at Berlin. +There it was decided to make of the Congo Basin an Independent +State, a "free-for-all" country, where every flag could trade with +equal right, and with no special tariff or restriction. + +The General Act of this conference agreed: "The trade of ALL nations +shall enjoy complete freedom." "No Power which exercises or shall +exercise Sovereign rights in the above-mentioned regions shall be +allowed to _grant therein a monopoly or favor of any kind in matters +of trade_." "ALL the Powers exercising Sovereign rights or influence +in the afore-said territories bind themselves to watch over the +preservation of the native tribes, and to care for the improvement +of _the condition of their moral and material welfare_, and _to +help in suppressing slavery_." The italics are mine. These +quotations from the act are still binding upon the fourteen Powers, +including the United States. + +For several years previous to the Conference of Berlin, Leopold of +Belgium, as a private individual, had shown much interest in the +development of the Congo. The opening up of that territory was +apparently his hobby. Out of his own pocket he paid for expeditions +into the Congo Basin, employed German and English explorers, and +protested against the then existing iniquities of the Arabs, who for +ivory and slaves raided the Upper Congo. Finally, assisted by many +geographical societies, he founded the International Association, to +promote "civilization and trade" in Central Africa; and enlisted +Henry M. Stanley in this service. + +That, in the early years, Leopold's interest in the Congo was +unselfish may or may not be granted, but, knowing him, as we now +know him, as one of the shrewdest and, of speculators, the most +unscrupulous, at the time of the Berlin Conference, his self-seeking +may safely be accepted. Quietly, unostentatiously, he presented +himself to its individual members as a candidate for the post of +administrator of this new territory. + +On the face of it he seemed an admirable choice. He was a sovereign +of a kingdom too unimportant to be feared; of the newly created +State he undoubtedly possessed an intimate knowledge. He promised to +give to the Dutch, English, and Portuguese traders, already for many +years established on the Congo, his heartiest aid, and, for those +traders still to come, to maintain the "open door." His professions +of a desire to help the natives were profuse. He became the +unanimous choice of the conference. + +Later he announced to the Powers signing the act, that from Belgium +he had received the right to assume the title of King of the +Independent State of the Congo. The Powers recognized his new title. + +The fact that Leopold, King of Belgium, was king also of the État +Indépendant du Congo confused many into thinking that the Free State +was a colony, or under the protection, of Belgium. As we have seen, +it is not. A Belgian may serve in the army of the Free State, or in +a civil capacity, as may a man of any nation, but, although with few +exceptions only Belgians are employed in the Free State, and +although to help the King in the Congo, the Belgian Government has +loaned him great sums of money, politically and constitutionally the +two governments are as independent of each other as France and +Spain. + +And so, in 1885, Leopold, by the grace of fourteen governments, was +appointed their steward over a great estate in which each of the +governments still holds an equal right; a trustee and keeper over +twenty millions of "black brothers" whose "moral and material +welfare" each government had promised to protect. + +There is only one thing more remarkable than the fact that Leopold +was able to turn this public market into a private park, and that +is, that he has been permitted to do so. It is true he is a man of +wonderful ability. For his own ends he is a magnificent organizer. +But in the fourteen governments that created him there have been, +and to-day there are, men, if less unscrupulous, of quite as great +ability; statesmen, jealous and quick to guard the rights of the +people they represent, people who since the twelfth century have +been traders, who since 1808 have declared slavery abolished. + +And yet, for twenty-five years these statesmen have watched Leopold +disobey every provision in the act of the conference. Were they to +visit the Congo, they could see for themselves the jungle creeping +in and burying their trading posts, their great factories turned +into barracks. They know that the blacks they mutually agreed to +protect have been reduced to slavery worse than that they suffered +from the Arabs, that hundreds of thousands of them have fled from +the Congo, and that those that remain have been mutilated, maimed, +or, what was more merciful, murdered. And yet the fourteen +governments, including the United States, have done nothing. + +Some tell you they do not interfere because they are jealous one of +the other; others say that it is because they believe the Congo will +soon be taken over by Belgium, and with Belgium in control, they +argue, they would be dealing with a responsible government, instead +of with a pirate. But so long as Leopold is King of Belgium one +doubts if Belgians in the Congo would rise above the level of their +King. The English, when asked why they do not assert their rights, +granted not only to them, but to thirteen other governments, reply +that if they did they would be accused of "ulterior motives." What +ulterior motives? If you pursue a pickpocket and recover your watch +from him, are your motives in doing so open to suspicion? + +Personally, although this is looking some way ahead, I would like to +see the English take over and administrate the Congo. Wherever I +visit a colony governed by Englishmen I find under their +administration, in spite of opium in China and gin on the West +Coast, that three people are benefited: the Englishman, the native, +and the foreign trader from any other part of the world. Of the +colonies of what other country can one say the same? + +As a rule our present governments are not loath to protect their +rights. But toward asserting them in the Congo they have been moved +neither by the protests of traders, chambers of commerce, +missionaries, the public press, nor by the cry of the black man to +"let my people go." By only those in high places can it be +explained. We will leave it as a curious fact, and return to the +"Unjust Steward." + +His first act was to wage wars upon the Arabs. From the Soudan and +from the East Coast they were raiding the Congo for slaves and +ivory, and he drove them from it. By these wars he accomplished two +things. As the defender of the slave, he gained much public credit, +and he kept the ivory. But war is expensive, and soon he pointed out +to the Powers that to ask him out of his own pocket to maintain +armies in the field and to administer a great estate was unfair. He +humbly sought their permission to levy a few taxes. It seemed a +reasonable request. To clear roads, to keep boats upon the great +rivers, to mark it with buoys, to maintain wood stations for the +steamers, to improve the "moral and material welfare of the +natives," would cost money, and to allow Leopold to bring about +these improvements, which would be for the good of all, he was +permitted to levy the few taxes. That was twenty years ago; to-day I +saw none of these improvements, and the taxes have increased. + +From the first they were so heavy that the great trade houses, which +for one hundred years in peace and mutual goodwill bartered with the +natives, found themselves ruined. It was not alone the export taxes, +lighterage dues, port dues, and personal taxes that drove them out +of the Congo; it was the King appearing against them as a rival +trader, the man appointed to maintain the "open door." And a trader +with methods they could not or would not imitate. Leopold, or the +"State," saw for the existence of the Congo only two reasons: Rubber +and Ivory. And the collecting of this rubber and ivory was, as he +saw it, the sole duty of the State and its officers. When he threw +over the part of trustee and became the Arab raider he could not +waste his time, which, he had good reason to fear, might be short, +upon products that, if fostered, would be of value only in later +years. Still less time had he to give to improvements that cost +money and that would be of benefit to his successors. He wanted only +rubber; he wanted it at once, and he cared not at all how he +obtained it. So he spun, and still spins, the greatest of all +"get-rich-quick" schemes; one of gigantic proportions, full of +tragic, monstrous, nauseous details. + +The only possible way to obtain rubber is through the native; as +yet, in teeming forests, the white man can not work and live. Of +even Chinese coolies imported here to build a railroad ninety per +cent. died. So, with a stroke of the pen, Leopold declared all the +rubber in the country the property of the "State," and then, to make +sure that the natives would work it, ordered that taxes be paid in +rubber. If, once a month (in order to keep the natives steadily at +work the taxes were ordered to be paid each month instead of once a +year), each village did not bring in so many baskets of rubber the +King's cannibal soldiers raided it, carried off the women as +hostages, and made prisoners of the men, or killed and ate them. For +every kilo of rubber brought in in excess of the quota the King's +agent, who received the collected rubber and forwarded it down the +river, was paid a commission. Or was "paid by results." Another +bonus was given him based on the price at which he obtained the +rubber. If he paid the native only six cents for every two pounds, +he received a bonus of three cents, the cost to the State being but +nine cents per kilo, but, if he paid the natives twelve cents for +every two pounds, he received as a bonus less than one cent. In a +word, the more rubber the agent collected the more he personally +benefited, and if he obtained it "cheaply" or for nothing--that is, +by taking hostages, making prisoners, by the whip of hippopotamus +hide, by torture--so much greater his fortune, so much richer +Leopold. + + [Illustration: A Village on the Kasai River.] + +Few schemes devised have been more cynical, more devilish, more +cunningly designed to incite a man to cruelty and abuse. To +dishonesty it was an invitation and a reward. It was this system of +"payment by results," evolved by Leopold sooner than allow his +agents a fixed and sufficient wage, that led to the atrocities. + +One result of this system was that in seven years the natives +condemned to slavery in the rubber forests brought in rubber to the +amount of fifty-five millions of dollars. But its chief results were +the destruction of entire villages, the flight from their homes in +the Congo of hundreds of thousands of natives, and for those that +remained misery, death, the most brutal tortures and degradations, +unprintable, unthinkable. + +I am not going to enter into the question of the atrocities. In the +Congo the tip has been given out from those higher up at Brussels to +"close up" the atrocities; and for the present the evil places in +the Tenderloin and along the Broadway of the Congo are tightly shut. +But at those lonely posts, distant a month to three months' march +from the capital, the cruelties still continue. I did not see them. +Neither, last year, did a great many people in the United States see +the massacre of blacks in Atlanta. But they have reason to believe +it occurred. And after one has talked with the men and women who +have seen the atrocities, has seen in the official reports that +those accused of the atrocities do not deny having committed them, +but point out that they were merely obeying orders, and after one +has seen that even at the capital of Boma all the conditions of +slavery exist, one is assured that in the jungle, away from the +sight of men, all things are possible. Merchants, missionaries, and +officials even in Leopold's service told me that if one could spare +a year and a half, or a year, to the work in the hinterland he would +be an eye-witness of as cruel treatment of the natives as any that +has gone before, and if I can trust myself to weigh testimony and +can believe my eyes and ears I have reason to know that what they +say is true. I am convinced that to-day a man, who feels that a year +and a half is little enough to give to the aid of twenty millions of +human beings, can accomplish in the Congo as great and good work as +that of the Abolitionists. + +Three years ago atrocities here were open and above-board. For +instance. In the opinion of the State the soldiers, in killing game +for food, wasted the State cartridges, and in consequence the +soldiers, to show their officers that they did not expend the +cartridges extravagantly on antelope and wild boar, for each empty +cartridge brought in a human hand, the hand of a man, woman, or +child. These hands, drying in the sun, could be seen at the posts +along the river. They are no longer in evidence. Neither is the +flower-bed of Lieutenant Dom, which was bordered with human skulls. +A quaint conceit. + +The man to blame for the atrocities, for each separate atrocity, is +Leopold. Had he shaken his head they would have ceased. When the hue +and cry in Europe grew too hot for him and he held up his hand they +did cease. At least along the main waterways. Years before he could +have stopped them. But these were the seven fallow years, when +millions of tons of red rubber were being dumped upon the wharf at +Antwerp; little, roughly rolled red balls, like pellets of +coagulated blood, which had cost their weight in blood, which would +pay Leopold their weight in gold. + +He can not plead ignorance. Of all that goes on in his big +plantation no man has a better knowledge. Without their personal +honesty, he follows every detail of the "business" of his rubber +farm with the same diligence that made rich men of George Boldt and +Marshall Field. Leopold's knowledge is gained through many spies, by +voluminous reports, by following up the expenditure of each centime, +of each arm's-length of blue cloth. Of every Belgian employed on +his farm, and ninety-five per cent. are Belgians, he holds the +_dossier_; he knows how many kilos a month the agent whips out of +his villages, how many bottles of absinthe he smuggles from the +French side, whether he lives with one black woman or five, why his +white wife in Belgium left him, why he left Belgium, why he dare not +return. The agent knows that Leopold, King of the Belgians, knows, +and that he has shared that knowledge with the agent's employer, the +man who by bribes of rich bonuses incites him to crime, the man who +could throw him into a Belgian jail, Leopold, King of the Congo. + +The agent decides for him it is best to please both Leopolds, and +Leopold makes no secret of what best pleases him. For not only is he +responsible for the atrocities, in that he does not try to suppress +them, but he is doubly guilty in that he has encouraged them. This +he has done with cynical, callous publicity, without effort at +concealment, without shame. Men who, in obtaining rubber, committed +unspeakable crimes, the memory of which makes other men +uncomfortable in their presence, Leopold rewarded with rich +bonuses, pensions, higher office, gilt badges of shame, and rapid +advancement. To those whom even his own judges sentenced to many +years' imprisonment he promptly granted the royal pardon, promoted, +and sent back to work in the vineyard. + +"That is the sort of man for _me_," his action seemed to say. "See +how I value that good and faithful servant. That man collected much +rubber. You observe I do not ask how he got it. I will not ask you. +All you need do is to collect rubber. Use our improved methods. Gum +copal rubbed in the kinky hair of the chief and then set on fire +burns, so my agents tell me, like vitriol. For collecting rubber the +chief is no longer valuable, but to his successor it is an +object-lesson. Let me recommend also the _chicotte_, the torture +tower, the 'hostage' house, and the crucifix. Many other stimulants +to labor will no doubt suggest themselves to you and to your +cannibal 'sentries.' Help to make me rich, and don't fear the +'State.' '_L'Etat, c'est moi!_' Go as far as you like!" + +I said the degradations and tortures practised by the men "working +on commission" for Leopold are unprintable, but they have been +printed, and those who wish to read a calmly compiled, careful, and +correct record of their deeds will find it in the "Red Rubber" of +Mr. E.R. Morel. An even better book by the same authority, on the +whole history of the State, is his "King Leopold's Rule in the +Congo." Mr. Morel has many enemies. So, early in the nineteenth +century, had the English Abolitionists, Wilberforce and Granville +Sharp. After they were dead they were buried in the Abbey, and their +portraits were placed in the National Gallery. People who wish to +assist in freeing twenty millions of human beings should to-day +support Mr. Morel. It will be of more service to the blacks than, +after he is dead, burying him in Westminster Abbey. + +Mr. Morel, the American and English missionaries, and the English +Consul, Roger Casement, and other men, in Belgium, have made a +magnificent fight against Leopold; but the Powers to whom they have +appealed have been silent. Taking courage of this silence, Leopold +has divided the Congo into several great territories in which the +sole right to work rubber is conceded to certain persons. To those +who protested that no one in the Congo "Free" State but the King +could trade in rubber, Leopold, as an answer, pointed with pride at +the preserves of these foreigners. And he may well point at them +with pride, for in some of those companies he owns a third, and in +most of them he holds a half, or a controlling interest. The +directors of the foreign companies are his cronies, members of his +royal household, his brokers, bankers. You have only to read the +names published in the lists of the Brussels Stock Exchange to see +that these "trading companies," under different aliases, are +Leopold. Having, then, "conceded" the greater part of the Congo to +himself, Leopold set aside the best part of it, so far as rubber is +concerned, as a _Domaine Privé_. Officially the receipts of this pay +for running the government, and for schools, roads and wharfs, for +which taxes were levied, but for which, after twenty years, one +looks in vain. Leopold claims that through the Congo he is out of +pocket; that this carrying the banner of civilization in Africa +does not pay. Through his press bureaus he tells that his sympathy +for his black brother, his desire to see the commerce of the world +busy along the Congo, alone prevents him giving up what is for him a +losing business. There are several answers to this. One is that in +the Kasai Company alone Leopold owns 2,010 shares of stock. Worth +originally $50 a share, the value of each share rose to $3,100, +making at one time his total shares worth $5,421,000. In the +A.B.I.R. Concession he owns 1,000 shares, originally worth $100 +each, later worth $940. In the "vintage year" of 1900 each of these +shares was worth $5,050, and the 1,000 shares thus rose to the value +of $5,050,000. + +These are only two companies. In most of the others half the shares +are owned by the King. + +As published in the "State Bulletin," the money received in eight +years for rubber and ivory gathered in the _Domaine Privé_ differs +from the amount given for it in the market at Antwerp. The official +estimates show a loss to the government. The actual sales show that +the government, over and above its own estimate of its expenses, +instead of losing, made from the _Domaine Privé_ alone $10,000,000. +We are left wondering to whom went that unaccounted-for $10,000,000. +Certainly the King would not take it, for, to reimburse himself for +his efforts, he early in the game reserved for himself another tract +of territory known as the _Domaine de la Couronne_. For years he +denied that this existed. He knew nothing of Crown Lands. But, at +last, in the Belgian Chamber, it was publicly charged that for years +from this private source, which he had said did not exist, Leopold +had been drawing an income of $15,000,000. Since then the truth of +this statement has been denied, but at the time in the Chamber it +was not contradicted. + +To-day, grown insolent by the apathy of the Powers, Leopold finds +disguising himself as a company, as a laborer worthy of his hire, +irksome. He now decrees that as "Sovereign" over the Congo all of +the Congo belongs to him. It is as much his property as is a +pheasant drive, as is a staked-out mining claim, as your hat is your +property. And the twenty millions of people who inhabit it are there +only on his sufferance. They are his "tenants." He permits each +the hut in which he lives, and the garden adjoining that hut, but +his work must be for Leopold, and everything else, animal, mineral, +or vegetable, belongs to Leopold. The natives not only may not sell +ivory or rubber to independent traders, but if it is found in their +possession it is seized; and if you and I bought a tusk of ivory +here it would be taken from us and we could be prosecuted. This is +the law. Other men rule over territories more vast even than the +Congo. The King of England rules an empire upon which the sun never +sets. But he makes no claim to own it. Against the wishes of even +the humblest crofter, the King would not, because he knows he could +not, enter his cottage. Nor can we imagine even Kaiser William going +into the palm-leaf hut of a charcoal-burner in German East Africa +and saying: "This is my palm-leaf hut. This is my charcoal. You must +not sell it to the English, or the French, or the American. If they +buy from you they are 'receivers of stolen goods.' To feed my +soldiers you must drag my river for my fish. For me, in my swamp and +in my jungle, you must toil twenty-four days of each month to +gather my rubber. You must not hunt the elephants, for they are my +elephants. Those tusks that fifty years ago your grandfather, with +his naked spear, cut from an elephant, and which you have tried to +hide from me under the floor of this hut, are my ivory. Because that +elephant, running wild through the jungle fifty years ago, belonged +to me. And you yourself are mine, your time is mine, your labor is +mine, your wife, your children, all are mine. They belong to me." + + [Illustration: "Tenants" of Leopold, Who Claims that the Congo + Belongs to Him, and that These Native People Are There Only as His + Tenants.] + +This, then, is the "open door" as I find it to-day in the Congo. It +is an incredible state of affairs, so insolent, so magnificent in +its impertinence, that it would be humorous, were it not for its +background of misery and suffering, for its hostage houses, its +chain gangs, its _chicottes_, its nameless crimes against the human +body, its baskets of dried hands held up in tribute to the Belgian +blackguard. + + + + +III + +THE CAPITAL OF THE CONGO + + +Leopold's "shop" has its front door at Banana. Its house flag is a +golden star on a blue background. Banana is the port of entry to the +Congo. You have, no doubt, seen many ports of Europe--Antwerp, +Hamburg, Boulogne, Lisbon, Genoa, Marseilles. Banana is the port of +entry to a country as large as Western Europe, and while the imports +and exports of Europe trickle through all these cities, the commerce +of the Congo enters and departs entirely at Banana. You can then +picture the busy harbor, the jungle of masts, the white bridges and +awnings of the steamers. By the fat funnels and the flags you can +distinguish the English tramps, the German merchantmen, the French, +Dutch, Italian, Portuguese traders, the smart "liners" from +Liverpool, even the Arab dhows with bird-wing sails, even the steel, +four-masted schooners out of Boston, U.S.A. You can imagine the +toiling lighters, the slap-dash tenders, the launches with shrieking +whistles. + +Of course, you suspect it is not a bit like that. But were it for +fourteen countries the "open door" to twenty millions of people, +that is how it might look. + +Instead, it is the private entrance to the preserves of a private +individual. So what you really see is, on the one hand, islands of +mangrove bushes, with their roots in the muddy water; on the other, +Banana, a strip of sand and palm trees without a wharf, quay, +landing stage, without a pier to which you could make fast anything +larger than a rowboat. + +In a canoe naked natives paddle alongside to sell fish; a peevish +little man in a sun hat, who, in order to save Leopold three +salaries, holds four port offices, is being rowed to the gangway; on +shore the only other visible inhabitant of Banana, a man with no +nerves, is disturbing the brooding, sweating silence by knocking the +rust off the plates of a stranded mud-scow. Welcome to our city! +Welcome to busy, bustling Banana, the port of entry of the Congo +Free State. + + [Illustration: The Facilities for Landing at Banana, the Port of + Entry to the Congo, Are Limited.] + +In a canoe we were paddled to the back yard of the café of Madame +Samuel, and from that bower of warm beer and sardine tins trudged +through the sun up one side of Banana and down the other. In between +the two paths were the bungalows and gardens of forty white men and +two white women. Many of the gardens, as was most of Banana, were +neglected, untidy, littered with condensed-milk tins. Others, more +carefully tended, were laid out in rigid lines. With all tropical +nature to draw upon, nothing had been imagined. The most ambitious +efforts were designs in whitewashed shells and protruding beer +bottles. We could not help remembering the gardens in Japan, of the +poorest and the most ignorant coolies. Do I seem to find fault with +Banana out of all proportion to its importance? It is because +Banana, the Congo's most advanced post of civilization, is typical +of all that lies beyond. + +From what I had read of the Congo I expected a broad sweep of muddy, +malaria-breeding water, lined by low-lying swamp lands, gloomy, +monotonous, depressing. + +But on the way to Boma and, later, when I travelled on the Upper +Congo, I thought the river more beautiful than any great river I had +ever seen. It was full of wonderful surprises. Sometimes it ran +between palm-covered banks of yellow sand as low as those of the +Mississippi or the Nile; and again, in half an hour, the banks were +rock and as heavily wooded as the mountains of Montana, or as white +and bold as the cliffs of Dover, or we passed between great hills, +covered with what looked like giant oaks, and with their peaks +hidden in the clouds. I found it like no other river, because in +some one particular it was like them all. Between Banana and Boma +the banks first screened us in with the tangled jungle of the +tropics, and then opened up great wind-swept plateaux, leading to +hills that suggested--of all places--England, and, at that, +cultivated England. The contour of the hills, the shape of the +trees, the shade of their green contrasted with the green of the +grass, were like only the cliffs above Plymouth. One did not look +for native kraals and the wild antelope, but for the square, +ivy-topped tower of the village church, the loaf-shaped hayricks, +slow-moving masses of sheep. But this that looks like a pasture +land is only coarse limestone covered with bitter, unnutritious +grass, which benefits neither beast nor man. + +At sunset we anchored in the current three miles from Boma, and at +daybreak we tied up to the iron wharf. As the capital of the +government Boma contains the residence and gardens of the governor, +who is the personal representative of Leopold, both as a shopkeeper +and as a king by divine right. He is a figurehead. The real +administrator is M. Vandamme, the Secrétaire-Général, the +ubiquitous, the mysterious, whose name before you leave Southampton +is in the air, of whom all men, whether they speak in French or +English, speak well. It is from Boma that M. Vandamme sends +collectors of rubber, politely labeled inspecteurs, directeurs, +judges, capitaines, and sous-lieutenants to their posts, and +distributes them over one million square miles. + +Boma is the capital of a country which is as large as six nations of +the European continent. For twenty-five years it has been the +capital. Therefore, the reader already guesses that Boma has only +one wharf, and at that wharf there is no custom-house, no warehouse, +not even a canvas awning under which, during the six months of rainy +season, one might seek shelter for himself and his baggage. + +Our debarkation reminded me of a landing of filibusters. A wharf +forty yards long led from the steamer to the bank. Down this marched +the officers of the army, the clerks, the bookkeepers, and on the +bank and in the street each dumped his boxes, his sword, his +camp-bed, his full-dress helmet. It looked as though a huge eviction +had taken place, as though a retreating army, having gained the +river's edge, were waiting for a transport. It was not as though to +the government the coming of these gentlemen was a complete +surprise; regularly every three weeks at that exact spot a like +number disembark. But in years the State has not found it worth +while to erect for them even an open zinc shed. The cargo invoiced +to the State is given equal consideration. + +"Prisoners of the State," each wearing round his neck a steel ring +from which a chain stretches to the ring of another "prisoner," +carried the cargo to the open street, where lay the luggage of the +officers, and there dropped it. Mingled with steamer chairs, tin +bathtubs, gun-cases, were great crates of sheet iron, green boxes of +gin, bags of Teneriffe potatoes, boilers of an engine. Upon the +scene the sun beat with vicious, cruel persistence. Those officers +who had already served in the Congo dropped their belongings under +the shadow of a solitary tree. Those who for the first time were +seeing the capital of the country they had sworn to serve sank upon +their boxes and, with dismay in their eyes, mopped their red and +dripping brows. + + [Illustration: "Prisoners" of the State in Chains at Matadi.] + +Boma is built at the foot of a hill of red soil. It is a town of +scattered buildings made of wood and sheet-iron plates, sent out in +crates, and held together with screws. To Boma nature has been +considerate. She has contributed many trees, two or three long +avenues of palms, and in the many gardens caused flowers to blossom +and flourish. In the report of the "Commission of Enquiry" which +Leopold was forced to send out in 1904 to investigate the +atrocities, and each member of which, for his four months' work, +received $20,000, Boma is described as possessing "the daintiness +and _chic_ of a European watering-place." + +Boma really is like a seaport of one of the Central American republics. +It has a temporary sufficient-to-the-day-for-to-morrow-we-die air. +It looks like a military post that at any moment might be abandoned. +To remove this impression the State has certain exhibits which seem +to point to a stable and good government. There is a well-conducted +hospital and clean, well-built barracks; for the amusement of the +black soldiers even a theatre, and for the higher officials +attractive bungalows, a bandstand, where twice a week a negro band +plays by ear, and plays exceedingly well. There is even a +lawn-tennis court, where the infrequent visitor to the Congo is +welcomed, and, by the courteous Mr. Vandamme, who plays tennis as +well as he does every thing else, entertained. Boma is the shop +window of Leopold's big store. The good features of Boma are like +those attractive articles one sometimes sees in a shop window, but +which in the shop one fails to find--at least, I did not find them +in the shop. Outside of Boma I looked in vain for a school +conducted by the State, like the one at Boma, such as those the +United States Government gave by the hundred to the Philippines. I +found not one. And I looked for such a hospital as the one I saw at +Boma, such as our government has placed for its employes along, and +at both ends of, the Isthmus of Panama, and, except for the one at +Leopoldville, I saw none. + +In spite of the fact that Boma is a "European watering-place," all +the servants of the State with whom I talked wanted to get away from +it, especially those who already had served in the interior. To +appreciate what Boma lacks one has only to visit the neighboring +seaports on the same coast; the English towns of Sierra Leone and +Calabar, the French town of Libreville in the French Congo, the +German seaport Duala in the Cameroons, but especially Calabar in +Southern Nigeria. In actual existence the new Calabar is eight years +younger than Boma, and in its municipal government, its +street-making, cleaning, and lighting, wharfs, barracks, prisons, +hospitals, it is a hundred years in advance. Boma is not a capital; +it is the distributing factory for a huge trading concern, and a +particularly selfish one. There is, as I have said, only one wharf, +and at that wharf, without paying the State, only State boats may +discharge cargo, so the English, Dutch, and German boats are forced +to "tie up" along the river front. There the grass is eight feet +high and breeds mosquitoes and malaria, and conceals the wary +crocodile. At night, from the deck of the steamer, all one can see +of this capital is a fringe of this high grass in the light from the +air ports, and on shore three gas-lamps. No cafés are open, no +sailors carouse, no lighted window suggests that some one is giving +a dinner, that some one is playing bridge. Darkness, gloom, silence +mark this "European watering-place." + +"You ask me," demanded a Belgian lieutenant one night as we stood +together by the rail, "whether I like better the bush, where there +is no white man in a hundred miles, or to be stationed at Boma?" + +He threw out his hands at the gas-lamps, rapidly he pointed at each +of them in turn. + +"Voilà, Boma!" he said. + +From Boma we steamed six hours farther up the river to Matadi. On +the way we stopped at Noqui, the home of Portuguese traders on the +Portuguese bank, which, as one goes up-stream, lies to starboard. +Here the current runs at from four to five miles an hour, and has so +sharply cut away the bank that we are able to run as near to it with +the stern of our big ship as though she were a canoe. To one used +more to ocean than to Congo traffic it was somewhat bewildering to +see the five-thousand-ton steamer make fast to a tree, a sand-bank +looming up three fathoms off her quarter, and the blades of her +propeller, as though they were the knives of a lawn-mower, cutting +the eel-grass. + +At Matadi the Congo makes one of her lightning changes. Her banks, +which have been low and woody, with, on the Portuguese side, +glimpses of boundless plateaux, become towering hills of rock. At +Matadi the cataracts and rapids begin, and for two hundred miles +continue to Stanley Pool, which is the beginning of the Upper Congo. +Leopoldville is situated on Stanley Pool, just to the right of where +the rapids start their race to the south. With Leopoldville above +and Boma below, still nearer the mouth of the river, Matadi makes a +centre link in the chain of the three important towns of the Lower +Congo. + +When Henry M. Stanley was halted by the cataracts and forced to +leave the river he disembarked his expedition on the bank opposite +Matadi, and a mile farther up-stream. It was from this point he +dragged and hauled his boats, until he again reached smooth water at +Stanley Pool. The wagons on which he carried the boats still can be +seen lying on the bank, broken and rusty. Like the sight of old gun +carriages and dismantled cannon, they give one a distinct thrill. +Now, on the bank opposite from where they lie, the railroad runs +from Matadi to Leopoldville. + +The Congo forces upon one a great admiration for Stanley. Unless +civilization utterly alters it, it must always be a monument to his +courage, and as you travel farther and see the difficulties placed +in his way, your admiration increases. There are men here who make +little of what Stanley accomplished; but they are men who seldom +leave their own compound, and, who, when they do go up the river, +travel at ease, not in a canoe, or on foot through the jungle, but +in the smoking-room of the steamer and in a first-class railroad +carriage. That they are able so to travel is due to the man they +would belittle. The nickname given to Stanley by the natives is +to-day the nickname of the government. Matadi means rock. When +Stanley reached the town of Matadi, which is surrounded entirely by +rock, he began with dynamite to blast roads for his caravan. The +natives called him Bula Matadi, the Breaker of Rocks, and, as in +those days he was the Government, the Law, and the Prophets, Bula +Matadi, who then was the white man who governed, now signifies the +white man's government. But it is a very different government, and a +very different white man. With the natives the word is universal. +They say "Bula Matadi wood post." "Not traders' chop, Bula Matadi's +chop." "Him no missionary steamer, him Bula Matadi steamer." + +The town of Matadi is of importance as the place where, owing to the +rapids, passengers and cargoes are reshipped on the railroad to the +_haut Congo_. It is a railroad terminus only, and it looks it. The +railroad station and store-houses are close to the river bank, and, +spread over several acres of cinders, are the railroad yard and +machine shops. Above those buildings of hot corrugated zinc and the +black soil rises a great rock. It is not so large as Gibraltar, or +so high as the Flatiron Building, but it is a little more steep than +either. Three narrow streets lead to its top. They are of flat +stones, with cement gutters. The stones radiate the heat of stove +lids. They are worn to a mirror-like smoothness, and from their +surface the sun strikes between your eyes, at the pit of your +stomach, and the soles of your mosquito boots. The three streets +lead to a parade ground no larger than and as bare as a brickyard. +It is surrounded by the buildings of Bula Matadi, the post-office, +the custom-house, the barracks, and the Café Franco-Belge. It has a +tableland fifty yards wide of yellow clay so beaten by thousands of +naked feet, so baked by the heat, that it is as hard as a brass +shield. Other tablelands may be higher, but this is the one nearest +the sun. You cross it wearily, in short rushes, with your heart in +your throat, and seeking shade, as a man crossing the zone of fire +seeks cover from the bullets. When you reach the cool, dirty +custom-house, with walls two feet thick, you congratulate yourself +on your escape; you look back into the blaze of the flaming plaza +and wonder if you have the courage to return. + + [Illustration: Bush Boys in the Plaza at Matadi Seeking Shade.] + +At the custom-house I paid duty on articles I could not possibly +have bought anywhere in the Congo, as, for instance, a tent and a +folding-bed, and for a license to carry arms. A young man with a +hammer and tiny branding irons beat little stars and the number of +my license to _porter d'armes_ on the stock of each weapon. Without +permission of Bula Matadi on leaving the Congo, one can not sell his +guns, or give them away. This is a precaution to prevent weapons +falling into the hands of the native. For some reason a native with +a gun alarms Bula Matadi. Just on the other bank of the river the +French, who do not seem to fear the black brother, sell him +flint-lock rifles, as many as his heart desires. + +On the steamer there was a mild young missionary coming out, for the +first time, to whom some unobserving friend had given a fox-terrier. +The young man did not care for the dog. He had never owned a dog, +and did not know what to do with this one. Her name was "Fanny," +and only by the efforts of all on board did she reach the Congo +alive. There was no one, from the butcher to the captain, including +the passengers, who had not shielded Fanny from the cold, and later +from the sun, fed her, bathed her, forced medicine down her throat, +and raced her up and down the spar deck. Consequently we all knew +Fanny, and it was a great shock when from the custom-house I saw her +running around the blazing parade ground, her eyes filled with fear +and "lost dog" written all over her, from her drooping tongue to her +drooping tail. Captain Burton and I called "Fanny," and, not seeking +suicide for ourselves, sent half a dozen black boys to catch her. +But Fanny never liked her black uncles; on the steamer the Kroo boys +learned to give her the length of her chain, and so we were forced +to plunge to her rescue into the valley of heat. Perhaps she thought +we were again going to lock her up on the steamer, or perhaps that +it was a friendly game, for she ran from us as fast as from the +black boys. In Matadi no one ever had crossed the parade ground +except at a funeral march, and the spectacle of two large white +men playing tag with a small fox-terrier attracted an immense +audience. The officials and clerks left work and peered between the +iron-barred windows, the "prisoners" in chains ceased breaking rock +and stared dumbly from the barracks, the black "sentries" shrieked +and gesticulated, the naked bush boys, in from a long caravan +journey, rose from the side of their burdens and commented upon our +manoeuvres in gloomy, guttural tones. I suspect they thought we +wanted Fanny for "chop." Finally Fanny ran into the legs of a German +trader, who grabbed her by the neck and held her up to us. + +"You want him? Hey?" he shouted. + +"Ay, man," gasped Burton, now quite purple, "did you think we were +trying to amuse the dog?" + +I made a leash of my belt, and the captain returned to the ship +dragging his prisoner after him. An hour later I met the youthful +missionary leading Fanny by a rope. + +"I must tell you about Fanny," he cried. "After I took her to the +Mission I forgot to tie her up--as I suppose I should have done--and +she ran away. But, would you believe it, she found her way straight +back to the ship. Was it not intelligent of her?" + +I was too far gone with apoplexy, heat prostration, and sunstroke to +make any answer, at least one that I could make to a missionary. + +The next morning Fanny, the young missionary, and I left for +Leopoldville on the railroad. It is a narrow-gauge railroad built +near Matadi through the solid rock and later twisting and turning so +often that at many places one can see the track on three different +levels. It is not a State road, but was built and is owned by a +Dutch company, and, except that it charges exorbitant rates and does +not keep its carriages clean, it is well run, and the road-bed is +excellent. But it runs a passenger train only three times a week, +and though the distance is so short, and though the train starts at +6:30 in the morning, it does not get you to Leopoldville the same +day. Instead, you must rest over night at Thysville and start at +seven the next morning. That afternoon at three you reach +Leopoldville. For the two hundred and fifty miles the fare is two +hundred francs, and one is limited to sixty pounds of luggage. That +was the weight allowed by the Japanese to each war correspondent, +and as they gave us six months in Tokio in which to do nothing else +but weigh our equipment, I left Matadi without a penalty. Had my +luggage exceeded the limit, for each extra pound I would have had to +pay the company ten cents. To the Belgian officers and agents who go +for three years to serve the State in the bush the regulation is +especially harsh, and in a company so rich, particularly mean. To +many a poor officer, and on the pay they receive there are no rich +ones, the tax is prohibitive. It forces them to leave behind +medicines, clothing, photographic supplies, all ammunition, which +means no chance of helping out with duck and pigeon the daily menu +of goat and tinned sausages, and, what is the greatest hardship, all +books. This regulation, which the State permitted to the +concessionaires of the railroad, sends the agents of the State into +the wilderness physically and mentally unequipped, and it is no +wonder the weaker brothers go mad, and act accordingly. + +My black boys travelled second-class, which means an open car with +narrow seats very close together and a wooden roof. On these cars +passengers are allowed twenty pounds of luggage and permitted to +collect two hundred and fifty miles of heat and dust. To a black boy +twenty pounds is little enough, for he travels with much more +baggage than an average "blanc." I am not speaking of the Congo boy. +All the possessions the State leaves him he could carry in his +pockets, and he has no pockets. But wherever he goes the Kroo boy, +Mendi boy, or Sierra Leone boy carries all his belongings with him +in a tin trunk painted pink, green, or yellow. He is never separated +from his "box," and the recognized uniform of a Kroo boy at work, is +his breechcloth, and hanging from a ribbon around his knee, the key +to his box. If a boy has no box he generally carries three keys. + +In the first-class car were three French officers en route to +Brazzaville, the capital of the French Congo, and a dog, a sad +mongrel, very dirty, very hungry. On each side of the tiny toy car +were six revolving-chairs, so the four men, not to speak of the dog, +quite filled it. And to our own bulk each added hand-bags, cases of +beer, helmets, gun-cases, cameras, water-bottles, and, as the road +does not supply food of any kind, his chop-box. A chop-box is +anything that holds food, and for food of every kind, for the hours +of feeding, and the verb "to feed," on the West Coast, the only +word, the "lazy" word, is "chop." + +The absent-minded young missionary, with Fanny jammed between his +ankles, and looking out miserably upon the world, and two other +young missionaries, travelled second-class. + +They were even more crowded together than were we, but not so much +with luggage as with humanity. But as a protest against the high +charges of the railroad the missionaries always travel in the open +car. These three young men were for the first time out of England, +and in any fashion were glad to start on their long journey up the +Congo to Bolobo. To them whatever happened was a joke. It was a joke +even when the colored "wife" of one of the French officers used the +broad shoulders of one of them as a pillow and slept sweetly. She +was a large, good-natured, good-looking mulatto, and at the frequent +stations the French officer ran back to her with "white man's chop," +a tin of sausages, a pineapple, a bottle of beer. She drank the +beer from the bottle, and with religious tolerance offered it to the +Baptists. They assured her without the least regret that they were +teetotalers. To the other blacks in the open car the sight of a +white man waiting on one of their own people was a thrilling +spectacle. They regarded the woman who could command such services +with respect. It would be interesting to know what they thought of +the white man. At each station the open car disgorged its occupants +to fill with water the beer bottle each carried, and to buy from the +natives kwango, the black man's bread, a flaky, sticky flour that +tastes like boiled chestnuts; and pineapples at a franc for ten. And +such pineapples! Not hard and rubber-like, as we know them at home, +but delicious, juicy, melting in the mouth like hothouse grapes, +and, also, after each mouthful, making a complete bath necessary. +One of the French officers had a lump of ice which he broke into +pieces and divided with the others. They saluted magnificently many +times, and as each drowned the morsel in his tin cup of beer, one of +them cried with perfect simplicity: "C'est Paris!" This reminded me +that the ship's steward had placed much ice in my chop basket, and I +carried some of it to another car in which were five of the White +Sisters. For nineteen days I had been with them on the steamer, but +they had spoken to no one, and I was doubtful how they would accept +my offering. But the Mother Superior gave permission, and they took +the ice through the car window, their white hoods bristling with the +excitement of the adventure. They were on their way to a post still +two months' journey up the river, nearly to Lake Tanganyika, and for +three years or, possibly, until they died, that was the last ice +they would see. + +At Bongolo station the division superintendent came in the car and +everybody offered him refreshment, and in return he told us, in the +hope of interesting us, of a washout, and then casually mentioned +that an hour before an elephant had blocked the track. It seemed so +much too good to be true that I may have expressed some doubt, for +he said: "Why, of course and certainly. Already this morning one was +at Sariski Station and another at Sipeto." And instead of looking +out of the window I had been reading an American magazine, filched +from the smoking-room, which was one year old! + +At Thysville the railroad may have opened a hotel, but when I was +there to hunt for a night's shelter it turned you out bag and +baggage. The French officers decided to risk a Portuguese trading +store known as the "Ideal Hotel," and the missionaries very kindly +gave me the freedom of their Rest House. It is kept open for +those of the Mission who pass between the Upper and Lower Congo. +At the station the young missionaries were met by two older +missionaries--Mr. Weekes, who furnished the "Commission of Enquiry" +with much evidence, which they would not, or were not allowed to, +print, and Mr. Jennings. With them were twenty "boys" from the +Mission and, with each of them carrying a piece of our baggage on +his head, we climbed the hill, and I was given a clean, comfortable, +completely appointed bedroom. Our combined chop we turned over to a +black brother. He is the custodian of the Rest House and an +excellent cook. While he was preparing it my boys spread out my +folding rubber tub. Had I closed the door I should have smothered, +so, in the presence of twenty interested black Baptists, I took an +embarrassing but one of the most necessary baths I can remember. + +There still was a piece of the ice remaining, and as the interest in +the bathtub had begun to drag I handed it to one of my audience. He +yelled as though I had thrust into his hand a drop of vitriol, and, +leaping in the air, threw the ice on the floor and dared any one to +touch it. From the "personal" boys who had travelled to Matadi the +Mission boys had heard of ice. But none had ever seen it. They +approached it as we would a rattlesnake. Each touched it and then +sprang away. Finally one, his eyes starting from his head, +cautiously stroked the inoffensive brick and then licked his +fingers. The effect was instantaneous. He assured the others it was +"good chop," and each of them sat hunched about it on his heels, +stroking it, and licking his fingers, and then with delighted +thrills rubbing them over his naked body. The little block of ice +that at Liverpool was only a "quart of water" had assumed the value +of a diamond. + +Dinner was enlivened by an incident. Mr. Weekes, with orders simply +to "fry these," had given to the assistant of the cook two tins of +sausages. The small _chef_ presented them to us in the pan in which +he had cooked them, but he had obeyed instructions to the letter and +had fried the tins unopened. + +After dinner we sat until late, while the older men told the young +missionaries of atrocities of which, in the twenty years and within +the last three years, they had been witnesses. Already in Mr. +Morel's books I had read their testimony, but hearing from the men +themselves the tales of outrage and cruelty gave them a fresh and +more intimate value, and sent me to bed hot and sick with +indignation. But, nevertheless, the night I slept at Thysville was +the only cool one I knew in the Congo. It was as cool as is a night +in autumn at home. Thysville, between the Upper and the Lower Congo, +with its fresh mountain air, is an obvious site for a hospital for +the servants of the State. To the Congo it should be what Simla is +to the sick men of India; but the State is not running hospitals. It +is in the rubber business. + +All steamers for the Upper Congo and her great tributaries, whether +they belong to the State or the Missions, start from Leopoldville. +There they fit out for voyages, some of which last three and four +months. So it is a place of importance, but, like Boma, it looks as +though the people who yesterday built it meant to-morrow to move +out. The river-front is one long dump-heap. It is a grave-yard for +rusty boilers, deck-plates, chains, fire-bars. The interior of the +principal storehouse for ships' supplies, directly in front of the +office of the captain of the port, looks like a junk-shop for old +iron and newspapers. I should have enjoyed taking the captain of the +port by the neck and showing him the water-front and marine shops at +Calabar; the wharfs and quays of stone, the open places spread with +gravel, the whitewashed cement gutters, the spare parts of +machinery, greased and labeled in their proper shelves, even the +condemned scrap-iron in orderly piles; the whole yard as trim as a +battleship. + +On the river-front at Leopoldville a grossly fat man, collarless, +coatless, purple-faced, perspiring, was rushing up and down. He was +the captain of the port. Black women had assembled to greet +returning black soldiers, and the captain was calling upon the black +sentries to drive them away. The sentries, yelling, fell upon the +women with their six-foot staves and beat them over the head and +bare shoulders, and as they fled, screaming, the captain of the port +danced in the sun shaking his fists after them and raging violently. +Next morning I was told he had tried to calm his nerves with +absinthe, which is not particularly good for nerves, and was +exceedingly unwell. I was sorry for him. The picture of discipline +afforded by the glazed-eyed official, reeling and cursing in the +open street, had been illuminating. + +Although at Leopoldville the State has failed to build wharfs, the +esthetic features of the town have not been neglected, and there is +a pretty plaza called Stanley Park. In the centre of this plaza is a +pillar with, at its base, a bust of Leopold, and on the top of the +pillar a plaster-of-Paris lady, nude, and, not unlike the +Bacchante of MacMonnies. Not so much from the likeness as from +history, I deduced that the lady must be Cléo de Mérode. But whether +the monument is erected to her or to Leopold, or to both of them, I +do not know. + + [Illustration: The Monument in Stanley Park, Erected, not to + Stanley, but to Leopold.] + +I left Leopoldville in the _Deliverance_. Some of the State boats +that make the long trip to Stanleyville are very large ships. They +have plenty of deck room and many cabins. With their flat, raft-like +hull, their paddle-wheel astern, and the covered sun deck, they +resemble gigantic house-boats. Of one of these boats the +_Deliverance_ was only one-third the size, but I took passage on her +because she would give me a chance to see not only something of the +Congo, but also one of its great tributaries, the less travelled +Kasai. The _Deliverance_ was about sixty-five feet over all and drew +three feet of water. She was built like a mud-scow, with a deck of +iron plates. Amidships, on this deck, was a tiny cabin with berths +for two passengers and standing room for one. The furnaces and +boiler were forward, banked by piles of wood. All the river boats +burn only wood. Her engines were in the stern. These engines and the +driving-rod to the paddle-wheel were uncovered. This gives the +_Deliverance_ the look of a large automobile without a tonneau. You +were constantly wondering what had gone wrong with the carbureter, +and if it rained what would happen to her engines. Supported on iron +posts was an upper deck, on which, forward, stood the captain's box +of a cabin and directly in front of it the steering-wheel. The +telegraph, which signalled to the openwork engine below, and a +dining table as small as a chess-board, completely filled the +"bridge." When we sat at table the captain's boy could only just +squeeze himself between us and the rail. It was like dining in a +private box. And certainly no theatre ever offered such scenery, nor +did any menagerie ever present so many strange animals. + +We were four white men: Captain Jensen, his engineer, and the other +passenger, Captain Anfossi, a young Italian. Before he reached his +post he had to travel one month on the _Deliverance_ and for another +month walk through the jungle. He was the most cheerful and amusing +companion, and had he been returning after three years of exile to +his home he could not have been more brimful of spirits. Captain +Jensen was a Dane (almost every river captain is a Swede or a Dane) +and talked a little English, a little French, and a little Bangala. +The mechanician was a Finn and talked the native Bangala, and +Anfossi spoke French. After chop, when we were all assembled on the +upper deck, there would be the most extraordinary talks in four +languages, or we would appoint one man to act as a clearing-house, +and he would translate for the others. + +On the lower deck we carried twenty "wood boys," whose duty was to +cut wood for the furnace, and about thirty black passengers. They +were chiefly soldiers, who had finished their period of service for +the State, with their wives and children. They were crowded on the +top of the hatches into a space fifteen by fifteen feet between our +cabin door and the furnace. Around the combings of the hatches, and +where the scuppers would have been had the _Deliverance_ had +scuppers, the river raced over the deck to a depth of four or five +inches. When the passengers wanted to wash their few clothes or +themselves they carried on their ablutions and laundry work where +they happened to be sitting. But for Anfossi and myself to go from +our cabin to the iron ladder of the bridge it was necessary to wade +both in the water and to make stepping stones of the passengers. I +do not mean that we merely stepped over an occasional arm or leg. I +mean we walked on them. You have seen a football player, in a hurry +to make a touchdown, hurdle without prejudice both friends and foes. +Our progress was like this. But by practice we became so expert that +without even awakening them we could spring lightly from the plump +stomach of a black baby to its mother's shoulder, from there leap to +the father's ribs, and rebound upon the rungs of the ladder. + + [Illustration: The _Deliverance_.] + +The river marched to the sea at the rate of four to five miles an +hour. The _Deliverance_ could make about nine knots an hour, so we +travelled at the average rate of five miles; but for the greater +part of each day we were tied to a bank while the boys went ashore +and cut enough wood to carry us farther. And we never travelled at +night. Owing to the changing currents, before the sun set we ran +into shore and made fast to a tree. I explained how in America the +river boats used search-lights, and was told that on one boat the +State had experimented with a searchlight, but that particular +searchlight having got out of order the idea of night travelling was +condemned. + +Ours was a most lazy progress, but one with the most beautiful +surroundings and filled with entertainment. From our private box we +looked out upon the most wonderful of panoramas. Sometimes we were +closely hemmed in by mountains of light-green grass, except where, +in the hollows, streams tumbled in tiny waterfalls between gigantic +trees hung with strange flowering vines and orchids. Or we would +push into great lakes of swirling brown water, dotted with flat +islands overgrown with reed grass higher than the head of a man. +Again the water turned blue and the trees on the banks grew into +forests with the look of cultivated, well-cared-for parks, but with +no sign of man, not even a mud hut or a canoe; only the strangest of +birds and the great river beasts. Sometimes the sky was overcast and +gray, the warm rain shut us in like a fog, and the clouds hid the +peaks of the hills, or there would come a swift black tornado and +the rain beat into our private box, and each would sit crouched in +his rain coat, while the engineer smothered his driving-rods in palm +oil, and the great drops drummed down upon the awning and drowned +the fire in our pipes. After these storms, as though it were being +pushed up from below, the river seemed to rise in the centre, to +become convex. By some optical illusion, it seemed to fall away on +either hand to the depth of three or four feet. + +But as a rule we had a brilliant, gorgeous sunshine that made the +eddying waters flash and sparkle, and caused the banks of sand to +glare like whitewashed walls, and turn the sharp, hard fronds of the +palms into glittering sword-blades. The movement of the boat +tempered the heat, and in lazy content we sat in our lookout box and +smiled upon the world. Except for the throb of the engine and the +slow splash, splash, splash of the wheel there was no sound. We +might have been adrift in the heart of a great ocean. So complete +was the silence, so few were the sounds of man's presence, that at +times one almost thought that ours was the first boat to disturb the +Congo. + +Although we were travelling by boat, we spent as much time on land +as on the water. Because the _Deliverance_ burnt wood and, like an +invading army, "lived on the country," she was always stopping to +lay in a supply. That gave Anfossi and myself a chance to visit the +native villages or to hunt in the forest. + +To feed her steamers the State has established along the river-bank +posts for wood, and in theory at these places there always is a +sufficient supply of wood to carry a steamer to the next post. But +our experience was either that another steamer had just taken all +the wood or that the boys had decided to work no more and had hidden +themselves in the bush. The State posts were "clearings," less than +one hundred yards square, cut out of the jungle. Sometimes only +black men were in charge, but as a rule the _chef de poste_ was a +lonely, fever-ridden white, whose only interest in our arrival was +his hope that we might spare him quinine. I think we gave away as +many grains of quinine as we received logs of wood. Empty-handed we +would turn from the wood post and steam a mile or so farther up the +river, where we would run into a bank, and a boy with a steel hawser +would leap overboard and tie up the boat to the roots of a tree. +Then all the boys would disappear into the jungle and attack the +primeval forest. Each was supplied with a machete and was expected +to furnish a _bras_ of wood. A _bras_ is a number of sticks about as +long and as thick as your arm, placed in a pile about three feet +high and about three feet wide. To fix this measure the head boy +drove poles into the bank three feet apart, and from pole to pole at +the same distance from the ground stretched a strip of bark. When +each boy had filled one of these openings all the wood was carried +on board, and we would unhitch the _Deliverance_, and she would +proceed to burn up the fuel we had just collected. It took the +twenty boys about four hours to cut the wood, and the _Deliverance_ +the same amount of time to burn it. It was distinctly a +hand-to-mouth existence. As I have pointed out, when it is too dark +to see the currents, the Congo captains never attempt to travel. So +each night at sunset Captain Jensen ran into the bank, and as soon +as the plank was out all the black passengers and the crew passed +down it and spent the night on shore. In five minutes the women +would have the fires lighted and the men would be cutting grass +for bedding and running up little shelters of palm boughs and +hanging up linen strips that were both tents and mosquito nets. + + [Illustration: The Native Wife of a _Chef de Poste_.] + +In the moonlight the natives with their camp-fires and torches made +most wonderful pictures. Sometimes for their sleeping place the +captain would select a glade in the jungle, or where a stream had +cut a little opening in the forest, or a sandy island, with tall +rushes on either side and the hot African moon shining on the white +sand and turning the palms to silver, or they would pitch camp in a +buffalo wallow, where the grass and mud had been trampled into a +clay floor by the hoofs of hundreds of wild animals. But the fact +that they were to sleep where at sunrise and at sunset came +buffaloes, elephants, and panthers, disturbed the women not at all, +and as they bent, laughing, over the iron pots, the firelight shone +on their bare shoulders and was reflected from their white teeth and +rolling eyes and brazen bangles. + +Until late in the night the goats would bleat, babies cry, and the +"boys" and "mammies" talked, sang, quarrelled, beat tom-toms, and +squeezed mournful groans out of the accordion of civilization. One +would have thought we had anchored off a busy village rather than at +a place where, before that night, the inhabitants had been only the +beasts of the jungle and the river. + + + + +IV + +AMERICANS IN THE CONGO + + +In trying to sum up what I found in the Congo Free State, I think +what one fails to find there is of the greatest significance. To +tell what the place is like, you must tell what it lacks. One must +write of the Congo always in the negative. It is as though you +asked: "What sort of a house is this one Jones has built?" and were +answered: "Well, it hasn't any roof, and it hasn't any cellar, and +it has no windows, floors, or chimneys. It's that kind of a house." + +When first I arrived in the Congo the time I could spend there +seemed hopelessly inadequate. After I'd been there a month, it +seemed to me that in a very few days any one could obtain a +painfully correct idea of the place, and of the way it is +administered. If an orchestra starts on an piece of music with all +the instruments out of tune, it need not play through the entire +number for you to know that the instruments are out of tune. + +The charges brought against Leopold II, as King of the Congo, are +three: + +(_a_) That he has made slaves of the twenty million blacks he +promised to protect. + +(_b_) That, in spite of his promise to keep the Congo open to trade, +he has closed it to all nations. + +(_c_) That the revenues of the country and all of its trade he has +retained for himself. + +Any one who visits the Congo and remains only two weeks will be +convinced that of these charges Leopold is guilty. In that time he +will not see atrocities, but he will see that the natives are +slaves, that no foreigner can trade with them, that in the interest +of Leopold alone the country is milked. + +He will see that the government of Leopold is not a government. It +preserves the perquisites and outward signs of government. It coins +money, issues stamps, collects taxes. But it assumes none of the +responsibilities of government. The Congo Free State is only a great +trading house. And in it Leopold is the only wholesale and retail +trader. He gives a bar of soap for rubber, and makes a "turn-over" +of a cup of salt for ivory. He is not a monarch. He is a shopkeeper. + +And were the country not so rich in rubber and ivory, were the +natives not sweated so severely, he also would be a bankrupt +shopkeeper. For the Congo is not only one vast trading post, but +also it is a trading post badly managed. Even in the republics of +Central America where the government changes so frequently, and +where each new president is trying to make hay while he can, there +is better administration, more is done for the people, the rights of +other nations are better respected. + +Were the Congo properly managed, it would be one of the richest +territories on the surface of the earth. As it is, through ignorance +and cupidity, it is being despoiled and its people are the most +wretched of human beings. In the White Book containing the reports +of British vice-consuls on conditions in the Congo from April of +last year to January of this year, Mr. Mitchell tells how the +enslavement of the people still continues, how "they" (the +conscripts, as they are called) "are hunted in the forest by +soldiers, and brought in chained by the neck like criminals." They +then, though conscripted to serve in the army, are set to manual +labor. They are slaves. The difference between the slavery under +Leopold and the slavery under the Arab raiders is that the Arab was +the better and kinder master. He took "prisoners" just as Leopold +seizes "conscripts," but he had too much foresight to destroy whole +villages, to carry off all the black man's live stock, and to uproot +his vegetable gardens. He purposed to return. And he did not wish to +so terrify the blacks that to escape from him they would penetrate +farther into the jungle. His motive was purely selfish, but his +methods, compared with those of Leopold, were almost considerate. +The work the State to-day requires of the blacks is so oppressive +that they have no time, no heart, to labor for themselves. + +In every other colony--French, English, German--in the native +villages I saw vegetable gardens, goats, and chickens, large, +comfortable, three-room huts, fences, and, especially in the German +settlement of the Cameroons at Duala, many flower gardens. In Bell +Town at Duala I walked for miles through streets lined with such +huts and gardens, and saw whole families, the very old as well as +the very young, sitting contentedly in the shade of their trees, or +at work in their gardens. In the Congo native villages I saw but one +old person, of chickens or goats that were not to be given to the +government as taxes I saw none, and the vegetable gardens, when +there were any such, were cultivated for the benefit of the _chef de +poste_, and the huts were small, temporary, and filthy. The dogs in +the kennels on my farm are better housed, better fed, and much +better cared for, whether ill or well, than are the twenty millions +of blacks along the Congo River. And that these human beings are so +ill-treated is due absolutely to the cupidity of one man, and to the +apathy of the rest of the world. And it is due as much to the apathy +and indifference of whoever may read this as to the silence of Elihu +Root or Sir Edward Grey. No one can shirk his responsibility by +sneering, "Am I my brother's keeper?" The Government of the United +States and the thirteen other countries have promised to protect +these people, to care for their "material and moral welfare," and +that promise is morally binding upon the people of those countries. +How much Leopold cares for the material welfare of the natives is +illustrated by the prices he pays the "boys" who worked on the +government steamer in which I went up the Kasai. They were bound on +a three months' voyage, and for each month's work on this trip they +were given in payment their rice and eighty cents. That is, at the +end of the trip they received what in our money would be equivalent +to two dollars and forty cents. And that they did not receive in +money, but in "trade goods," which are worth about ten per cent less +than their money value. So that of the two dollars and eighty cents +that is due them, these black boys, who for three months sweated in +the dark jungle cutting wood, are robbed by this King of twenty-four +cents. One would dislike to grow rich at that price. + + [Illustration: English Missionaries, and Some of Their Charges.] + +In the French Congo I asked the traders at Libreville what they paid +their boys for cutting mahogany. I found the price was four francs a +day without "chop," or three and a half francs with "chop." That +is, on one side of the river the French pay in cash for one day's +work what Leopold pays in trade goods for the work of a month. As a +result the natives run away to the French side, and often, I might +almost say invariably, when at the _poste de bois_ on the Congo side +we would find two cords of wood, on the other bank at the post for +the French boats we would count two hundred and fifty cords of wood. +I took photographs of the native villages in all the colonies, in +order to show how they compared--of the French and Belgian wood +posts, the one well stocked and with the boys lying about asleep or +playing musical instruments, or alert to trade and barter, and on +the Belgian side no wood, and the unhappy white man alone, and +generally shivering with fever. Had the photographs only developed +properly they would have shown much more convincingly than one can +write how utterly miserable is the condition of the Congo negro. And +the condition of the white man at the wood posts is only a little +better. We found one man absolutely without supplies. He was only +twenty-four hours distant from Leopoldville, but no supplies had +been sent him. He was ill with fever, and he could eat nothing but +milk. Captain Jensen had six cans of condensed milk, which the State +calculated should suffice for him and his passengers for three +months. He turned the lot over to the sick man. + +We found another white man at the first wood post on the Kasai just +above where it meets the Congo. He was in bed and dangerously ill +with enteric fever. He had telegraphed the State at Leopoldville and +a box of medicines had been sent to him; but the State doctors had +forgotten to enclose any directions for their use. We were as +ignorant of medicines as the man himself, and, as it was impossible +to move him, we were forced to leave him lying in his cot with the +row of bottles and tiny boxes, that might have given him life, +unopened at his elbow. It was ten days before the next boat would +touch at his post. I do not know that it reached him in time. One +could tell dozens of such stories of cruelty to natives and of +injustice and neglect to the white agents. + +The fact that Leopold has granted to American syndicates control +over two great territories in the Congo may bring about a better +state of affairs, and, in any event, it may arouse public interest +in this country. It certainly should be of interest to Americans +that some of the most prominent of their countrymen have gone into +close partnership with a speculator as unscrupulous and as notorious +as is Leopold, and that they are to exploit a country which as yet +has been developed only by the help of slavery, with all its +attendant evils of cruelty and torture. + +That Leopold has no right to give these concessions is a matter +which chiefly concerns the men who are to pay for them, but it is an +interesting fact. + +The Act of Berlin expressly states: _"No Power which exercises, or +shall exercise, sovereign rights in the above-mentioned regions, +shall be allowed to grant therein a monopoly or favor of any kind in +matters of trade."_ + +Leopold is only a steward placed by the Powers over the Congo. He is +a janitor. And he has no more authority to give even a foot of +territory to Belgians, Americans, or Chinamen than the janitor of an +apartment house has authority to fill the rooms with his wife's +relations or sell the coal in the basement. + +The charge that the present concessionaires have no title that any +independent trader or miner need respect is one that is sure to be +brought up when the Powers throw Leopold out, and begin to clean +house. The concessionaires take a sporting chance that Leopold will +not be thrown out. It should be remembered that it is to his and to +their advantage to see that he is not. + +In November of 1906, Leopold gave the International Forestry and +Mining Company of the Congo mining rights in territories adjoining +his private park, the _Domaine de la Couronne_, and to the American +Congo Company he granted the right to work rubber along the Congo +River to where it joins the Kasai. This latter is a territory of +four thousand square miles. The company also has the option within +the next eleven years of buying land in any part of a district which +is nearly one-half of the entire Congo. Of the Forestry and Mining +Company one-half of the profits go to Leopold, one-fourth to +Belgians, and the remaining fourth to the Americans. Of the profits +of the American Congo Company, Leopold is entitled to one-half and +the Americans to the other half. This company was one originally +organized to exploit a new method of manufacturing crude rubber from +the plant. The company was taken over by Thomas F. Ryan and his +associates. Back of both companies are the Guggenheims, who are to +perform the actual work in the mines and in the rubber plantation. +Early in March a large number of miners and engineers were selected +by John Hays Hammond, the chief engineer of the Guggenheim +Exploration Companies, and A. Chester Beatty, and were sent to +explore the territory granted in the mining concession. Another +force of experts are soon to follow. The legal representative of the +syndicates has stated that in the Congo they intend to move "on +commercial lines." By that we take it they mean they will give the +native a proper price for his labor; and instead of offering +"bonuses" and "commissions" to their white employees will pay them +living wages. The exact terms of the concessions are wrapped in +mystery. Some say the territories ceded to the concessionaires are +to be governed by them, policed by them, and that within the +boundaries of these concessions the Americans are to have absolute +control. If this be so the syndicates are entering upon an +experiment which for Americans is almost without precedent. They +will be virtually what in England is called a chartered company, +with the difference that the Englishmen receive their charter from +their own government, while the charter under which the Americans +will act will be granted by a foreign Power, and for what they may +do in the Congo their own government could not hold them +responsible. They are answerable only to the Power that issued the +charter; and that Power is the just, the humane, the merciful +Leopold. + +The history of the early days of chartered companies in Africa, +notoriously those of the Congo, Northern Nigeria, Rhodesia, and +German Central Africa does not make pleasant reading. But until the +Americans in the Congo have made this experiment, it would be most +unfair (except that the company they choose to keep leaves them open +to suspicion) not to give them the benefit of the doubt. One can at +least say for them that they seem to be absolutely ignorant of the +difficulties that lie before them. At least that is true of all of +them to whom I have talked. + +The attorney of the Rubber Company when interviewed by a +representative of a New York paper is reported to have said: "We +have purchased a privilege from a Sovereign State and propose to +operate it along purely commercial lines. With King Leopold's +management of Congo affairs in the past, or, with _what he may do in +an administrative way in the future, we have absolutely nothing to +do_." The italics are mine. + +When asked: "Under your concessions are you given similar powers +over the native blacks as are enjoyed by other concessionaires?" the +answer of the attorney, as reported, was: "The problem of labor is +not mentioned in the concession agreement, neither is the question +of local administration. We are left to solve the labor problem in +our own way, on a purely commercial basis, and with the question of +government we have absolutely nothing whatever to do. The labor +problem will not be formidable. Our mills are simple affairs. One +man can manage them, and the question of the labor on the rubber +concession is reduced to the minimum." This answer of the learned +attorney shows an ignorance of "labor" conditions in the Congo which +is, unless assumed, absolutely abject. + +If the American syndicates are not to police and govern the +territories ceded them, but if these territories are to continue to +be administered by Leopold, it is not possible for the Americans to +have "absolutely nothing to do" with that administration. Leopold's +sole idea of administration is that every black man is his slave, in +other words, the only men the Americans can depend upon for labor +are slaves. Of the profits of these American companies Leopold is to +receive one-half. He will work his rubber with slaves. + +Are the Americans going to use slaves also, or do they intend "on +commercial lines" to pay those who work for them living wages? And +if they do, at the end of the fiscal year, having paid a fair price +for labor, are they prepared to accept a smaller profit than will +their partner Leopold, who obtains his labor with the aid of a chain +and a whip? + + [Illustration: The Laboring Man Upon Whom the American + Concessionaires Must Depend.] + +The attorney for the company airily says: "The labor problem will +not be formidable." + +If the man knows what he is talking about, he can mean but one +thing. + +The motives that led Leopold to grant these concessions are possibly +various. The motives that induced the Americans to take his offer +were probably less complicated. With them it was no question of +politics. They wanted the money; they did not need it, for they all +are rich--they merely wanted it. But Leopold wants more than the +half profits he will obtain from the Americans. If the Powers should +wake from their apathy and try to cast him out of the Congo, he +wants, through his American partners, the help of the United States. +Should he be "dethroned," by granting these concessions now on a +share and share alike basis with Belgians, French, and Americans, he +still, through them, hopes to draw from the Congo a fair income. And +in the meanwhile he looks to these Americans to kill any action +against him that may be taken in our Senate and House of +Representatives, even in the White House and Department of State. + +For the last two years Chester A. Beatty has been visiting Leopold +at Belgium, and has obtained the two concessions, and Leopold has +obtained, or hopes he has obtained, the influence of many American +shareholders. The fact that the people of the United States +possessed no "vested interest" in the Congo was the important fact +that placed any action on our part in behalf of that distressed +country above suspicion. If we acted, we did so because the United +States, as one of the signatory Powers of the Berlin Act, had +promised to protect the natives of the Congo; and we could truly +claim that we acted only in the name of humanity. Leopold has now +robbed us of that claim. He hopes that the enormous power wielded by +the Americans with whom he is associated, will prevent any action +against him in this country. + +But the deal has already been made public, and the motives of those +who now oppose improvement of conditions in the Congo, and who +support Leopold, will be at once suspected. + +To me the most interesting thing about the tract of land ceded to +Mr. Ryan, apart from the number of hippopotamuses I saw on it, was +that the people living along the Congo say that it is of no value. +They told me that two years ago, after working it for some time, +Leopold abandoned it as unprofitable, and they added that, when +Leopold cannot whip rubber out of the forest, it is hard to believe +that it can be obtained there legitimately by any one else. On the +bank I saw the "factories" to which the unprofitable rubber had been +carried from the interior. They had formerly belonged to Leopold, +now they are the property of Mr. Ryan and of the American Congo +Company. In only two years they already are in ruins, and the jungle +has engulfed them. + +I was on the land owned by the company a dozen times or more, but I +did not go into the interior. Even had I done so, I am not an expert +on rubber, and would have understood nothing of Para trees, Lagos +silk, and liane. I am speaking not of my own knowledge, only of what +was told me by people who live on the spot. I found that this +particular concession was well known, because, unlike the land given +to the Forestry and Mines Company, it is not an inaccessible tract, +but is situated only eight miles from Leopoldville. In our language, +that is about as far as is the Battery to 160th Street. Leopoldville +is the chief place on the Congo River, and every one there who spoke +to me of the concession knew where it was situated, and repeated +that it had been given up by Leopold as unprofitable, and that he +had unloaded it on Mr. Ryan. They seem to think it very clever of +the King to have got rid of it to the American millionaire. To one +knowing Mr. Ryan only from what he reads of him in the public press, +he does not seem to be the sort of man to whom Leopold could sell a +worthless rubber plantation. However, it is a matter which concerns +only Mr. Ryan and those who may think of purchasing shares in the +company. The Guggenheims, who are to operate this rubber, say that +Leopold did not know how to get out the full value of the land, and +that they, by using the machinery they will install, will be able to +make a profit, where Leopold, using only native labor, suffered a +loss. + +To the poor the ways of the truly rich are past finding out. After a +man has attained a fortune sufficient to keep him in yachts and +automobiles, one would think he could afford to indulge himself in +the luxury of being squeamish; that as to where he obtained any +further increase of wealth, he would prefer to pick and choose. + +On the contrary, these Americans go as far out of their way as +Belgium to make a partner of the man who has wrung his money from +wretched slaves, who were beaten, starved, and driven in chains. +This concession cannot make them rich. It can only make them richer. +And not richer in fact, for all the money they may whip out of the +Congo could not give them one thing that they cannot now command, +not an extra taste to the lips, not a fresh sensation, not one added +power for good. To them it can mean only a figure in ink on a page +of a bank-book. But what suffering, what misery it may mean to the +slaves who put it there! Why should men as rich as these elect to go +into partnership with one who sweats his dollars out of the naked +black? How really fine, how really wonderful it would be if these +same men, working together, decided to set free these twenty million +people--if, instead of joining hands with Leopold, they would +overthrow him and march into the Congo free men, without his chain +around their ankles, and open it to the trade of the world, and give +justice and a right to live and to work and to sell and buy to +millions of miserable human beings. These Americans working together +could do it. They could do it from Washington. Or five hundred men +with two Maxim guns could do it. The "kingdom" of the Congo is only +a house of cards. Five hundred filibusters could take Boma, proclaim +the Congo open to the traders of the world, as the Act of Berlin +declares it to be, and in a day make of Leopold the jest of Europe. +They would only be taking possession of what has always belonged to +them. + +Down in the Congo I talked to many young officers of Leopold's army. +They had been driven to serve him by the whips of failure, poverty, +or crime. I do not know that the American concessionaires are driven +by any such scourge. These younger men, who saw the depths of their +degradation, who tasted the dirty work they were doing, were daily +risking life by fever, through lack of food, by poisoned arrows, +and for three hundred dollars a year. Their necessity was great. +They had the courage of their failure. They were men one could pity. +One of them picked at the band of blue and gold braid around the +wrist of his tunic, and said: "Look, it is our badge of shame." + +To me those foreign soldiers of fortune, who, sooner than starve at +home or go to jail, serve Leopold in the jungle, seem more like men +and brothers than these truly rich, who, of their own free will, +safe in their downtown offices, become partners with this blackguard +King. + +What will be the outcome of the American advance into the Congo? +Will it prove the salvation of the Congo? Will it be, if that were +possible, a greater evil? + +E.R. Morel, who is the leader in England of the movement for the +improvement of the Congo, has written: "It is a little difficult to +imagine that the trust magnates are moulded upon the unique model of +Leopold II, and are prepared for the asking to become associates in +slave-driving. The trouble is that they probably know nothing about +African conditions, that they have been primed by the King with his +detestable theories, and are starting their enterprises on the basis +that the natives of Central Africa must be regarded as mere +'laborers' for the white man's benefit, possessing no rights in land +nor in the produce of the soil. If Mr. Ryan and his colleagues are +going to acquire their rubber over four thousand square miles, by +'commercial methods,' we welcome their advent. But we would point +out to them that, in such a case, they had better at once abandon +all idea of three or four hundred per cent dividends with which the +wily autocrat at Brussels has doubtless primed them. No such +monstrous profits are to be acquired in tropical Africa under a +trade system. If, on the other hand, the methods they are prepared +to adopt are the methods King Leopold and his other concessionaires +have adopted for the past thirteen years, devastation and +destruction, and the raising of more large bodies of soldiers, are +their essential accompaniments; and the widening of the area of the +Congo hell is assured." + +The two things in the American invasion of the Congo that promise +good to that unhappy country are that our country is represented at +Boma by a most intelligent, honest, and fearless young man in the +person of James A. Smith, our Consul-General, and that the actual +work of operating the mines and rubber is in the hands of the +Guggenheims. They are well known as men upright in affairs, and as +philanthropists and humanitarians of the common-sense type. Like +other rich men of their race, they have given largely to charity and +to assist those less fortunate than themselves. + +For thirteen years in mines in Mexico, in China, and Alaska, they +have had to deal with the problem of labor, and they have met it +successfully. Workmen of three nationalities they have treated with +fairness. + +"Why should you suppose," Mr. Daniel Guggenheim asked me, "that in +the Congo we will treat the negroes harshly? In Mexico we found the +natives ill-paid and ill-fed. We fed them and paid them well. Not +from any humanitarian idea, but because it was good business. It is +not good business to cut off a workman's hands or head. We are not +ashamed of the way we have always treated our workmen, and in the +Congo we are not going to spoil our record." + +I suggested that in Mexico he did not have as his partner Leopold, +tempting him with slave labor, and that the distance from Broadway +to his concessions in the Congo was so great that as to what his +agents might do there he could not possibly know. To this Mr. +Guggenheim answered that "Neither Leopold nor anyone else can +dictate how we shall treat the native labor," that if his agents +were cruel they would be instantly dismissed, and that for what +occurred in the Congo on the land occupied by the American Congo +Company his brothers and himself alone were responsible, and that +they accepted that responsibility. + +But already on his salary list he has men who are sure to get him +into trouble, men of whose _dossiers_ he is quite ignorant. + +From Belgium, Leopold has unloaded on the American companies several +of his "valets du roi," press agents, and tools, men who for years +have been defenders of his dirty work in the Congo; and of the +Americans, one, who is prominently exploited by the Belgians, had +to leave Africa for theft. + +That Mr. Guggenheim wishes and intends to give to the black in the +Congo fair treatment there is no possible doubt. But that on +Broadway, removed from the scene of operations in time some four to +six months, and in actual distance eight thousand miles, he can +control the acts of his agents and his partners, remains to be +proved. He is attacking a problem much more momentous than the +handling of Mexican _peons_ or Chinese coolies, and every step of +the working out of this problem will be watched by the people of +this country. + +And should they find that the example of the Belgian concessionaires +in their treatment of the natives is being imitated by even one of +the American Congo Company the people of this country will know it, +and may the Lord have mercy on his soul! + + + + +V + +HUNTING THE HIPPO + + +Except once or twice in the Zoo, I never had seen a hippopotamus, +and I was most anxious, before I left the Congo, to meet one. I +wanted to look at him when he was free, and his own master, without +iron bars or keepers; when he believed he was quite alone, and was +enjoying his bath in peace and confidence. I also wanted to shoot +him, and to hang in my ancestral halls his enormous head with the +great jaws open and the inside of them painted pink and the small +tusks hungrily protruding. I had this desire, in spite of the fact +that for every hippo except the particular one whose head I coveted, +I entertained the utmost good feeling. + +As a lad, among other beasts the hippopotamus had appealed to my +imagination. Collectively, I had always looked upon them as most +charming people. They come of an ancient family. Two thousand four +hundred years ago they were mentioned by Herodotus. And Herodotus to +the animal kingdom is what Domesday Book is to the landed gentry. To +exist beautifully for twenty-four hundred years without a single +mésalliance, without having once stooped to trade, is certainly a +strong title to nobility. Other animals by contact with man have +become degraded. The lion, the "King of Beasts," now rides a +bicycle, and growls, as previously rehearsed, at the young woman in +spangles, of whom he is secretly afraid. And the elephant, the +monarch of the jungle, and of a family as ancient and noble as that +of the hippopotamus, the monarch of the river, has become a beast of +burden and works for his living. You can see him in Phoenix Park +dragging a road-roller, in Siam and India carrying logs, and at +Coney Island he bends the knee to little girls from Brooklyn. The +royal proboscis, that once uprooted trees, now begs for peanuts. + +But, you never see a hippopotamus chained to a road-roller, or +riding a bicycle. He is still the gentleman, the man of elegant +leisure, the aristocrat of aristocrats, harming no one, and, in his +ancestral river, living the simple life. + +And yet, I sought to kill him. At least, one of him, but only one. +And, that I did not kill even one, while a bitter disappointment, is +still a source of satisfaction. + +In the Congo River we saw only two hippos, and both of them were +dead. They had been shot from a steamer. If the hippo is killed in +the water, it is impossible to recover the body at once. It sinks +and does not rise, some say, for an hour, others say for seven +hours. As in an hour the current may have carried the body four +miles below where it sank, the steamer does not wait, and the +destruction of the big beast is simple murder. There should be a law +in the Congo to prevent their destruction, and, no doubt, if the +State thought it could make a few francs out of protecting the +hippo, as it makes many million francs by preserving the elephant, +which it does for the ivory, such a law would exist. We soon saw +many hippos, but although we could not persuade the only other +passenger not to fire at them, there are a few hippos still alive in +the Congo. For, the only time the Captain and I were positive he +hit anything, was when he fired over our heads and blew off the roof +of the bridge. + +When first we saw the two dead hippos, one of them was turning and +twisting so violently that we thought he was alive. But, as we drew +near, we saw the strange convulsions were due to two enormous and +ugly crocodiles, who were fiercely pulling at the body. Crocodiles +being man-eaters, we had no feelings about shooting them, either in +the water or up a tree; and I hope we hit them. In any event, after +we fired the body drifted on in peace. + +On my return trip, going with the stream, when the boat covers about +four times the distance she makes when steaming against it, I saw +many hippos. In one day I counted sixty-nine. But on our way up the +Congo, until we turned into the Kasai River, we saw none. + +So, on the first night we camped in the Kasai I had begun to think I +never would see one, and I went ashore both skeptical and +discouraged. We had stopped, not at a wood post, but at a place on +the river's bank previously untouched by man, where there was a +stretch of beach, and then a higher level with trees and tall +grasses. Driven deep in this beach were the footprints of a large +elephant. They looked as though some one had amused himself by +sinking a bucket in the mud, and then pulling it out. For sixty +yards I followed the holes and finally lost them in a confusion of +other tracks. The place had been so trampled upon that it was beaten +into a basin. It looked as though every animal in the Kasai had met +there to hold a dance. There were the deep imprints of the hippos +and the round foot of the elephant, with the marks of the big toes +showing as clearly as though they had been scooped out of the mud +with a trowel, the hoofs of buffalo as large as the shoe of a cart +horse, and the arrow-like marks of the antelope, some in dainty +little Vs, others measuring three inches across, and three inches +from the base to the point. They came from every direction, down the +bank and out of the river; and crossed and recrossed, and beneath +the fresh prints that had been made that morning at sunrise, were +those of days before rising up sharply out of the sun-dried clay, +like bas-reliefs in stucco. I had gone ashore in a state of mind so +skeptical that I was as surprised as Crusoe at the sight of +footprints. It was as though the boy who did not believe in fairies +suddenly stumbled upon them sliding down the moonbeams. One felt +distinctly apologetic--as though uninvited he had pushed himself +into a family gathering. At the same time there was the excitement +of meeting in their own homes the strange peoples I had seen only in +the springtime, when the circus comes to New York, in the basement +of Madison Square Garden, where they are our pitiful prisoners, +bruising their shoulders against bars. Here they were monarchs of +all they surveyed. I was the intruder; and, looking down at the +marks of the great paws and delicate hoofs, I felt as much out of +place as would a grizzly bear in a Fifth Avenue club. And I behaved +much as would the grizzly bear. I rushed back for my rifle intent on +killing something. + +The sun had just set; the moon was shining faintly: it was the +moment the beasts of the jungle came to the river to drink. Anfossi, +although he had spent three years in the Congo and had three years' +contract still to work out, was as determined to kill something as +was the tenderfoot from New York. + +Sixty yards from the stern of the _Deliverance_ was the basin I had +discovered; at an equal distance from her bow, a stream plunged into +the river. Anfossi argued the hippos would prefer to drink the clear +water of the stream, to the muddy water of the basin, and elected to +watch at the stream. I carried a deck chair to the edge of my basin +and placed it in the shadow of the trees. Anfossi went into our +cabin for his rifle. At that exact moment a hippopotamus climbed +leisurely out of the river and plunged into the stream. One of the +soldiers on shore saw him and rushed for the boat. Anfossi sent my +boy on the jump for me and, like a gentleman, waited until I had +raced the sixty yards. But when we reached the stream there was +nothing visible but the trampled grass and great holes in the mud +and near us in the misty moonlight river something that puffed and +blew slowly and luxuriously, as would any fat gentleman who had been +forced to run for it. Had I followed Anfossi's judgment and gone +along the bank sixty yards ahead, instead of sixty yards astern of +the _Deliverance_, at the exact moment at which I sank into my deck +chair, the hippo would have emerged at my feet. It is even betting +as to which of us would have been the more scared. + +The next day, and for days after, we saw nothing but hippos. We saw +them floating singly and in family groups, with generally four or +five cows to one bull, and sometimes in front a baby hippo no larger +than a calf, which the mother with her great bulk would push against +the swift current, as you see a tugboat in the lee of a great liner. +Once, what I thought was a spit of rocks suddenly tumbled apart and +became twenty hippos, piled more or less on top of each other. +During that one day, as they floated with the current, enjoying +their afternoon's nap, we saw thirty-four. They impressed me as the +most idle, and, therefore, the most aristocratic of animals. They +toil not, neither do they spin; they had nothing to do but float in +the warm water and the bright sunshine; their only effort was to +open their enormous jaws and yawn luxuriously, in the pure content +of living, in absolute boredom. They reminded you only of fat gouty +old gentlemen, puffing and blowing in the pool at the Warm Springs. + +The next chance we had at one of them on shore came on our first +evening in the Kasai just before sunset. Captain Jensen was steering +for a flat island of sand and grass where he meant to tie up for the +night. About fifty yards from the spot for which we were making, was +the only tree on the island, and under it with his back to us, and +leisurely eating the leaves of the lower branches, exactly as though +he were waiting for us by appointment, was a big gray hippo. His +back being toward us, we could not aim at his head, and he could not +see us. But the _Deliverance_ is not noiseless, and, hearing the +paddle-wheel, the hippo turned, saw us, and bolted for the river. +The hippopotamus is as much at home in the water as the seal. To get +to the water, if he is surprised out of it, and to get under it, if +he is alarmed while in it, is instinct. If he does venture ashore, +he goes only a few rods from the bank and then only to forage. His +home is the river, and he rushes to bury himself in it as naturally +as the squirrel makes for a tree. This particular hippo ran for the +river as fast as a horse coming at a slow trot. He was a very badly +scared hippo. His head was high in the air, his fat sides were +shaking, and the one little eye turned toward us was filled with +concern. Behind him the yellow sun was setting into the lagoons. On +the flat stretch of sand he was the only object, and against the +horizon loomed as large as a freight car. That must be why we both +missed him. I tried to explain that the reason I missed him was +that, never before having seen so large an animal running for his +life, I could not watch him do it and look at the gun sights. No one +believed that was why I missed him. I did not believe it myself. In +any event neither of us hit his head, and he plunged down the bank +to freedom, carrying most of the bank with him. But, while we still +were violently blaming each other, at about two hundred yards below +the boat, he again waddled out of the river and waded knee deep up +the little stream. Keeping the bunches of grass between us, I ran up +the beach, aimed at his eye and this time hit him fairly enough. +With a snort he rose high in the air, and so, for an instant, +balanced his enormous bulk. The action was like that of a horse +that rears on his hind legs, when he is whipped over the nose. And +apparently my bullet hurt him no more than the whip the horse, for +he dropped heavily to all fours, and again disappeared into the +muddy river. Our disappointment and chagrin were intense, and at +once Anfossi and I organized a hunt for that evening. To encourage +us, while we were sitting on the bridge making a hasty dinner, +another hippopotamus had the impertinence to rise, blowing like a +whale, not ten feet from where we sat. We could have thrown our tin +cups and hit him; but he was in the water, and now we were seeking +only those on land. + + [Illustration: Mr. Davis and Native "Boy," on the Kasai River.] + +Two years ago when the atrocities along the Kasai made the natives +fear the white man and the white man fear the natives, each of the +river boats was furnished with a stand of Albini rifles. Three of +the black soldiers, who were keen sportsmen, were served with these +muskets, and as soon as the moon rose, the soldiers and Anfossi, my +black boy, with an extra gun, and I set forth to clear the island of +hippos. To the stranger it was a most curious hunt. The island was +perfectly flat and bare, and the river had eaten into it and +overflowed it with tiny rivulets and deep, swift-running streams. +Into these rivulets and streams the soldiers plunged, one in front, +feeling the depth of the water with a sounding rod, and as he led we +followed. The black men made a splendid picture. They were naked but +for breech-cloths, and the moonlight flashed on their wet skins and +upon the polished barrels of the muskets. But, as a sporting +proposition, as far as I could see, we had taken on the hippopotamus +at his own game. We were supposed to be on an island, but the water +was up to our belts and running at five miles an hour. I could not +understand why we had not openly and aboveboard walked into the +river. Wading waist high in the water with a salmon rod I could +understand, but not swimming around in a river with a gun. The force +of the shallowest stream was the force of the great river behind it, +and wherever you put your foot, the current, on its race to the sea, +annoyed at the impediment, washed the sand from under the sole of +your foot and tugged at your knees and ankles. To add to the +interest the three soldiers held their muskets at full cock, and as +they staggered for a footing each pointed his gun at me. There also +was a strange fish about the size of an English sole that sprang out +of the water and hurled himself through space. Each had a white +belly, and as they skimmed past us in the moonlight it was as though +some one was throwing dinner plates. After we had swum the length of +the English Channel, we returned to the boat. As to that midnight +hunt I am still uncertain as to whether we were hunting the hippos +or the hippos were hunting us. + +The next morning we had our third and last chance at a hippo. + +It is distinctly a hard-luck story. We had just gone on the bridge +for breakfast when we saw him walking slowly from us along an island +of white sand as flat as your hand, and on which he loomed large as +a haystack. Captain Jensen was a true sportsman. He jerked the bell +to the engine-room, and at full speed the _Deliverance_ raced for +the shore. The hippo heard us, and, like a baseball player caught +off base, tried to get back to the river. Captain Jensen danced on +the deck plates: + +"Schoot it! schoot it!" he yelled, "Gotfurdamn! schoot it!" When +Anfossi and I fired, the _Deliverance_ was a hundred yards from the +hippo, and the hippo was not five feet from the bank. In another +instant, he would have been over it and safe. But when we fired, he +went down as suddenly as though a safe had dropped on him. Except +that he raised his head, and rolled it from side to side, he +remained perfectly still. From his actions, or lack of actions, it +looked as though one of the bullets had broken his back; and when +the blacks saw he could not move they leaped and danced and +shrieked. To them the death of the big beast promised much chop. + +But Captain Jensen was not so confident. "Schoot it," he continued +to shout, "we lose him yet! Gotfurdamn! schoot it!" + +My gun was an American magazine rifle, holding five cartridges. We +now were very near the hippo, and I shot him in the head twice, and, +once, when he opened them, in the jaws. At each shot his head would +jerk with a quick toss of pain, and at the sight the blacks screamed +with delight that was primitively savage. After the last shot, when +Captain Jensen had brought the _Deliverance_ broadside to the bank, +the hippo ceased to move. The boat had not reached the shore before +the boys with the steel hawser were in the water; the gangplank was +run out, and the black soldiers and wood boys, with their knives, +were dancing about the hippo and hacking at his tail. Their idea was +to make him the more quickly bleed to death. I ran to the cabin for +more cartridges. It seemed an absurd precaution. I was as sure I had +the head of that hippo as I was sure that my own was still on my +neck. My only difficulty was whether to hang the head in the front +hall or in the dining-room. It might be rather too large for the +dining-room. That was all that troubled me. After three minutes, +when I was back on deck, the hippo still lay immovable. Certainly +twenty men were standing about him; three were sawing off his tail, +and the women were chanting triumphantly a song they used to sing in +the days when the men were allowed to hunt, and had returned +successful with food. + +On the bridge was Anfossi with his camera. Before the men had +surrounded the hippo he had had time to snap one picture of it. I +had just started after my camera, when from the blacks there was a +yell of alarm, of rage, and amazement. The hippo had opened his +eyes and raised his head. I shoved the boys out of the way, and, +putting the gun close to his head, fired pointblank. I wanted to put +him out of pain. I need not have distressed myself. The bullet +affected him no more than a quinine pill. What seemed chiefly to +concern him, what apparently had brought him back to life, was the +hacking at his tail. That was an indignity he could not brook. + +His expression, and he had a perfectly human expression, was one of +extreme annoyance and of some slight alarm, as though he were +muttering: "This is no place for _me_," and, without more ado, he +began to roll toward the river. Without killing some one, I could +not again use the rifle. The boys were close upon him, prying him +back with the gangplank, beating him with sticks of firewood, trying +to rope him with the steel hawser. On the bridge Captain Jensen and +Anfossi were giving orders in Danish and Italian, and on the bank I +swore in American. Everybody shoved and pushed and beat at the great +bulk, and the great bulk rolled steadily on. We might as well have +tried to budge the Fifth Avenue Hotel. He reached the bank, he +crushed it beneath him, and, like a suspension bridge, splashed into +the water. Even then, we who watched him thought he would stick fast +between the boat and the bank, that the hawser would hold him. But +he sank like a submarine, and we stood gaping at the muddy water and +saw him no more. When I recovered from my first rage I was glad he +was still alive to float in the sun and puff and blow and open his +great jaws in a luxurious yawn. I could imagine his joining his +friends after his meeting with us, and remarking in reference to our +bullets: "I find the mosquitoes are quite bad this morning." + +With this chapter is published the photograph Anfossi took, from the +deck of the steamer, of our hippo--the hippo that was too stupid to +know when he was dead. It is not a good photograph, but of our hippo +it is all we have to show. I am still undecided whether to hang it +in the hall or the dining-room. + + [Illustration: The Hippopotamus that Did Not Know He Was Dead.] + +The days I spent on my trip up the river were of delightful +sameness, sunshine by day, with the great panorama drifting past, +and quiet nights of moonlight. For diversion, there were many +hippos, crocodiles, and monkeys, and, though we saw only their +tracks and heard them only in the jungle, great elephants. And +innumerable strange birds--egrets, eagles, gray parrots, crimson +cranes, and giant flamingoes--as tall as a man and from tip to tip +measuring eight feet. + +Each day the programme was the same. The arrival at the wood post, +where we were given only excuses and no wood, and where once or +twice we unloaded blue cloth and bags of salt, which is the currency +of the Upper Congo, and the halt for hours to cut wood in the +forest. + +Once we stopped at a mission and noted the contrast it made with the +bare, unkempt posts of the State. It was the Catholic mission at +Wombali, and it was a beauty spot of flowers, thatched houses, +grass, and vegetables. There was a brickyard, and schools, and +sewing-machines, and the blacks, instead of scowling at us, nodded +and smiled and looked happy and contented. The Father was a great +red-bearded giant, who seemed to have still stored up in him all the +energy of the North. While the steamer was unloaded he raced me +over the vegetable garden and showed me his farm. I had seen other +of the Catholic Missions, and I spoke of how well they looked, of +the signs they gave of hard work, and of consideration for the +blacks. + +"I am not of that Order," the Father said gravely. He was speaking +in English, and added, as though he expected some one to resent it: +"We are Jesuits." No one resented it, and he added: "We have our +Order in your country. Do you know Fordham College?" + +Did I know it? If you are trying to find our farm, the automobile +book tells you to leave Fordham College on your left after Jerome +Avenue. + +"Of course, I know it," I said. "They have one of the best baseball +nines near New York; they play the Giants every spring." + +The Reverend Father started. + +"They play with Giants!" he gasped. + +I did not know how to say "baseball nines" in French, but at least +he was assured that whatever it was, it was one of the best near New +York. + +Then Captain Jensen's little black boy ran up to tell me the +steamer was waiting, and began in Bangalese to beg something of the +Father. The priest smiled and left us, returning with a rosary and +crucifix, which the boy hung round his neck, and then knelt, and the +red-bearded Father laid his fingers on the boy's kinky head. He was +a very happy boy over his new possession, and it was much coveted by +all the others. One of the black mammies, to ward off evil from the +little naked baby at her breast, offered an arm's length of blue +cloth for "the White Man's fetish." + + [Illustration: The Jesuit Brothers at the Wombali Mission.] + +My voyage up the Kasai ended at Dima, the headquarters of the Kasai +Concession. I had been told that at Dima I would find a rubber +plantation, and I had gone there to see it. I found that the +plantation was four days distant, and that the boat for the +plantation did not start for six days. I also had been told by the +English missionaries at Dima, that I would find an American mission. +When I reached Dima I learned that the American mission was at a +station further up the river, which could not be reached sooner than +a month. That is the sort of information upon which in the Congo +one is forced to regulate his movements. As there was at Dima +neither mission nor plantation, and as the only boat that would +leave it in ten days was departing the next morning, I remained +there only one night. It was a place cut out of the jungle, two +hundred yards square, and of all stations I saw in the Congo, the +best managed. It is the repair shop for the steamers belonging to +the Kasai Concession, as well as the headquarters of the company and +the residence of the director, M. Dryepoint. He and Van Damme seemed +to be the most popular officials in the Congo. M. Dryepoint was up +the river, so I did not meet him, but I was most courteously and +hospitably entertained by M. Fumière. He gave me a whole house to +myself, and personally showed me over his small kingdom. All the +houses were of brick, and the paths and roads were covered with +gravel and lined with flowers. Nothing in the Congo is more curious +than this pretty town of suburban villas and orderly machine shops; +with the muddy river for a street and the impenetrable jungle for a +back yard. The home of the director at Dima is the proud boast of +the entire Congo. And all they say of it is true. It did have a +billiard table and ice, and a piano, and M. Fumière invited me to +join his friends at an excellent dinner. In furnishing this +celebrated house, the idea had apparently been to place in it the +things one would least expect to find in the jungle, or, without +wishing to be ungracious, anywhere. So, although there are no women +at Dima, there are great mirrors in brass frames, chandeliers of +glass with festoons and pendants of glass, metal lamps with shades +of every color, painted plaster statuettes and carved silk-covered +chairs. In the red glow of the lamps, surrounded by these Belgian +atrocities, M. Fumière sat down to the pianola. The heat of Africa +filled the room; on one side we could have touched the jungle, on +the other in the river the hippopotamus puffed and snorted. M. +Fumière pulled out the stops, and upon the heat and silence of the +night, floated the "Evening Star," Mascagni's "Intermezzo," and +"Chin-chin Chinaman." + +Next morning I left for Leopoldville in a boat much larger than the +_Deliverance_, but with none of her cheer or good-fellowship. This +boat was run by the black wife of the captain. Trailing her velvet +gown, and cleaning her teeth with a stick of wood, she penetrated to +every part of the steamer, making discipline impossible and driving +the crew out of control. + +I was glad to escape at Kinchassa to the clean and homelike bungalow +and beautiful gardens of the only Englishman still in the employ of +the State, Mr. Cuthbert Malet, who gave me hospitably of his scanty +store of "Scotch," and, what was even more of a sacrifice, of his +precious handful of eggs. A week later I was again in Boma, waiting +for the _Nigeria_ to take me back to Liverpool. + +Before returning to the West Coast and leaving the subject of the +Congo, I wish to testify to what seemed to me the enormously +important work that is being done by the missionaries. I am not +always an admirer of the missionary. Some of those one meets in +China and Japan seem to be taking much more interest in their own +bodies than in the souls of others. But, in the Congo, almost the +only people who are working in behalf of the natives are those +attached to the missions. Because they bear witness against Leopold, +much is said by his hired men and press agents against them. But +they are deserving of great praise. Some of them are narrow and +bigoted, and one could wish they were much more tolerant of their +white brothers in exile, but compared with the good they do, these +faults count for nothing. It is due to them that Europe and the +United States know the truth about the Congo. They were the first to +bear witness, and the hazardous work they still are doing for their +fellow men is honest, practical Christianity. + + + + +VI + +OLD CALABAR + + +While I was up the Congo and the Kasai rivers, Mrs. Davis had +remained at Boma, and when I rejoined her, we booked passage home on +the _Nigeria_. We chose the _Nigeria_, which is an Elder-Dempster +freight and passenger steamer, in preference to the fast mail +steamer because of the ports of the West Coast we wished to see as +many as possible. And, on her six weeks' voyage to Liverpool, the +_Nigeria_ promised to spend as much time at anchor as at sea. On the +Coast it is a more serious matter to reserve a cabin than in New +York. You do not stop at an uptown office, and on a diagram of the +ship's insides, as though you were playing roulette, point at a +number. Instead, as you are to occupy your cabin, not for one, but +for six, weeks, you search, as vigilantly as a navy officer looking +for contraband, the ship herself and each cabin. + +But going aboard was a simple ceremony. The Hôtel Splendide stands +on the bank of the Congo River. After saying "Good-by" to her +proprietor, I walked to the edge of the water and waved my helmet. +In the Congo, a white man standing in the sun without a hat is a +spectacle sufficiently thrilling to excite the attention of all, and +at once Captain Hughes of the _Nigeria_ sent a cargo boat to the +rescue, and on the shoulders of naked Kroo boys Mrs. Davis and the +maid, and the trunks, spears, tents, bathtubs, carved idols, native +mats, and a live mongoos were dropped into it, and we were paddled +to the gangway. + +"If that's all, we might as well get under way," said Captain +Hughes. The anchor chains creaked, from the bank the proprietor of +the Splendide waved his hand, and the long voyage to Liverpool had +begun. It was as casual as halting and starting a cable-car. + +According to schedule, after leaving the Congo, we should have gone +south and touched at Loanda. But on this voyage, outward bound, the +_Nigeria_ had carried, to help build the railroad at Lobito Bay, a +deckload of camels. They had proved trying passengers, and instead +of first touching at the Congo, Captain Hughes had continued on +south and put them ashore. So we were robbed of seeing both Loanda +and the camels. + +This line, until Calabar is reached, carries but few passengers, +and, except to receive cargo, the ship is not fully in commission. +During this first week she is painted, and holystoned, her carpets +are beaten, her cabins scrubbed and aired, and the passengers mess +with the officers. So, of the ship's life, we acquired an intimate +knowledge, her interests became our own, and the necessity of +feeding her gaping holds with cargo was personal and acute. On a +transatlantic steamer, when once the hatches are down, the captain +need think only of navigation; on these coasters, the hatches never +are down, and the captain, that sort of captain dear to the heart of +the owners, is the man who fills the holds. + +A skipper going ashore to drum up trade was a novel spectacle. +Imagine the captain of one of the Atlantic greyhounds prying among +the warehouses on West Street, demanding of the merchants: +"Anything going my way, this trip?" He would scorn to do it. Before +his passengers have passed the custom officers, he is in mufti, and +on his way to his villa on Brooklyn Heights, or to the Lambs Club, +and until the Blue Peter is again at the fore, little he cares for +passengers, mails, or cargo. But the captain of a "coaster" must be +sailor and trader, too. He is expected to navigate a coast, the +latest chart of which is dated somewhere near 1830, and at which the +waves rush in walls of spray, sometimes as high as a three-story +house. He must speak all the known languages of Europe, and all the +unknown tongues of innumerable black brothers. At each port he must +entertain out of his own pocket the agents of all the trading +houses, and, in his head, he must keep the market price, "when laid +down in Liverpool," of mahogany, copra, copal, rubber, palm oil, and +ivory. To see that the agent has not overlooked a few bags of ground +nuts, or a dozen puncheons of oil, he must go on shore and peer into +the compound of each factory, and on board he must keep peace +between the Kroo boys and the black deck passengers, and see that +the white passengers with a temperature of 105, do not drink more +than is good for them. At least, those are a few of the duties the +captains on the ships controlled by Sir Alfred Jones, who is Elder +and Dempster, are expected to perform. No wonder Sir Alfred is +popular. + +Our first port of call was Landana, in Portuguese territory, but two +ships of the Woermann Line were there ahead of us and had gobbled up +all the freight. So we could but up anchor and proceed to +Libreville, formerly the capital of the French Congo. At five in the +morning by the light of a ship's lantern, we were paddled ashore to +drum up trade. We found two traders, Ives and Thomas, who had +waiting for the _Nigeria_ at the mouth of the Gabun River six +hundred logs of mahogany, and, in consequence, there was general +rejoicing, and Scotch and "sparklets," and even music from a German +music-box that would burst into song only after it had been fed with +a copper. One of the clerks said that Ives had forgotten how to +extract the coppers and in consequence was using the music-box as a +savings bank. + +In the French Congo the natives are permitted to trade; in the +Congo Free State they are not, or, rather, they have nothing with +which to trade, and the contrast between the empty "factories" of +the Congo and those of Libreville, crowded with natives buying and +selling, was remarkable. There also was a conspicuous difference in +the quality and variety of the goods. In Leopold's Congo "trade" +goods is a term of contempt. It describes articles manufactured only +for those who have no choice and must accept whatever is offered. +When your customers must take what you please to give them the +quality of your goods is likely to deteriorate. Salt of the poorest +grade, gaudy fabrics that neither "wear" nor "wash," bars of coarse +soap (the native is continually washing his single strip of cloth), +and axe-heads made of iron, are what Leopold thinks are a fair +exchange for the forced labor of the black. + +But the articles I found in the factories in Libreville were what, +in the Congo, are called "white man's goods" and were of excellent +quality and in great variety. There were even French novels and +cigars. Some of the latter, called the Young American on account of +the name and the flag on the lid, tempted me, until I saw they were +manufactured by Dusseldorffer and Vanderswassen, and one suspected +Rotterdam. + +In Ives's factory I saw for the first time a "trade" rifle, or Tower +musket. In the vernacular of the Coast, they are "gas-pipe" guns. +They are put together in England, and to a white man are a most +terrifying weapon. The original Tower muskets, such as, in the days +of '76, were hung over the fireplace of the forefathers of the Sons +of the Revolution, were manufactured in England, and stamped with +the word "Tower," and for the reigning king G.R. I suppose at that +date at the Tower of London there was an arsenal; but I am ready to +be corrected. To-day the guns are manufactured at Birmingham, but +they still have the flint lock, and still are stamped with the word +"Tower" and the royal crown over the letters G.R., and with the +arrow which is supposed to mark the property of the government. The +barrel is three feet four inches long, and the bore is that of an +artesian well. The native fills four inches of this cavity with +powder and the remaining three feet with rusty nails, barbed wire, +leaden slugs, and the legs and broken parts of iron pots. An officer +of the W.A.F.F.'s, in a fight in the bush in South Nigeria, had one +of these things fired at him from a distance of fifteen feet. He +told me all that saved him was that when the native pulled the +trigger the recoil of the gun "kicked" the muzzle two feet in the +air and the native ten feet into the bush. I bought a Tower rifle at +the trade price, a pound, and brought it home. But although my +friends have offered to back either end of the gun as being the more +destructive, we have found no one with a sufficient sporting spirit +to determine the point. + +Libreville is a very pretty town, but when it was laid out the +surveyors just missed placing the Equator in its main street. It is +easy to understand why with such a live wire in the vicinity +Libreville is warm. From the same cause it also is rich in flowers, +vines, and trees growing in generous, undisciplined abundance, +making of Libreville one vast botanical garden, and burying the town +and its bungalows under screens of green and branches of scarlet +and purple flowers. Close to the surf runs an avenue bordered by +giant cocoanut palms and, after the sun is down, this is the +fashionable promenade. Here every evening may be seen in their +freshest linen the six married white men of Libreville, and, in the +latest Paris frocks, the six married ladies, while from the verandas +of the factories that line the sea front and from under the paper +lanterns of the Café Guion the clerks and traders sip their absinthe +and play dominoes, and cast envious glances at the six fortunate +fellow exiles. + +For several days we lay a few miles south of Libreville, off the +mouth of the Gabun River, taking in the logs of mahogany. It was a +continuous performance of the greatest interest. I still do not +understand why all those engaged in it were not drowned, or pounded +to a pulp. Just before we touched at the Gabun River, two tramp +steamers, chartered by Americans, carried off a full cargo of this +mahogany to the States. It was an experiment the result of which the +traders of Libreville are awaiting with interest. The mahogany that +the reader sees in America probably comes from Hayti, Cuba, or +Belize, and is of much finer quality than that of the Gabun River, +which latter is used for making what the trade calls "fancy" +cigar-boxes and cheap furniture. But before it becomes a cigar-box +it passes through many adventures. Weeks before the steamer arrives +the trader, followed by his black boys, explores the jungle and +blazes the trees. Then the boys cut trails through the forest, and, +using logs for rollers, drag and push the tree trunks to the bank of +the river. There the tree is cut into huge cubes, weighing about a +ton, and measuring twelve to fifteen feet in length and three feet +across each face. A boy can "shape" one of these logs in a day. + +Although his pay varies according to whether the tributaries of the +river are full or low, so making the moving of the logs easy or +difficult, he can earn about three pounds ten shillings a month, +paid in cash. Compared with the eighty cents a month paid only a few +miles away in the Congo Free State, and in "trade" goods, these are +good wages. When the log is shaped the mark of the trader is branded +on it with an iron, just as we brand cattle, and it is turned loose +on the river. At the mouth of the river there is little danger of +the log escaping, for the waves are stronger than the tide, and +drive the logs upon the shore. There, in the surf, we found these +tons of mahogany pounding against each other. In the ship's +steam-launch were iron chains, a hundred yards long, to which, at +intervals, were fastened "dogs," or spikes. These spikes were driven +into the end of a log, the brand upon the log was noted by the +captain and trader, and the logs, chained together like the vertebræ +of a great sea serpent, were towed to the ship's side. There they +were made fast, and three Kroo boys knocked the spike out of each +log, warped a chain around it, and made fast that chain to the steel +hawser of the winch. As it was drawn to the deck a Senegalese +soldier, acting for the Customs, gave it a second blow with a +branding hammer, and, thundering and smashing, it swung into the +hold. + + [Illustration: There, in the Surf, We Found These Tons of Mahogany, + Pounding Against Each Other.] + +In the "round up" of the logs the star performers were the three +Kroo boys at the ship's side. For days, in fascinated horror, the +six passengers watched them, prayed for them, and made bets as to +which would be the first to die. One understands that a Kroo boy is +as much at home in the sea as on shore, but these boys were neither +in the sea nor on shore. They were balancing themselves on blocks of +slippery wood that weighed a ton, but which were hurled about by the +great waves as though they were life-belts. All night the hammering +of the logs made the ship echo like a monster drum, and all day +without an instant's pause each log reared and pitched, spun like a +barrel, dived like a porpoise, or, broadside, battered itself +against the iron plates. But, no matter what tricks it played, a +Kroo boy rode it as easily as though it were a horse in a +merry-go-round. + +It was a wonderful exhibition. It furnished all the thrills that one +gets when watching a cowboy on a bucking bronco, or a trained seal. +Again and again a log, in wicked conspiracy with another log, would +plan to entice a Kroo boy between them, and smash him. At the sight +the passengers would shriek a warning, the boy would dive between +the logs, and a mass of twelve hundred pounds of mahogany would +crash against a mass weighing fifteen hundred with a report like +colliding freight cars. + +And then, as, breathless, we waited to see what once was a Kroo boy +float to the surface, he would appear sputtering and grinning, and +saying to us as clearly as a Kroo smile can say it: "He never +touched me!" + + [Illustration: A Log of Mahogany Jammed in the Anchor Chains.] + +Two days after we had stored away the mahogany we anchored off +Duala, the capital of the German Cameroons. Duala is built upon a +high cliff, and from the water the white and yellow buildings with +many pillars gave it the appearance of a city. Instead, it is a +clean, pretty town. With the German habit of order, it has been laid +out like barracks, but with many gardens, well-kept, shaded streets, +and high, cool houses, scientifically planned to meet the +necessities of the tropics. At Duala the white traders and officials +were plump and cheerful looking, and in the air there was more of +prosperity than fever. The black and white sentry boxes and the +native soldiers practising the stork march of the Kaiser's army were +signs of a rigid military rule, but the signs of Germany's efforts +in trade were more conspicuous. Nowhere on the coast did we see as +at Duala such gorgeous offices as those of the great trading house +of Woermann, the hated rivals of "Sir Alfred," such carved +furniture, such shining brass railings, and nowhere else did we see +plate-glass windows, in which, with unceasing wonder, the natives +stared at reflections of their own persons. In the river there was a +private dry dock of the Woermanns, and along the wharfs for acres +was lumber for the Woermanns, boxes of trade goods, puncheons and +casks for the Woermanns, private cooper shops and private machine +shops and private banks for the Woermanns. The house flag of the +Woermanns became as significant as that of a reigning sovereign. One +felt inclined to salute it. + +The success of the German merchant on the East Coast and over all +the world appears to be a question of character. He is patient, +methodical, painstaking; it is his habit of industry that is helping +him to close port after port to English, French, and American goods. +The German clerks do not go to the East Coast or to China and South +America to drink absinthe or whiskey, or to play dominoes or +cricket. They work twice as long as do the other white men, and +during those longer office hours they toil twice as hard. One of our +passengers was a German agent returning for his vacation. I used to +work in the smoking-room and he always was at the next table, also +at work, on his ledgers and account books. He was so industrious +that he bored me, and one day I asked him why, instead of spoiling +his vacation with work, he had not balanced his books before he left +the Coast. + +"It is an error," he said; "I can not find him." And he explained +that in the record of his three years' stewardship, which he was to +turn over to the directors in Berlin, there was somewhere a mistake +of a sixpence. + +"But," I protested, "what's sixpence to you? You drink champagne all +day. You begin at nine in the morning!" + +"I drink champagne," said the clerk, "because for three years I have +myself alone in the bush lived, but, can I to my directors go with a +book not balanced?" He laid his hand upon his heart and shook his +head. "It is my heart that tells me 'No!'" + +After three weeks he gave a shout, his face blushed with pleasure, +and actual tears were in his eyes. He had dug out the error, and at +once he celebrated the recovery of the single sixpence by giving me +twenty-four shillings' worth of champagne. It is a true story, and +illustrates, I think, the training and method of the German mind, of +the industry of the merchants who are trading over all the seas. As +a rule the "trade" goods "made in Germany" are "shoddy." They do not +compare in quality with those of England or the States; in every +foreign port you will find that the English linen is the best, that +the American agricultural implements, American hardware, saws, axes, +machetes, are superior to those manufactured in any other country. +But the German, though his goods are poorer, cuts the coat to please +the customer. He studies the wishes of the man who is to pay. He is +not the one who says: "Take it, or leave it." + +The agent of one of the largest English firms on the Ivory Coast, +one that started by trading in slaves, said to me: "Our largest +shipment to this coast is gin. This is a French colony, and if the +French traders and I were patriots instead of merchants we would +buy from our own people, but we buy from the Germans, because trade +follows no flag. They make a gin out of potatoes colored with rum or +gin, and label it 'Demerara' and 'Jamaica.' They sell it to us on +the wharf at Antwerp for ninepence a gallon, and we sell it at nine +francs per dozen bottles. Germany is taking our trade from us +because she undersells us, and because her merchants don't wait for +trade to come to them, but go after it. Before the Woermann boat is +due their agent here will come to my factory and spy out all I have +in my compound. 'Why don't you ship those logs with us?' he'll ask. + +"'Can't spare the boys to carry them to the beach,' I'll say. + +"'I'll furnish the boys,' he'll answer. That's the German way. + +"The Elder-Dempster boats lie three miles out at sea and blow a +whistle at us. They act as though by carrying our freight they were +doing us a favor. These German ships, to save you the long pull, +anchor close to the beach and lend you their own shore boats and +their own boys to work your cargo. And if you give them a few tons +to carry, like as not they'll 'dash' you to a case of 'fizz.' And +meanwhile the English captain is lying outside the bar tooting his +whistle and wanting to know if you think he's going to run his ship +aground for a few bags of rotten kernels. And he can't see, and the +people at home can't see, why the Germans are crowding us off the +Coast." + +Just outside of Duala, in the native village of Bell Town, is the +palace and the harem of the ruler of the tribe that gave its name to +the country, Mango Bell, King of the Cameroons. His brother, Prince +William, sells photographs and "souvenirs." We bought photographs, +and on the strength of that hinted at a presentation at court. +Brother William seemed doubtful, so we bought enough postal cards to +establish us as _étrangers de distinction_, and he sent up our +names. With Pivani, Hatton & Cookson's chief clerk we were escorted +to the royal presence. The palace is a fantastic, pagoda-like +building of three stories; and furnished with many mirrors, carved +oak sideboards, and lamp-shades of colored glass. Mango Bell, King +of the Cameroons, sounds like a character in a comic opera, but the +king was an extremely serious, tall, handsome, and self-respecting +negro. Having been educated in England, he spoke much more correct +English than any of us. Of the few "Kings I Have Met," both tame and +wild, his manners were the most charming. Back of the palace is an +enormously long building under one roof. Here live his thirty-five +queens. To them we were not presented. + + [Illustration: The Palace of the King of the Cameroons.] + +Prince William asked me if I knew where in America there was a +street called Fifth Avenue. I suggested New York. He referred to a +large Bible, and finding, much to his surprise, that my guess was +correct, commissioned me to buy him, from a firm on that street, +just such another Bible as the one in his hand. He forgot to give me +the money to pay for it, but loaned us a half-dozen little princes +to bear our purchases to the wharf. For this service their royal +highnesses graciously condescended to receive a small "dash," and +with the chief clerk were especially delighted. He, being a +sleight-of-hand artist, apparently took five-franc pieces out of +their Sunday clothes and from their kinky hair. When we left they +were rapidly disrobing to find if any more five-franc pieces were +concealed about their persons. + +The morning after we sailed from Duala we anchored in the river in +front of Calabar, the capital of Southern Nigeria. Of all the ports +at which we touched on the Coast, Calabar was the hottest, the best +looking, and the best administered. It is a model colony, but to +bring it to the state it now enjoys has cost sums of money entirely +out of proportion to those the colony has earned. The money has been +spent in cutting down the jungle, filling in swamps that breed +mosquitoes and fever, and in laying out gravel walks, water mains, +and open cement gutters, and in erecting model hospitals, barracks, +and administrative offices. Even grass has been made to grow, and +the high bluff upon which are situated the homes of the white +officials and Government House has been trimmed and cultivated and +tamed until it looks like an English park. It is a complete +imitation, even to golf links and tennis courts. But the fight that +has been made against the jungle has not stopped with golf links. In +1896 the death rate was ten men out of every hundred. That +corresponds to what in warfare is a decimating fire, upon which an +officer, without danger of reproof, may withdraw his men. But at +Calabar the English doctors did not withdraw, and now the death rate +is as low as three out of every hundred. That Calabar, or any part +of the West Coast, will ever be made entirely healthy is doubtful. +Man can cut down a forest and fill in a swamp, but he can not reach +up, as to a gas jet, and turn off the sun. And at Calabar, even at +night when the sun has turned itself off, the humidity and the heat +leave one sweating, tossing, and gasping for air. In Calabar the +first thing a white man learns is not to take any liberties with the +sun. When he dresses, eats, drinks, and moves about the sun is as +constantly on his mind, as it is on the face of the sun-dial. The +chief ascent to the top of the bluff where the white people live is +up a steep cement walk about eighty yards long. At the foot of this +a white man will be met by four hammock-bearers, and you will see +him get into the hammock and be carried in it the eighty yards. + +For even that short distance he is taking no chances. But while he +nurses his vitality and cares for his health he does not use the sun +as an excuse for laziness or for slipshod work. I have never seen a +place in the tropics where, in spite of the handicap of damp, fierce +heat, the officers and civil officials are so keenly and constantly +employed, where the bright work was so bright, and the whitewash so +white. + +Out at the barracks of the West African Frontier Force, the +W.A.F.F.'s, the officers, instead of from the shade of the veranda +watching the non-coms. teach a native the manual, were themselves at +work, and each was howling orders at the black recruits and smashing +a gun against his hip and shoulder as smartly as a drill sergeant. I +found the standard maintained at Calabar the more interesting +because the men were almost entirely their own audience. If they +make the place healthy, and attractive-looking, and dress for +dinner, and shy at cocktails, and insist that their tan shoes shall +glow like meershaum pipes, it is not because of the refining +presence of lovely women, but because the men themselves like things +that way. The men of Calabar have learned that when the sun is at +110, morals, like material things, disintegrate, and that, though +the temptation is to go about in bath-room slippers and pajamas, one +is wiser to bolster up his drenched and drooping spirit with a stiff +shirt front and a mess jacket. They tell that in a bush station in +upper Nigeria, one officer got his D.S.O. because with an audience +of only a white sergeant he persisted in a habit of shaving twice a +day. + + [Illustration: The Home of the Thirty Queens of King Mango Bell.] + +There are very few women in Calabar. There are three or four who are +wives of officials, two nurses employed by the government, and the +Mother Superior and Sisters of the Order of St. Joseph, and, of +course, all of them are great belles. For the Sisters, especially +the officers, the government people, the traders, the natives, even +the rival missionaries, have the most tremendous respect and +admiration. The sacrifice of the woman who, to be near her husband +on the Coast, consents to sicken and fade and grow old before her +time, and of the nurse who, to preserve the health of others, risks +her own, is very great; but the sacrifice of the Sisters, who have +renounced all thought of home and husband, and who have exiled +themselves to this steaming swamp-land, seems the most unselfish. In +order to support the 150 little black boys and girls who are at +school at the mission, the Sisters rob themselves of everything +except the little that will keep them alive. Two, in addition to +their work at the mission, act as nurses in the English hospital, +and for that they receive together $600. This forms the sole regular +income of the five women; for each $120 a year. With anything else +that is given them in charity, they buy supplies for the little +converts. They live in a house of sandstone and zinc that holds the +heat like a flat-iron, they are obliged to wear a uniform that is of +material and fashion so unsuited to the tropics that Dr. Chichester, +in charge of the hospital, has written in protest against it to +Rome, and on many days they fast, not because the Church bids them +so to do, but because they have no food. And with it all, these five +gentlewomen are always eager, cheerful, sweet of temper, and a +living blessing to all who meet them. What now troubles them is that +they have no room to accommodate the many young heathen who come to +them to be taught to wear clothes, and to be good little boys and +girls. This is causing the Sisters great distress. Any one who does +not believe in that selfish theory, that charity begins at home, but +who would like to help to spread Christianity in darkest Africa and +give happiness to five noble women, who are giving their lives for +others, should send a postal money order to Marie T. Martin, the +Reverend Mother Superior of the Catholic Mission of Old Calabar, +Southern Nigeria. + +And if you are going to do it, as they say in the advertising pages, +"Do it now!" + + [Illustration: The Mother Superior and Sisters of St. Joseph and + Their Converts at Old Calabar.] + +At Calabar there is a royal prisoner, the King of Benin. He is not +an agreeable king like His Majesty of the Cameroons, but a grossly +fat, sensual-looking young man, who, a few years ago, when he was at +war with the English, made "ju ju" against them by sacrificing three +hundred maidens, his idea being that the ju ju would drive the +English out of Benin. It was poor ju ju, for it drove the young man +himself out of Benin, and now he is a king in exile. As far as I +could see, the social position of the king is insecure, and +certainly in Calabar he does not move in the first circles. One +afternoon, when the four or five ladies of Calabar and Mr. Bedwell, +the Acting Commissioner, and the officers of the W.A.F.F.'s were at +the clubhouse having ice-drinks, the king at the head of a retinue +of cabinet officers, high priests, and wives bore down upon the +club-house with the evident intention of inviting himself to tea. +Personally, I should like to have met a young man who could murder +three hundred girls and worry over it so little that he had not lost +one of his three hundred pounds, but the others were considerably +annoyed and sent an A.D.C. to tell him to "Move on!" as though he +were an organ-grinder, or a performing bear. + +"These kings," exclaimed a subaltern of the W.A.F.F.'s, indignantly, +"are trying to push in everywhere!" + +When we departed from Calabar, the only thing that reconciled me to +leaving it and its charming people, was the fact that when the ship +moved there was a breeze. While at anchor in the river I had found +that not being able to breathe by day or to sleep by night in time +is trying, even to the stoutest constitution. + +One of the married ladies of Calabar, her husband, an officer of +the W.A.F.F.'s, and the captain of the police sailed on the +_Nigeria_ "on leave," and all Calabar came down to do them honor. +There was the commissioner's gig, and the marine captain's gig, and +the police captain's gig, and the gig from "Matilda's," the English +trading house, and one from the Dutch house and the French house, +and each gig was manned by black boys in beautiful uniforms and +fezzes, and each crew fought to tie up to the foot of the +accommodation ladder. It was as gay as a regatta. On the +quarter-deck the officers drank champagne, in the captain's cabin +Hughes treated the traders to beer, in the "square" the non-coms. of +the W.A.F.F.'s drank ale. The men who were going away on leave tried +not to look too happy, and those who were going back to the shore +drank deep and tried not to appear too carelessly gay. A billet on +the West Coast is regarded by the man who accepts it as a sort of +sporting proposition, as a game of three innings of nine months +each, during which he matches his health against the Coast. If he +lives he wins; if he dies the Coast wins. + +After Calabar, at each port off which we anchored, at Ponny, +Focardos, Lagos, Accra, Cape Coast Castle, and Sekonni, it was +always the same. Always there came over the side the man going +"Home," the man who had fought with the Coast and won. He was as +excited, as jubilant as a prisoner sentenced to death who had +escaped his executioners. And always the heartiest in their +congratulations were the men who were left behind, his brother +officers, or his fellow traders, the men of the Sun Hat Brigade, in +their unofficial uniforms, in shirtwaists, broad belts from which +dangled keys and a whistle, beautifully polished tan boots, and with +a wand-like whip or stick of elephant hide. They swarmed the decks +and overwhelmed the escaping refugee with good wishes. He had +cheated their common enemy. By merely keeping alive he had achieved +a glorious victory. In their eyes he had performed a feat of +endurance like swimming the English Channel. They crowded to +congratulate him as people at the pit-mouth congratulate the +entombed miner, who, after many days of breathing noisome gases, +drinks the pure air. Even the black boys seem to feel the triumph +of the white master, and their paddles never flashed so bravely, and +their songs never rang so wildly, as when they were racing him away +from the brooding Coast with its poisonous vapors toward the big +white ship that meant health and home. + +Although most of the ports we saw only from across a mile or two of +breakers, they always sent us something of interest. Sometimes all +the male passengers came on board drunk. With the miners of the Gold +Coast and the "Palm Oil Ruffians" it used to be a matter of +etiquette not to leave the Coast in any other condition. Not so to +celebrate your escape seemed ungenerous and ungrateful. At Sekondi +one of the miners from Ashanti was so completely drunk, that he was +swung over the side, tied up like a plum-pudding, in a bag. + +When he emerged from the bag his expression of polite inquiry was +one with which all could sympathize. To lose consciousness on the +veranda of a café, and awake with a bump on the deck of a steamer +many miles at sea, must strengthen one's belief in magic carpets. + +Another entertainment for the white passengers was when the boat +boys fought for the black passengers as they were lowered in the +mammy-chair. As a rule, in the boats from shore, there were twelve +boys to paddle and three or four extra men to handle and unhook the +mammy-chair and the luggage. While the boys with the paddles +manoeuvred to bring their boat next to the ship's side, the extra +boys tried to pull their rivals overboard, dragging their hands from +ropes and gunwales, and beating them with paddles. They did this +while every second the boat under them was spinning in the air or +diving ten feet into the hollow of the waves, and trying to smash +itself and every other boat into driftwood. From the deck the second +officer would swing a mammy-chair over the side with the idea of +dropping it into one of these boats. But before the chair could be +lowered, a rival boat would shove the first one away, and with a +third boat would be fighting for its place. Meanwhile, high above +the angry sea, the chair and its cargo of black women would be +twirling like a weathercock and banging against the ship's side. The +mammies were too terrified to scream, but the ship's officers +yelled and swore, the boat's crews shrieked, and the black babies +howled. Each baby was strapped between the shoulders of the mother. +A mammy-chair is like one of those two-seated swings in which people +sit facing one another. If to the shoulders of each person in the +swing was tied a baby, it is obvious that should the swing bump into +anything, the baby would get the worst of it. That is what happened +in the mammy-chair. Every time the chair spun around, the head of a +baby would come "crack!" against the ship's side. So the babies +howled, and no one of the ship's passengers, crowded six deep along +the rail, blamed them. The skull of the Ethiopian may be hard, but +it is most unfair to be swathed like a mummy so that you can neither +kick nor strike back, and then have your head battered against a +five-thousand-ton ship. + +How the boys who paddled the shore boats live long enough to learn +how to handle them is a great puzzle. We were told that the method +was to take out one green boy with a crew of eleven experts. But how +did the original eleven become experts? At Accra, where the waves +are very high and rough, are the best boat boys on the coast. We +watched the Custom House boat fight her way across the two miles of +surf to the shore. The fight lasted two hours. It was as thrilling +as watching a man cross Niagara Falls on a tight-rope. The greater +part of the two hours the boat stood straight in the air, as though +it meant to shake the crew into the sea, and the rest of the time it +ran between walls of water ten feet high and was entirely lost to +sight. Two things about the paddling on the West Coast make it +peculiar; the boys sit, not on the thwarts, but on the gunwales, as +a woman rides a side-saddle, and in many parts of the coast the boys +use paddles shaped like a fork or a trident. One asks how, sitting +as they do, they are able to brace themselves, and how with their +forked paddles they obtained sufficient resistance. A coaster's +explanation of the split paddle was that the boys did not want any +more resistance than they could prevent. + + [Illustration: The Kroo Boys Sit, Not On the Thwarts, but On the + Gunwales, as a Woman Rides a Side Saddle.] + +There is no more royal manner of progress than when one of these +boats lifts you over the waves, with the boys chanting some wild +chorus, with their bare bodies glistening, their teeth and eyes +shining, the splendid muscles straining, and the dripping paddles +flashing like twelve mirrors. + +Some of the chiefs have canoes of as much as sixty men-power, +and when these men sing, and their bodies and voices are in +unison, a war canoe seems the only means of locomotion, and a +sixty-horse-power racing car becomes a vehicle suited only to the +newly rich. + +I knew I had left the West Coast when, the very night we sailed from +Sierra Leone, for greater comfort, I reached for a linen bed-spread +that during four stifling, reeking weeks had lain undisturbed at the +foot of the berth. During that time I had hated it as a monstrous +thing; as something as hot and heavy as a red flannel blanket, as a +buffalo robe. And when, on the following night, I found the +wind-screen was not in the air port, and that, nevertheless, I still +was alive, I knew we had passed out of reach of the Equator, and +that all that followed would be as conventional as the "trippers" +who joined us at the Canary Isles; and as familiar as the low, gray +skies, the green, rain-soaked hills, and the complaining Channel +gulls that convoyed us into Plymouth Harbor. + + + + +VII + +ALONG THE EAST COAST + + +Were a man picked up on a flying carpet and dropped without warning +into Lorenço Marquez, he might guess for a day before he could make +up his mind where he was, or determine to which nation the place +belonged. + +If he argued from the adobe houses with red-tiled roofs and walls of +cobalt blue, the palms, and the yellow custom-house, he might think +he was in Santiago; the Indian merchants in velvet and gold +embroideries seated in deep, dark shops which breathe out dry, +pungent odors, might take him back to Bombay; the Soudanese and +Egyptians in long blue night-gowns and freshly ironed fezzes would +remind him of Cairo; the dwarfish Portuguese soldiers, of Madeira, +Lisbon, and Madrid, and the black, bare-legged policemen in khaki +with great numerals on their chests, of Benin, Sierra Leone, or +Zanzibar. After he had noted these and the German, French, and +English merchants in white duck, and the Dutch man-of-warsmen, who +look like ship's stewards, the French marines in coal-scuttle +helmets, the British Jack-tars in their bare feet, and the native +Kaffir women, each wrapped in a single, gorgeous shawl with a black +baby peering from beneath her shoulder-blades, he would decide, by +using the deductive methods of Sherlock Holmes, that he was in the +Midway of the Chicago Fair. + +Several hundred years ago Da Gama sailed into Delagoa Bay and +founded the town of Lorenço Marquez, and since that time the +Portuguese have always felt that it is only due to him and to +themselves to remain there. They have great pride of race, and they +like the fact that they possess and govern a colony. So, up to the +present time, in spite of many temptations to dispose of it, they +have made the ownership of Delagoa Bay an article of their national +religion. But their national religion does not require of them to +improve their property. And to-day it is much as it was when the +sails of Da Gama's fleet first stirred its poisonous vapors. + +The harbor itself is an excellent one and the bay is twenty-two +miles along, but there is only one landing-pier, and that such a +pier as would be considered inconsistent with the dignity of the +Larchmont Yacht Club. To the town itself Portugal has been content +to contribute as her share the gatherers of taxes, collectors of +customs and dispensers of official seals. She is indifferent to the +fact that the bulk of general merchandise, wine, and machinery that +enter her port is brought there by foreigners. She only demands that +they buy her stamps. Her importance in her own colony is that of a +toll-gate at the entrance of a great city. + +Lorenço Marquez is not a spot which one would select for a home. +When I was first there, the deaths from fever were averaging fifteen +a day, and men who dined at the club one evening were buried +hurriedly before midnight, and when I returned in the winter months, +the fever had abated, but on the night we arrived twenty men were +robbed. The fact that we complained to the police about one of the +twenty robberies struck the commandant as an act of surprising and +unusual interest. We gathered from his manner that the citizens of +Lorenço Marquez look upon being robbed as a matter too personal and +selfish with which to trouble the police. It was perhaps credulous +of us, as our hotel was liberally labelled with notices warning its +patrons that "Owing to numerous robberies in this hotel, our guests +will please lock their doors." This was one of three hotels owned by +the same man. One of the others had been described to us as the +"tough" hotel, and at the other, a few weeks previous, a friend had +found a puff-adder barring his bedroom door. The choice was somewhat +difficult. + +On her way from Lorenço Marquez to Beira our ship, the _Kanzlar_, +kept close to the shore, and showed us low-lying banks of yellow +sand and coarse green bushes. There was none of the majesty of +outline which reaches from Table Bay to Durban, none of the blue +mountains of the Colony, nor the deeply wooded table-lands and great +inlets of Kaffraria. The rocks which stretch along the southern +coast and against which the waves break with a report like the +bursting of a lyddite shell, had disappeared, and along Gazaland and +the Portuguese territory only swamps and barren sand-hills +accompanied us in a monotonous yellow line. From the bay we saw +Beira as a long crescent of red-roofed houses, many of them of four +stories with verandas running around each story, like those of the +summer hotels along the Jersey coast. It is a town built upon the +sands, with a low stone breakwater, but without a pier or jetty, the +lack of which gives it a temporary, casual air as though it were +more a summer resort than the one port of entry for all Rhodesia. It +suggested Coney Island to one, and to others Asbury Park and the +board-walk at Atlantic City. When we found that in spite of her +Portuguese flags and naked blacks, Beira reminded us of nothing +except an American summer-resort, we set to discovering why this +should be, and decided it was because, after the red dust of the +Colony and the Transvaal, we saw again stretches of white sand, and +instead of corrugated zinc, flimsy houses of wood, which you felt +were only opened for the summer season and which for the rest of +the year remained boarded up against driven sands and equinoctial +gales. Beira need only to have added to her "Sea-View" and "Beach" +hotels, a few bathing-suits drying on a clothes-line, a tin-type +artist, and a merry-go-round, to make us feel perfectly at home. +Beira being the port on the Indian Ocean which feeds Mashonaland and +Matabeleland and the English settlers in and around Buluwayo and +Salisbury, English influence has proclaimed itself there in many +ways. When we touched, which was when the British soldiers were +moving up to Rhodesia, the place, in comparison with Lorenço +Marquez, was brisk, busy, and clean. Although both are ostensibly +Portuguese, Beira is to Lorenço Marquez what the cleanest street of +Greenwich Village, of New York City, is to "Hell's Kitchen" and the +Chinese Quarter. The houses were well swept and cool, the shops were +alluring, the streets were of clean shifting white sand, and the +sidewalks, of gray cement, were as well kept as a Philadelphia +doorstep. The most curious feature of Beira is her private tram-car +system. These cars run on tiny tracks which rise out of the sand +and extend from one end of the town to the other, with branch lines +running into the yards of shops and private houses. The motive power +for these cars is supplied by black boys who run behind and push +them. Their trucks are about half as large as those on the hand-cars +we see flying along our railroad tracks at home, worked by gangs of +Italian laborers. On some of the trucks there is only a bench, +others are shaded by awnings, and a few have carriage-lamps and +cushioned seats and carpets. Each of them is a private conveyance; +there is not one which can be hired by the public. When a merchant +wishes to go down town to the port, his black boys carry his private +tram-car from his garden and settle it on the rails, the merchant +seats himself, and the boys push him and his baby-carriage to +whatever part of the city he wishes to go. When his wife is out +shopping and stops at a store the boys lift her car into the sand in +order to make a clear track for any other car which may be coming +behind them. One would naturally suppose that with the tracks and +switch-boards and sidings already laid, the next step would be to +place cars upon them for the convenience of the public, but this is +not the case, and the tracks through the city are jealously reserved +for the individuals who tax themselves five pounds a year to extend +them and to keep them in repair. After the sleds on the island of +Madeira these private street-cars of Beira struck me as being the +most curious form of conveyance I had ever seen. + + [Illustration: Going Visiting in Her Private Tram-car at Beira.] + +Beira was occupied by the Companhia de Mozambique with the idea of +feeding Salisbury and Buluwayo from the north, and drawing away some +of the trade which at that time was monopolized by the merchants of +Cape Town and Durban. But the tse-tse fly belt lay between Beira on +the coast and the boundary of the Chartered Company's possessions, +and as neither oxen nor mules could live to cross this, it was +necessary, in order to compete with the Cape-Buluwayo line, to build +a railroad through the swamp and jungle. This road is now in +operation. It is two hundred and twenty miles in length, and in the +brief period of two months, during the long course of its progress +through the marshes, two hundred of the men working on it died of +fever. Some years ago, during a boundary dispute between the +Portuguese and the Chartered Company, there was a clash between the +Portuguese soldiers and the British South African police. How this +was settled and the honor of the Portuguese officials satisfied, +Kipling has told us in the delightful tale of "Judson and the +Empire." It was off Beira that Judson fished up a buoy and anchored +it over a sand-bar upon which he enticed the Portuguese gunboat. A +week before we touched at Beira, the Portuguese had rearranged all +the harbor buoys, but, after the casual habits of their race, had +made no mention of the fact. The result was that the _Kanzlar_ was +hung up for twenty-four hours. We tried to comfort ourselves by +thinking that we were undoubtedly occupying the same mud-bank which +had been used by the strategic Judson to further the course of +empire. + +The _Kanzlar_ could not cross the bar to go to Chinde, so the +_Adjutant_, which belongs to the same line and which was created for +these shallow waters, came to the _Kanzlar_, bringing Chinde with +her. She brought every white man in the port, and those who could +not come on board our ship remained contentedly on the _Adjutant_, +clinging to her rail as she alternately sank below, or was tossed +high above us. For three hours they smiled with satisfaction as +though they felt that to have escaped from Chinde, for even that +brief time, was sufficient recompense for a thorough ducking and the +pains of sea-sickness. On the bridge of the _Adjutant_, in white +duck and pith helmets, were the only respectable members of Chinde +society. We knew that they were the only respectable members of +Chinde society, because they told us so themselves. On her lower +deck she brought two French explorers, fully dressed for the part as +Tartarin of Tarascon might have dressed it in white havelocks and +gaiters buckled up to the thighs, and clasping express rifles in new +leather cases. From her engine-room came stokers from Egypt, and +from her forward deck Malays in fresh white linen, Mohammedans in +fez and turban, Portuguese officials, chiefly in decorations, Indian +coolies and Zanzibari boys, very black and very beautiful, who wound +and unwound long blue strips of cotton about their shoulders, or +ears, or thighs as the heat, or the nature of the work of unloading +required. Among these strange peoples were goats, as delicately +colored as a meerschaum pipe, and with the horns of our red deer, +strange white oxen with humps behind the shoulders, those that are +exhibited in cages at home as "sacred buffalo," but which here are +only patient beasts of burden, and gray monkeys, wildcats, snakes +and crocodiles in cages addressed to "Hagenbeck, Hamburg." The +freight was no less curious; assegais in bundles, horns stretching +for three feet from point to point, or rising straight, like +poignards; skins, ground-nuts, rubber, and heavy blocks of bees-wax +wrapped in coarse brown sacking, and which in time will burn before +the altars of Roman Catholic churches in Italy, Spain, and France. + +People of the "Bromide" class who run across a friend from their own +city in Paris will say, "Well, to think of meeting _you_ here. How +small the world is after all!" If they wish a better proof of how +really small it is, how closely it is knit together, how the +existence of one canning-house in Chicago supports twenty stores in +Durban, they must follow, not the missionary or the explorers, not +the punitive expeditions, but the man who wishes to buy, and the man +who brings something to sell. Trade is what has brought the +latitudes together and made the world the small department store it +is, and forced one part of it to know and to depend upon the other. + +The explorer tells you, "I was the first man to climb Kilamajaro." +"I was the first to cut a path from the shores of Lake Nyassa into +the Congo Basin." He even lectures about it, in front of a wet sheet +in the light of a stereopticon, and because he has added some miles +of territory to the known world, people buy his books and learned +societies place initials after his distinguished name. But before +his grandfather was born and long before he ever disturbed the +waters of Nyassa the Phoenicians and Arabs and Portuguese and men +of his own time and race had been there before him to buy ivory, +both white and black, to exchange beads and brass bars and +shaving-mirrors for the tusks of elephants, raw gold, copra, rubber, +and the feathers of the ostrich. Statesmen will modestly say that a +study of the map showed them how the course of empire must take its +way into this or that undiscovered wilderness, and that in +consequence, at their direction, armies marched to open these tracts +which but for their prescience would have remained a desert. But +that was not the real reason. A woman wanted three feathers to wear +at Buckingham Palace, and to oblige her a few unimaginative traders, +backed by a man who owned a tramp steamer, opened up the East Coast +of Africa; another wanted a sealskin sacque, and fleets of ships +faced floating ice under the Northern Lights. The bees of the Shire +Riverway help to illuminate the cathedrals of St. Peters and Notre +Dame, and back of Mozambique thousands of rubber-trees are being +planted to-day, because, at the other end of the globe, people want +tires for their automobiles; and because the fashionable ornament of +the natives of Swaziland is, for no reason, no longer blue-glass +beads, manufacturers of beads in Switzerland and Italy find +themselves out of pocket by some thousands and thousands of pounds. + +The traders who were making the world smaller by bringing cotton +prints to Chinde to cover her black nakedness, her British Majesty's +consul at that port, and the boy lieutenant of the paddle-wheeled +gunboat which patrols the Zambesi River, were the gentlemen who +informed me that they were the only respectable members of Chinde +society. They came over the side with the gratitude of sailors whom +the _Kanzlar_ might have picked up from a desert island, where they +had been marooned and left to rot. They observed the gilded glory of +the _Kanzlar_ smoking-room, its mirrors and marble-topped tables, +with the satisfaction and awe of the California miner, who found all +the elegance of civilization in the red plush of a Broadway omnibus. +The boy-commander of the gunboat gazed at white women in the saloon +with fascinated admiration. + +"I have never," he declared, breathlessly, "I have never seen so +many beautiful women in one place at the same time! I'd forgotten +that there were so many white people in the world." + +"If I stay on board this ship another minute I shall go home," said +Her Majesty's consul, firmly. "You will have to hold me. It's coming +over me--I feel it coming. I shall never have the strength to go +back." He appealed to the sympathetic lieutenant. "Let's desert +together," he begged. + + [Illustration: One-half of the Street Cleaning Department of + Mozambique.] + +In the swamps of the East Coast the white exiles lay aside the +cloaks and masks of crowded cities. They do not try to conceal their +feelings, their vices, or their longings. They talk to the first +white stranger they meet of things which in the great cities a man +conceals even from his room-mate, and men they would not care to +know, and whom they would never meet in the fixed social pathways of +civilization, they take to their hearts as friends. They are too few +to be particular, they have no choice, and they ask no questions. It +is enough that the white man, like themselves, is condemned to +exile. They do not try to find solace in the thought that they are +the "foretrekkers" of civilization, or take credit to themselves +because they are the path-finders and the pioneers who bear the heat +and burden of the day. They are sorry for themselves, because they +know, more keenly than any outsider can know, how good is the life +they have given up, and how hard is the one they follow, but they do +not ask anyone else to be sorry. They would be very much surprised +if they thought you saw in their struggle against native and +Portuguese barbarism, fever, and savage tribes, a life of great good +and value, full of self-renunciation, heroism, and self-sacrifice. + +On the day they boarded the _Kanzlar_ the pains of nostalgia were +sweeping over the respectable members of Chinde society like waves +of nausea, and tearing them. With a grim appreciation of their own +condition, they smiled mockingly at the ladies on the quarter-deck, +as you have seen prisoners grin through the bars; they were even +boisterous and gay, but their gayety was that of children at recess, +who know that when the bell rings they are going back to the desk. + +A little English boy ran through the smoking-room, and they fell +upon him, and quarrelled for the privilege of holding him on their +knees. He was a shy, coquettish little English boy, and the +boisterous, noisy men did not appeal to him. To them he meant home +and family and the old nursery, papered with colored pictures from +the Christmas _Graphic_. His stout, bare legs and tangled curls and +sailor's hat, with "H.M.S. Mars" across it, meant all that was clean +and sweet-smelling in their past lives. + +"I'll arrest you for a deserter," said the lieutenant of the +gunboat. "I'll make the consul send you back to the _Mars_." He held +the boy on his knee fearfully, handling him as though he were some +delicate and precious treasure that might break if he dropped it. + +The agent of the Oceanic Development Company, Limited, whose +business in life is to drive savage Angonis out of the jungle, where +he hopes in time to see the busy haunts of trade, begged for the boy +with eloquent pleading. + +"You've had the kiddie long enough now," he urged. "Let me have him. +Come here, Mr. Mars, and sit beside me, and I'll give you fizzy +water--like lemon-squash, only nicer." He held out a wet bottle of +champagne alluringly. + +"No, he is coming to his consul," that youth declared. "He's coming +to his consul for protection. You are not fit characters to +associate with an innocent child. Come to me, little boy, and do not +listen to those degraded persons." So the "innocent child" seated +himself between the consul and the chartered trader, and they patted +his fat calves and red curls and took his minute hands in their +tanned fists, eying him hungrily, like two cannibals. But the little +boy was quite unconscious and inconsiderate of their hunger, and, +with the cruelty of children, pulled himself free and ran away. + +"He was such a nice little kiddie," they said, apologetically, as +though they felt they had been caught in some act of weakness. + +"I haven't got a card with me; I haven't needed one for two years," +said the lieutenant, genially. "But fancy your knowing Sparks! He +has the next station to mine; I'm at one end of the Shire River and +he's at the other; he patrols from Fort Johnson up to the top of the +lake. I suppose you've heard him play the banjo, haven't you? That's +where we hit it off--we're both terribly keen about the banjo. I +suppose if it wasn't for my banjo, I'd go quite off my head down +here. I know Sparks would. You see, I have these chaps at Chinde to +talk to, and up at Tete there's the Portuguese governor, but Sparks +has only six white men scattered along Nyassa for three hundred +miles." + +I had heard of Sparks and the six white men. They grew so lonely +that they agreed to meet once a month at some central station and +spend the night together, and they invited Sparks to attend the +second meeting. But when he arrived he found that they had organized +a morphine club, and the only six white men on Lake Nyassa were +sitting around a table with their sleeves rolled up, giving +themselves injections. Sparks told them it was a "disgusting +practice," and put back to his gunboat. I recalled the story to the +lieutenant, and he laughed mournfully. + +"Yes," he said; "and what's worse is that we're here for two years +more, with all this fighting going on at the Cape and in China. +Still, we have our banjos, and the papers are only six weeks old, +and the steamer stops once every month." + + [Illustration: Custom House, Zanzibar.] + +Fortunately there were many bags of bees-wax to come over the side, +so we had time in which to give the exiles the news of the outside +world, and they told us of their present and past lives: of how one +as an American filibuster had furnished coal to the Chinese Navy; +how another had sold "ready to wear" clothes in a New York +department store, and another had been attaché at Madrid, and +another in charge of the forward guns of a great battle-ship. We +exchanged addresses and agreed upon the restaurant where we would +meet two years hence to celebrate their freedom, and we emptied many +bottles of iced-beer, and the fact that it was iced seemed to affect +the exiles more than the fact that it was beer. + +But at last the ship's whistle blew with raucous persistence. It was +final and heartless. It rang down the curtain on the mirage which +once a month comes to mock Chinde with memories of English villages, +of well-kept lawns melting into the Thames, of London asphalt and +flashing hansoms. With a jangling of bells in the engine-room the +mirage disappeared, and in five minutes to the exiles of Chinde the +_Kanzlar_ became a gray tub with a pennant of smoke on the horizon +line. + +I have known some men for many years, smoked and talked with them +until improper hours of the morning, known them well enough to +borrow their money, even their razors, and parted from them with +never a pang. But when our ship abandoned those boys to the unclean +land behind them, I could see them only in a blurred and misty +group. We raised our hats to them and tried to cheer, but it was +more of a salute than a cheer. I had never seen them before, I shall +never meet them again--we had just burned signals as our ships +passed in the night--and yet, I must always consider among the +friends I have lost, those white-clad youths who are making the ways +straight for others through the dripping jungles of the Zambesi, +"the only respectable members of Chinde Society."[A] + +[Footnote A: NOTE--I did not lose the white-clad youths. The +lieutenant now is the commander of a cruiser, and the consul, a +consul-general; and they write me that the editor of the Chinde +newspaper, on his editorial page, has complained that he, also, +should be included among the respectable members of Chinde Society. +He claims his absence at Tete, at the time of the visit of the +_Kanzlar_, alone prevented his social position being publicly +recognized. That justice may be done, he, now, is officially, though +tardily, created a member of Chinde's respectable society. R.H.D.] + +The profession of the slave-trader, unless it be that of his +contemporary, the pirate preying under his black flag, is the one +which holds you with the most grewsome and fascinating interest. Its +inhumanity, its legends of predatory expeditions into unknown +jungles of Africa, the long return marches to the Coast, the +captured blacks who fall dead in the trail, the dead pulling down +with their chains those who still live, the stifling holds of the +slave-ships, the swift flights before pursuing ships-of-war, the +casting away, when too closely chased, of the ship's cargo, and the +sharks that followed, all of these come back to one as he walks the +shore-wall of Mozambique. From there he sees the slave-dhows in the +harbor, the jungles on the mainland through which the slaves came by +the thousands, and still come one by one, and the ancient palaces of +the Portuguese governors, dead now some hundreds of years, to whom +this trade in human agony brought great wealth, and no loss of +honor. + + [Illustration: Chain-gangs of Petty Offenders Outside of Zanzibar.] + +Mozambique in the days of her glory was, with Zanzibar, the great +slave-market of East Africa, and the Portuguese and the Arabs who +fattened on this traffic built themselves great houses there, and a +fortress capable, in the event of a siege, of holding the garrison +and all the inhabitants as well. To-day the slave-trade brings to +those who follow it more of adventure than of financial profit, but +the houses and the official palaces and the fortress still remain, +and they are, in color, indescribably beautiful. Blue and pink and +red and light yellow are spread over their high walls, and have been +so washed and chastened by the rain and sun, that the whole city has +taken on the faint, soft tints of a once brilliant water-color. The +streets themselves are unpeopled, empty and strangely silent. Their +silence is as impressive as their beauty. In the heat of the day, +which is from sunrise to past sunset, you see no one, you hear no +footfall, no voices, no rumble of wheels or stamp of horses' hoofs. +The bare feet of the native, who is the only human being who dares +to move abroad, makes no sound, and in Mozambique there are no +carriages and no horses. Two bullock-carts, which collect scraps and +refuse from the white staring streets, are the only carts in the +city, and with the exception of a dozen 'rikshas are the only +wheeled vehicles the inhabitants have seen. + +I have never visited a city which so impressed one with the fact +that, in appearance, it had remained just as it was four hundred +years before. There is no decay, no ruins, no sign of disuse; it is, +on the contrary, clean and brilliantly beautiful in color, with +dancing blue waters all about it, and with enormous palms moving +above the towering white walls and red tiled roofs, but it is a city +of the dead. The open-work iron doors, with locks as large as +letter-boxes, are closed, the wooden window-shutters are barred, and +the wares in the shops are hidden from the sidewalk by heavy +curtains. There is a park filled with curious trees and with flowers +of gorgeous color, but the park is as deserted as a cemetery; along +the principal streets stretch mosaic pavements formed of great +blocks of white and black stone, they look like elongated +checker-boards, but no one walks upon them, and though there are +palaces painted blue, and government buildings in Pompeiian red, and +churches in chaste gray and white, there are no sentries to guard +the palaces, nor no black-robed priests enter or leave the +churches. They are like the palaces of a theatre, set on an empty +stage, and waiting for the actors. It will be a long time before the +actors come to Mozambique. It is, and will remain, a city of the +fifteenth century. It is now only a relic of a cruel and barbarous +period, when the Portuguese governors, the "gentlemen adventurers," +and the Arab slave-dealers, under its blue skies, and hidden within +its barred and painted walls, led lives of magnificent debauchery, +when the tusks of ivory were piled high along its water-front, and +the dhows at anchor reeked with slaves, and when in the +market-place, where the natives now sit bargaining over a bunch of +bananas or a basket of dried fish, their forefathers were themselves +bought and sold. + +In the five hundred years in which he has claimed the shore line of +East Africa from south of Lorenço Marquez to north of Mozambique, +and many hundreds of miles inland, the Portuguese has been the dog +in the manger among nations. In all that time he has done nothing to +help the land or the people whom he pretends to protect, and he +keeps those who would improve both from gaining any hold or +influence over either. It is doubtful if his occupation of the East +Coast can endure much longer. The English and the Germans now +surround him on every side. Even handicapped as they are by the lack +of the seaports which he enjoys, they have forced their way into the +country which lies beyond his and which bounds his on every side. +They have opened up this country with little railroads, with lonely +lengths of telegraph wires, and with their launches and gunboats +they have joined, by means of the Zambesi and Chinde Rivers, new +territories to the great Indian Ocean. His strip of land, which bars +them from the sea, is still unsettled and unsafe, its wealth +undeveloped, its people untamed. He sits at his café at the coast +and collects custom-dues and sells stamped paper. For fear of the +native he dares not march five miles beyond his sea-port town, and +the white men who venture inland for purposes of trade or to +cultivate plantations do so at their own risk, he can promise them +no protection. + +The land back of Mozambique is divided into "holdings," and the rent +of each holding is based upon the number of native huts it +contains. The tax per hut is one pound a year, and these holdings +are leased to any Portuguese who promises to pay the combined taxes +of all the huts. He also engages to cut new roads, to keep those +already made in repair, and to furnish a sufficient number of police +to maintain order. The lessees of these holdings have given rise to +many and terrible scandals. In the majority of cases, the lessee, +once out of reach of all authority and of public opinion, and +wielding the power of life and death, becomes a tyrant and +task-master over his district, taxing the natives to five and ten +times the amount which each is supposed to furnish, and treating +them virtually as his bondsmen. Up along the Shire River, the +lessees punish the blacks by hanging them from a tree by their +ankles and beating their bare backs with rhinoceros hide, until, as +it has been described to me by a reputable English resident, the +blood runs in a stream over the negro's shoulders, and forms a pool +beneath his eyes. + + [Illustration: The Ivory on the Right, Covered Only with Sacking, + Is Ready for Shipment to Boston, U.S.A.] + +You hear of no legitimate enterprise fostered by these lessees, of +no development of natural resources, but, instead, you are told +tales of sickening cruelty, and you can read in the consular +reports others quite as true; records of heartless treatment of +natives, of neglect of great resources, and of hurried snatching at +the year's crop and a return to the Coast, with nothing to show of +sustained effort or steady development. The incompetence of Portugal +cannot endure. Now that England has taken the Transvaal from the +Boer, she will find the seaport of Lorenço Marquez too necessary to +her interests to much longer leave it in the itching palms of the +Portuguese officials. Beira she also needs to feed Rhodesia, and the +Zambesi and Chinde Rivers to supply the British Central African +Company. Farther north, the Germans will find that if they mean to +make German Central Africa pay, they must control the seaboard. It +seems inevitable that, between the two great empires, the little +kingdom of Portugal will be crowded out, and having failed to +benefit either herself or anyone else on the East Coast, she will +withdraw from it, in favor of those who are fitter to survive her. + +There is no more interesting contrast along the coast of East +Africa than that presented by the colonies of England, Germany, and +Portugal. Of these three, the colonies of the Englishmen are, as one +expects to find them, the healthiest, the busiest, and the most +prosperous. They thrive under your very eyes; you feel that they +were established where they are, not by accident, not to gratify a +national vanity or a ruler's ambition, but with foresight and with +knowledge, and with the determination to make money; and that they +will increase and flourish because they are situated where the +natives and settlers have something to sell, and where the men can +bring, in return, something the natives and colonials wish to buy. +Port Elizabeth, Durban, East London, and Zanzibar belong to this +prosperous class, which gives good reason for the faith of those who +founded them. + +On the other hand, as opposed to these, there are the settlements of +the Portuguese, rotten and corrupt, and the German settlements of +Dar Es Salaam and Tanga which have still to prove their right to +exist. Outwardly, to the eye, they are model settlements. Dar Es +Salaam, in particular, is a beautiful and perfectly appointed +colonial town. In the care in which it is laid out, in the +excellence of its sanitary arrangements, in its cleanliness, and in +the magnificence of its innumerable official residences, and in +their sensible adaptability to the needs of the climate, one might +be deceived into believing that Dar Es Salaam is the beautiful +gateway of a thriving and busy colony. But there are no ramparts of +merchandise along her wharves, no bulwarks of strangely scented +bales blocking her water-front; no lighters push hurriedly from the +shore to meet the ship, although she is a German ship, or to receive +her cargo of articles "made in Germany." On the contrary, her +freight is unloaded at the English ports, and taken on at English +ports. And the German traders who send their merchandise to Hamburg +in her hold come over the side at Zanzibar, at Durban, and at Aden, +where the English merchants find in them fierce competitors. There +is nothing which goes so far to prove the falsity of the saying that +"trade follows the flag" as do these model German colonies with +their barracks, governor's palace, officers' clubs, public pleasure +parks, and with no trade; and the English colonies, where the German +merchants remain, and where, under the English flag, they grow +steadily rich. The German Emperor, believing that colonies are a +source of strength to an empire, rather than the weakness that they +are, has raised the German flag in Central East Africa, but the +ships of the German East African Company, subsidized by him, carry +their merchandize to the English ports, and his German subjects +remain where they can make the most money. They do not move to those +ports where the flag of their country would wave over them. + +Dar Es Salaam, although it lacks the one thing needful to make it a +model settlement, possesses all the other things which are needful, +and many which are pure luxuries. Its residences, as I have said, +have been built after the most approved scientific principles of +ventilation and sanitation. In no tropical country have I seen +buildings so admirably adapted to the heat and climatic changes and +at the same time more in keeping with the surrounding scenery. They +are handsome, cool-looking, white and clean, with broad verandas, +high walls, and false roofs under which currents of air are lured in +spite of themselves. The residences are set back along the high bank +which faces the bay. In front of them is a public promenade, newly +planted shade-trees arch over it, and royal palms reach up to it +from the very waters of the harbor. At one end of this semicircle +are the barracks of the Soudanese soldiers, and at the other is the +official palace of the governor. Everything in the settlement is +new, and everything is built on the scale of a city, and with the +idea of accommodating a great number of people. Hotels and cafés, +better than any one finds in the older settlements along the coast, +are arranged on the water-front, and there is a church capable of +seating the entire white population at one time. If the place is to +grow, it can do so only through trade, and when trade really comes +all these palaces and cafés and barracks which occupy the entire +water-front will have to be pushed back to make way for warehouses +and custom-house sheds. At present it is populated only by +officials, and, I believe, twelve white women. + + [Illustration: The Late Sultan of Zanzibar in His State Carriage.] + +You feel that it is an experiment, that it has been sent out like a +box of children's building blocks, and set up carefully on this +beautiful harbor. All that Dar Es Salaam needs now is trade and +emigrants. At present it is a show place, and might be exhibited at +a world's fair as an example of a model village. + +In writing of Zanzibar I am embarrassed by the knowledge that I am +not an unprejudiced witness. I fell in love with Zanzibar at first +sight, and the more I saw of it the more I wanted to take my luggage +out of the ship's hold and cable to my friends to try and have me +made Vice-Consul to Zanzibar through all succeeding administrations. + +Zanzibar runs back abruptly from a white beach in a succession of +high white walls. It glistens and glares, and dazzles you; the sand +at your feet is white, the city itself is white, the robes of the +people are white. It has no public landing-pier. Your rowboat is run +ashore on a white shelving beach, and you face an impenetrable mass +of white walls. The blue waters are behind you, the lofty +fortress-like façade before you, and a strip of white sand is at +your feet. + +And while you are wondering where this hidden city may be, a kind +resident takes you by the hand and pilots you through a narrow crack +in the rampart, along a twisting fissure between white-washed walls +where the sun cannot reach, past great black doorways of carved oak, +and out suddenly into the light and laughter and roar of Zanzibar. + +In the narrow streets are all the colors of the Orient, gorgeous, +unshaded, and violent; cobalt blue, greens, and reds on framework, +windows, and doorways; red and yellow in the awnings and curtains of +the bazaars, and orange and black, red and white, yellow, dark blue, +and purple, in the long shawls of the women. It is the busiest, and +the brightest and richest in color of all the ports along the East +African coast. Were it not for its narrow streets and its towering +walls it would be a place of perpetual sunshine. Everybody is either +actively busy, or contentedly idle. It is all movement, noise, and +glitter, everyone is telling everyone else to make way before him; +the Indian merchants beseech you from the open bazaars; their +children, swathed in gorgeous silks and hung with jewels and +bangles, stumble under your feet, the Sultan's troops assail you +with fife and drum, and the black women, wrapped below their bare +shoulders in the colors of the butterfly, and with teeth and brows +dyed purple, crowd you to the wall. Outside the city there are long +and wonderful roads between groves of the bulky mango-tree of +richest darkest green and the bending palm, shading deserted palaces +of former Sultans, temples of the Indian worshippers, native huts, +and the white-walled country residences and curtained verandas of +the white exiles. It is absurd to write them down as exiles, for it +is a Mohammedan Paradise to which they have been exiled. + +The exiles themselves will tell you that the reason you think +Zanzibar is a paradise, is because you have your steamer ticket in +your pocket. But that retort shows their lack of imagination, and a +vast ingratitude to those who have preceded them. For the charm of +Zanzibar lies in the fact that while the white men have made it +healthy and clean, have given it good roads, good laws, protection +for the slaves, quick punishment for the slave-dealers, and a firm +government under a benign and gentle Sultan, they have done all of +this without destroying one flash of its local color, or one throb +of its barbaric life, which is the showy, sunshiny, and sumptuous +life of the Far East. The good things of civilization are there, but +they are unobtrusive, and the evils of civilization appear not at +all, the native does not wear a derby hat with a kimona, as he does +in Japan, nor offer you souvenirs of Zanzibar manufactured in +Birmingham; Reuter's telegrams at the club and occasional steamers +alone connect his white masters with the outer world, and so +infrequent is the visiting stranger that the local phrase-book for +those who wish to converse in the native tongue is compiled chiefly +for the convenience of midshipmen when searching a slave-dhow. + + [Illustration: H.S.H. Hamud bin Muhamad bin Said, the Late Sultan + of Zanzibar.] + +Zanzibar is an "Arabian Nights" city, a comic-opera capital, a most +difficult city to take seriously. There is not a street, or any +house in any street, that does not suggest in its architecture and +decoration the untrammelled fancy of the scenic artist. You feel +sure that the latticed balconies are canvas, that the white adobe +walls are supported from behind by braces, that the sunshine is a +carbon light, that the chorus of boatmen who hail you on landing +will reappear immediately costumed as the Sultan's body-guard, that +the women bearing water-jars on their shoulders will come on in the +next scene as slaves of the harem, and that the national anthem will +prove to be Sousa's Typical Tune of Zanzibar. + +Several hundred years ago the Sultans of Zanzibar grew powerful and +wealthy through exporting slaves and ivory from the mainland. These +were not two separate industries, but one was developed by the other +and was dependent upon it. The procedure was brutally simple. A +slave-trader, having first paid his tribute to the Sultan, crossed +to the mainland, and marching into the interior made his bargain +with one of the local chiefs for so much ivory, and for so many men +to carry it down to the coast. Without some such means of transport +there could have been no bargain, so the chief who was anxious to +sell would select a village which had not paid him the taxes due +him, and bid the trader help himself to what men he found there. +Then would follow a hideous night attack, a massacre of women and +children, and the taking prisoners of all able-bodied males. These +men, chained together in long lines, and each bearing a heavy tooth +of ivory upon his shoulder, would be whipped down to the coast. It +was only when they had carried the ivory there, and their work was +finished, that the idea presented itself of selling them as well as +the ivory. Later, these bearers became of equal value with the +ivory, and the raiding of native villages and the capture of men and +women to be sold into slavery developed into a great industry. The +industry continues fitfully to-day, but it is carried on under great +difficulties, and at a risk of heavy punishments. What is called +"domestic slavery" is recognized on the island of Zanzibar, the vast +clove plantations which lie back of the port employing many hundreds +of these domestic slaves. It is not to free these from their slight +bondage that the efforts of those who are trying to suppress the +slave-trade is to-day directed, but to prevent others from being +added to their number. What slave-trading there is at present is by +Arabs and Indians. They convey the slaves in dhows from the mainland +to Madagascar, Arabia, or southern Persia, and to the Island of +Pemba, which lies north of Zanzibar, and only fifteen miles from the +mainland. If a slave can be brought this short distance in safety he +can be sold for five hundred dollars; on the mainland he is not +worth more than fifteen dollars. The channels, and the mouths of +rivers, and the little bays opening from the Island of Pemba are +patrolled more or less regularly by British gunboats, and junior +officers in charge of a cutter and a crew of half a dozen men, are +detached from these for a few months at a time on "boat service." It +seems to be an unprofitable pursuit, for one officer told me that +during his month of boat service he had boarded and searched three +hundred dhows, which is an average of ten a day, and found slaves on +only one of them. But as, on this occasion, he rescued four slaves, +and the slavers, moreover, showed fight, and wounded him and two of +his boat's crew, he was more than satisfied. + +The trade in ivory, which has none of these restrictions upon it, +still flourishes, and the cool, dark warerooms of Zanzibar are +stored high with it. In a corner of one little cellar they showed +us twenty-five thousand dollars worth of these tusks piled up as +carelessly as though they were logs in a wood-shed. One of the most +curious sights in Zanzibar is a line of Zanzibari boys, each +balancing a great tusk on his shoulder, worth from five hundred to +two thousand dollars, and which is unprotected except for a piece of +coarse sacking. + + [Illustration: A German "Factory" at Tanga, the Store Below, the + Living Apartments Above.] + +The largest exporters of ivory in the world are at Zanzibar, and +though probably few people know it, the firm which carries on this +business belongs to New York City, and has been in the ivory trade +with India and Africa from as far back as the fifties. In their +house at Zanzibar they have entertained every distinguished African +explorer, and the stories its walls have heard of native wars, +pirate dhows, slave-dealers, the English occupation, and terrible +marches through the jungles of the Congo, would make valuable and +picturesque history. The firm has always held a semi-official +position, for the reason that the United States Consul at Zanzibar, +who should speak at least Swahili and Portuguese, is invariably +chosen for the post from a drug-store in Yankton, Dakota, or a +post-office in Canton, Ohio. Consequently, on arriving at Zanzibar +he becomes homesick, and his first official act is to cable his +resignation, and the State Department instructs whoever happens to +be general manager of the ivory house to perform the duties of +acting-consul. So, the ivory house has nearly always held the eagle +of the consulate over its doorway. The manager of the ivory house, +who at the time of our visit was also consul, is Harris Robbins +Childs. Mr. Childs is well known in New York City, is a member of +many clubs there, and speaks at least five languages. He understands +the native tongue of Zanzibar so well that when the Prime Minister +of the Sultan took us to the palace to pay our respects, Childs +talked the language so much better than did the Sultan's own Prime +Minister that there was in consequence much joking and laughing. The +Sultan then was a most dignified, intelligent, and charming old +gentleman. He was popular both with his own people, who loved him +with a religious fervor, and with the English, who unobtrusively +conducted his affairs. + +There have been sultans who have acted less wisely than does Hamud +bin Muhamad bin Said. A few years ago one of these, Said Khaled, +defied the British Empire as represented by several gunboats, and +dared them to fire on his ship of war, a tramp steamer which he had +converted into a royal yacht. The gunboats were anchored about two +hundred yards from the palace, which stands at the water's edge, and +at the time agreed upon, they sank the Sultan's ship of war in the +short space of three minutes, and in a brief bombardment destroyed +the greater part of his palace. The ship of war still rests where +she sank, and her topmasts peer above the water only three hundred +yards distant from the windows of the new palace. They serve as a +constant warning to all future sultans. + +The new palace is of somewhat too modern architecture, and is not +nearly as dignified as are the massive white walls of the native +houses which surround it. But within it is a fairy palace, hung with +silk draperies, tapestries, and hand-painted curtains; the floors +are covered with magnificent rugs from Persia and India, and the +reception-room is crowded with treasures of ebony, ivory, lacquer +work, and gold and silver. There were two thrones made of silver +dragons, with many scales, and studded with jewels. The Sultan did +not seem to mind our openly admiring his treasures, and his +attendants, who stood about him in gorgeous-colored silks heavy with +gold embroideries, were evidently pleased with the deep impression +they made upon the visitors. The Sultan was very gentle and +courteous and human, especially in the pleasure he took over his son +and heir, who then was at school in England, and who, on the death +of his father, succeeded him. He seemed very much gratified when we +suggested that there was no better training-place for a boy than an +English public school; as Americans, he thought our opinion must be +unprejudiced. Before he sent us away, he gave Childs, and each of +us, a photograph of himself, one of which is reproduced in this +book. + +Our next port was the German settlement of Tanga. We arrived there +just as a blood-red sun was setting behind great and gloomy +mountains. The place itself was bathed in damp hot vapors, and +surrounded even to the water's edge by a steaming jungle. It was +more like what we expected Africa to be than was any other place we +had visited, and the proper touch of local color was supplied by a +trader, who gave as his reason for leaving us so early in the +evening that he needed sleep, as on the night before at his camp +three lions had kept him awake until morning. + + [Illustration: Soudanese Soldiers Under a German Officer Outside of + Tanga.] + +The bubonic plague prevented our landing at other ports. We saw them +only through field-glasses from the ship's side, so that there is, +in consequence, much that I cannot write of the East Coast of +Africa. But the trip, which allows one merely to nibble at the +Coast, is worth taking again when the bubonic plague has passed +away. It was certainly worth taking once. If I have failed to make +that apparent, the fault lies with the writer. It is certainly not +the fault of the East Coast, not the fault of the Indian Ocean, that +"sets and smiles, so soft, so bright, so blooming blue," or of the +exiles and "remittance men," or of the engineers who are building +the railroad from Cape Town to Cairo, or of any lack of interest +which the East Coast presents in its problem of trade, of conquest, +and of, among nations, the survival of the fittest. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Congo and Coasts of Africa +by Richard Harding Davis + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA *** + +***** This file should be named 14297-8.txt or 14297-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/1/4/2/9/14297/ + +Produced by Janet Kegg and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed +Proofreading Team + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Congo and Coasts of Africa + +Author: Richard Harding Davis + +Release Date: December 8, 2004 [EBook #14297] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA *** + + + + +Produced by Janet Kegg and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed +Proofreading Team + + + + + + +</pre> + + + +<a name="img1" id="img1"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-01.jpg" width="500" height="338" alt="Mr. Davis and "Wood Boys" of the Congo." title="Mr. Davis and "Wood Boys" of the Congo." /> +</div> +<p class="cap">Mr. Davis and "Wood Boys" of the Congo. </p> +<hr /> + +<h1>THE CONGO AND</h1> +<h1> COASTS OF AFRICA</h1> + +<h4>BY</h4> + +<h2>RICHARD HARDING DAVIS, <small>F.R.G.S.</small></h2> + + +<p class="center"><small>AUTHOR OF "SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE," "THE SCARLET CAR," <br />"WITH BOTH +ARMIES IN SOUTH AFRICA," "FARCES," "THE CUBAN<br /> AND PORTO RICAN +CAMPAIGNS"</small></p> + +<br /> + + +<h4>ILLUSTRATIONS<br /> +FROM PHOTOGRAPHS BY THE AUTHOR<br /> +AND OTHERS</h4> + +<br /> + +<h5>CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS<br /> +NEW YORK<br /> +1907</h5> + +<hr /> + + + + +<h5>TO</h5> +<h4>CECIL CLARK DAVIS</h4> + +<h5>MY FELLOW VOYAGER ALONG<br /> +THE COASTS OF AFRICA</h5> + +<hr /> +<br /> + + + +<h3>CONTENTS</h3> + + + +<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="8" summary="contents"> +<tr><td align='center'><b>i</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#I">The Coasters</a></td><td align='right'>3</td></tr> + +<tr><td align='center'><b>ii</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#II">My Brother's Keeper</a></td><td align='right'>32</td></tr> + +<tr><td align='center'><b>iii</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#III">The Capital of the Congo</a></td><td align='right'>55</td></tr> + +<tr><td align='center'><b>iv</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#IV">Americans in the Congo</a></td><td align='right'>93</td></tr> + +<tr><td align='center'><b>v</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#V">Hunting the Hippo</a></td><td align='right'>118</td></tr> + +<tr><td align='center'><b>vi</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#VI">Old Calabar</a></td><td align='right'>142</td></tr> + +<tr><td align='center'><b>vii</b></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#VII">Along the East Coast</a></td><td align='right'>176</td></tr> +</table> + +<br /> + +<hr class="short" /> + + +<h3>ILLUSTRATIONS</h3> + +<p class="itoc"> +<a href="#img1"> R. Davis and "Wood Boys" of the Congo</a> <i>Frontispiece</i> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img2"> Mrs. Davis in a Borrowed "Hammock," The Local Means + of Transport on the West Coast</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img3">A White Building, that Blazed Like the Base of a + Whitewashed Stove at White Heat</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> +<a href="#img4">The "Mammy Chair" is Like Those Swings You See + in Public Playgrounds</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> +<a href="#img5">A Village on the Kasai River</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> +<a href="#img6">"Tenants" of Leopold, Who Claims that the Congo + Belongs to Him, and that these Native People + are there only as His Tenants</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img7">The Facilities for Landing At Banana, the Port of + Entry to the Congo, are Limited</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img8"> "Prisoners" of the State in Chains at Matadi</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img9"> Bush Boys in the Plaza at Matadi Seeking Shade</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img10">The Monument in Stanley Park, Erected, Not to + Stanley, but to Leopold</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img11">The <i>Deliverance</i>. The River Raced over the Deck + to a Depth of Four or Five Inches. Between + Her Cabin and the Wood-pile, were Stored Fifty + Human Beings</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img12">The Native Wife of a <i>Chef de Poste</i></a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img13">English Missionaries, and Some of Their Charges</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img14">The Laboring Man Upon Whom the American Concessionaires + Must Depend</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img15">Mr. Davis and Native "Boy," on the Kasai River</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img16">The Hippopotamus that Did Not Know He Was Dead</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img17">The Jesuit Brothers at the Wombali Mission</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img18">There, in the Surf, We Found These Tons of Mahogany, + Pounding against Each Other</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img19">A Log of Mahogany Jammed in the Anchor Chains</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img20">The Palace of the King of the Cameroons</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img21">The Home of the Thirty Queens of King Mango Bell</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img22">The Mother Superior and Sisters of St. Joseph and + Their Converts at Old Calabar</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img23">The Kroo Boys Sit, not on the Thwarts, but on the + Gunwales, as a Woman Rides a Side Saddle</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img24">Going Visiting in Her Private Tram-car at Beira</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img25">One-half of the Street Cleaning Department of + Mozambique</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img26">Custom House, Zanzibar</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img27">Chain-gangs of Petty Offenders Outside of Zanzibar</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img28">The Ivory on the Right, Covered only with Sacking, + is Ready for Shipment to Boston, U.S.A.</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img29">The Late Sultan of Zanzibar in His State Carriage</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img30">H.S.H. Hamud bin Muhamad bin Said, the Late + Sultan of Zanzibar</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img31">A German "Factory" at Tanga, the Store Below, the + Living Apartments Above</a> +</p> + +<p class="itoc"> + <a href="#img32">Soudanese Soldiers under a German Officer Outside + of Tanga</a> +</p> + +<br /> + +<hr /> + +<br /> + + +<h3>THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA</h3> +<br /> + +<h2><a name="I" id="I"></a>I</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span> + + +<h3>THE COASTERS</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>No matter how often one sets out, "for to admire, and for to see, +for to behold this world so wide," he never quite gets over being +surprised at the erratic manner in which "civilization" distributes +itself; at the way it ignores one spot upon the earth's surface, and +upon another, several thousand miles away, heaps its blessings and +its tyrannies. Having settled in a place one might suppose the +"influences of civilization" would first be felt by the people +nearest that place. Instead of which, a number of men go forth in a +ship and carry civilization as far away from that spot as the winds +will bear them.</p> + +<p>When a stone falls in a pool each part of each ripple is equally +distant from the spot <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span> +where the stone fell; but if the stone of +civilization were to have fallen, for instance, into New Orleans, +equally near to that spot we would find the people of New York City +and the naked Indians of Yucatan. Civilization does not radiate, or +diffuse. It leaps; and as to where it will next strike it is as +independent as forked lightning. During hundreds of years it passed +over the continent of Africa to settle only at its northern coast +line and its most southern cape; and, to-day, it has given Cuba all +of its benefits, and has left the equally beautiful island of Hayti, +only fourteen hours away, sunk in fetish worship and brutal +ignorance.</p> + +<p>One of the places it has chosen to ignore is the West Coast of +Africa. We are familiar with the Northern Coast and South Africa. We +know all about Morocco and the picturesque Raisuli, Lord Cromer, and +Shepheard's Hotel. The Kimberley Diamond Mines, the Boer War, +Jameson's Raid, and Cecil Rhodes have made us know South Africa, and +on the East Coast we supply Durban with buggies and farm wagons, +furniture from Grand Rapids, and, although we have nothing against +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span> +Durban, breakfast food and canned meats. We know Victoria Falls, +because they have eclipsed our own Niagara Falls, and Zanzibar, +farther up the Coast, is familiar through comic operas and rag-time. +Of itself, the Cape to Cairo Railroad would make the East Coast +known to us. But the West Coast still means that distant shore from +whence the "first families" of Boston, Bristol and New Orleans +exported slaves. Now, for our soap and our salad, the West Coast +supplies palm oil and kernel oil, and for automobile tires, rubber. +But still to it there cling the mystery, the hazard, the cruelty of +those earlier times. It is not of palm oil and rubber one thinks +when he reads on the ship's itinerary, "the Gold Coast, the Ivory +Coast, the Bight of Benin, and Old Calabar."</p> + +<p>One of the strange leaps made by civilization is from Southampton to +Cape Town, and one of its strangest ironies is in its ignoring all +the six thousand miles of coast line that lies between. Nowadays, in +winter time, the English, flying from the damp cold of London, go to +Cape Town as unconcernedly as to the Riviera. They travel in great +seagoing hotels, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span> +on which they play cricket, and dress for dinner. +Of the damp, fever-driven coast line past which, in splendid ease, +they are travelling, save for the tall peaks of Teneriffe and Cape +Verde, they know nothing.</p> + +<p>When last Mrs. Davis and I made that voyage from Southampton, the +decks were crowded chiefly with those English whose faces are +familiar at the Savoy and the Ritz, and who, within an hour, had +settled down to seventeen days of uninterrupted bridge, with, before +them, the prospect on landing of the luxury of the Mount Nelson and +the hospitalities of Government House. When, the other day, we again +left Southampton, that former departure came back in strange +contrast. It emphasized that this time we are not accompanying +civilization on one of her flying leaps. Instead, now, we are going +down to the sea in ships with the vortrekkers of civilization, those +who are making the ways straight; who, in a few weeks, will be +leaving us to lose themselves in great forests, who clear the paths +of noisome jungles where the sun seldom penetrates, who sit in +sun-baked "factories," as they call their trading houses, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span> +measuring +life by steamer days, who preach the Gospel to the cannibals of the +Congo, whose voices are the voices of those calling in the +wilderness.</p> + +<p>As our tender came alongside the <i>Bruxellesville</i> at Southampton, we +saw at the winch Kroo boys of the Ivory Coast; leaning over the rail +the Sœurs Blanches of the Congo, robed, although the cold was +bitter and the decks black with soot-stained snow, all in white; +missionaries with long beards, a bishop in a purple biretta, and +innumerable Belgian officers shivering in their cloaks and wearing +the blue ribbon and silver star that tells of three years of service +along the Equator. This time our fellow passengers are no +pleasure-seekers, no Cook's tourists sailing south to avoid a +rigorous winter. They have squeezed the last minute out of their +leave, and they are going back to the station, to the factory, to +the mission, to the barracks. They call themselves "Coasters," and +they inhabit a world all to themselves. In square miles, it is a +very big world, but it is one of those places civilization has +skipped.</p> + +<p>Nearly every one of our passengers from Antwerp or Southampton knows +that if he <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span>keeps his contract, and does not die, it will be three +years before he again sees his home. So our departure was not +enlivening, and, in the smoking-room, the exiles prepared us for +lonely ports of call, for sickening heat, for swarming multitudes of +blacks.</p> + +<p>In consequence, when we passed Finisterre, Spain, which from New +York seems almost a foreign country, was a near neighbor, a dear +friend. And the Island of Teneriffe was an anticlimax. It was as +though by a trick of the compass we had been sailing southwest and +were entering the friendly harbor of Ponce or Havana.</p> + +<p>Santa Cruz, the port town of Teneriffe, like La Guayra, rises at the +base of great hills. It is a smiling, bright-colored, red-roofed, +typical Spanish town. The hills about it mount in innumerable +terraces planted with fruits and vegetables, and from many of these +houses on the hills, should the owner step hurriedly out of his +front door, he would land upon the roof of his nearest neighbor. +Back of this first chain of hills are broad farming lands and +plateaus from which Barcelona and London are fed with the earliest +and the most tender <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>of potatoes that appear in England at the same +time Bermuda potatoes are being printed in big letters on the bills +of fare along Broadway. Santa Cruz itself supplies passing steamers +with coal, and passengers with lace work and post cards; and to the +English in search of sunshine, with a rival to Madeira. It should be +a successful rival, for it is a charming place, and on the day we +were there the thermometer was at 72°, and every one was complaining +of the cruel severity of the winter. In Santa Cruz one who knows +Spanish America has but to shut his eyes and imagine himself back in +Santiago de Cuba or Caracas. There are the same charming plazas, the +yellow churches and towered cathedral, the long iron-barred windows, +glimpses through marble-paved halls of cool patios, the same open +shops one finds in Obispo and O'Reilly Streets, the idle officers +with smart uniforms and swinging swords in front of cafés killing +time and digestion with sweet drinks, and over the garden walls +great bunches of purple and scarlet flowers and sheltering palms. +The show place in Santa Cruz is the church in which are stored the +relics of the sea-fight in which, as a young <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>man, Nelson lost his +arm and England also lost two battleflags. As she is not often +careless in that respect, it is a surprise to find, in this tiny +tucked-away little island, what you will not see in any of the show +places of the world. They tell in Santa Cruz that one night an +English middy, single-handed, recaptured the captured flags and +carried them triumphantly to his battleship. He expected at the +least a K.C.B., and when the flags, with a squad of British marines +as a guard of honor, were solemnly replaced in the church, and the +middy himself was sent upon a tour of apology to the bishop, the +governor, the commandant of the fortress, the alcalde, the collector +of customs, and the captain of the port, he declared that monarchies +were ungrateful. The other objects of interest in Teneriffe are +camels, which in the interior of the island are common beasts of +burden, and which appearing suddenly around a turn would frighten +any automobile; and the fact that in Teneriffe the fashion in +women's hats never changes. They are very funny, flat straw hats; +like children's sailor hats. They need only "<i>U.S.S. Iowa</i>" on the +band to be quite familiar. Their secret <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>is that they are built to +support baskets and buckets of water, and that concealed in each is +a heavy pad.</p> + +<a name="img2" id="img2"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-02.jpg" width="500" height="321" alt="Mrs. Davis in a Borrowed "Hammock," the Local Means +of Transport on the West Coast." title="Mrs. Davis in a Borrowed "Hammock," the Local Means +of Transport on the West Coast." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Mrs. Davis in a Borrowed "Hammock," the Local Means +of Transport on the West Coast. </p> + +<p>After Teneriffe the destination of every one on board is as +irrevocably fixed as though the ship were a government transport. We +are all going to the West Coast or to the Congo. Should you wish to +continue on to Cape Town along the South Coast, as they call the +vast territory from Lagos to Cape Town, although there is an +irregular, a very irregular, service to the Cape, you could as +quickly reach it by going on to the Congo, returning all the way to +Southampton, and again starting on the direct line south.</p> + +<p>It is as though a line of steamers running down our coast to Florida +would not continue on along the South Coast to New Orleans and +Galveston, and as though no line of steamers came from New Orleans +and Galveston to meet the steamers of the East Coast.</p> + +<p>In consequence, the West Coast of Africa, cut off by lack of +communication from the south, divorced from the north by the Desert +of Sahara, lies in the steaming heat of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>Equator to-day as it +did a thousand years ago, in inaccessible, inhospitable isolation.</p> + +<p>Two elements have helped to preserve this isolation: the fever that +rises from its swamps and lagoons, and the surf that thunders upon +the shore. In considering the stunted development of the West Coast, +these two elements must be kept in mind—the sickness that strikes +at sunset and by sunrise leaves the victim dead, and the monster +waves that rush booming like cannon at the beach, churning the sandy +bottom beneath, and hurling aside the great canoes as a man tosses a +cigarette. The clerk who signs the three-year contract to work on +the West Coast enlists against a greater chance of death than the +soldier who enlists to fight only bullets; and every box, puncheon, +or barrel that the trader sends in a canoe through the surf is +insured against its never reaching, as the case may be, the shore or +the ship's side.</p> + +<p>The surf and the fever are the Minotaurs of the West Coast, and in +the year there is not a day passes that they do not claim and +receive their tribute in merchandise and human life. Said an old +Coaster to me, pointing at the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>harbor of Grand Bassam: "I've seen +just as much cargo lost overboard in that surf as I've seen shipped +to Europe." One constantly wonders how the Coasters find it good +enough. How, since 1550, when the Portuguese began trading, it has +been possible to find men willing to fill the places of those who +died. But, in spite of the early massacres by the natives, in spite +of attacks by wild beasts, in spite of pirate raids, of desolating +plagues and epidemics, of wars with other white men, of damp heat +and sudden sickness, there were men who patiently rebuilt the forts +and factories, fought the surf with great breakwaters, cleared +breathing spaces in the jungle, and with the aid of quinine for +themselves, and bad gin for the natives, have held their own. Except +for the trade goods it never would be held. It is a country where +the pay is cruelly inadequate, where but few horses, sheep, or +cattle can exist, where the natives are unbelievably lazy and +insolent, and where, while there is no society of congenial spirits, +there is a superabundance of animal and insect pests. Still, so +great are gold, ivory, and rubber, and so many are the men who will +take big chances <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>for little pay, that every foot of the West Coast +is preëmpted. As the ship rolls along, for hours from the rail you +see miles and miles of steaming yellow sand and misty swamp where as +yet no white man has set his foot. But in the real estate office of +Europe some Power claims the right to "protect" that swamp; some +treaty is filed as a title-deed.</p> + +<p>As the Powers finally arranged it, the map of the West Coast is like +a mosaic, like the edge of a badly constructed patchwork quilt. In +trading along the West Coast a man can find use for five European +languages, and he can use a new one at each port of call.</p> + +<p>To the north, the West Coast begins with Cape Verde, which is +Spanish. It is followed by Senegal, which is French; but into +Senegal is tucked "a thin red line" of British territory called +Gambia. Senegal closes in again around Gambia, and is at once +blocked to the south by the three-cornered patch which belongs to +Portugal. This is followed by French Guinea down to another British +red spot, Sierra Leone, which meets Liberia, the republic of negro +emigrants from the United States. South of Liberia is the French +Ivory Coast, then the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>English Gold Coast; Togo, which is German; +Dahomey, which is French; Lagos and Southern Nigeria, which again +are English; Fernando Po, which is Spanish, and the German +Cameroons.</p> + +<p>The coast line of these protectorates and colonies gives no idea of +the extent of their hinterland, which spreads back into the Sahara, +the Niger basin, and the Soudan. Sierra Leone, one of the smallest +of them, is as large as Maine; Liberia, where the emigrants still +keep up the tradition of the United States by talking like end men, +is as large as the State of New York; two other colonies, Senegal +and Nigeria, together are 135,000 square miles larger than the +combined square miles of all of our Atlantic States from Maine to +Florida and including both. To partition finally among the Powers +this strip of death and disease, of uncountable wealth, of unnamed +horrors and cruelties, has taken many hundreds of years, has brought +to the black man every misery that can be inflicted upon a human +being, and to thousands of white men, death and degradation, or +great wealth.</p> + +<p>The raids made upon the West Coast to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>obtain slaves began in the +fifteenth century with the discovery of the West Indies, and it was +to spare the natives of these islands, who were unused and unfitted +for manual labor and who in consequence were cruelly treated by the +Spaniards, that Las Casas, the Bishop of Chiapa, first imported +slaves from West Africa. He lived to see them suffer so much more +terribly than had the Indians who first obtained his sympathy, that +even to his eightieth year he pleaded with the Pope and the King of +Spain to undo the wrong he had begun. But the tide had set west, and +Las Casas might as well have tried to stop the Trades. In 1800 +Wilberforce stated in the House of Commons that at that time British +vessels were carrying each year to the Indies and the American +colonies 38,000 slaves, and when he spoke the traffic had been going +on for two hundred and fifty years. After the Treaty of Utrecht, +Queen Anne congratulated her Peers on the terms of the treaty which +gave to England "the fortress of Gibraltar, the Island of Minorca, +and the monopoly in the slave trade for thirty years," or, as it was +called, the <i>asiento</i> (contract). This was <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>considered so good an +investment that Philip V of Spain took up one-quarter of the common +stock, and good Queen Anne reserved another quarter, which later she +divided among her ladies. But for a time she and her cousin of Spain +were the two largest slave merchants in the world. The point of view +of those then engaged in the slave trade is very interesting. When +Queen Elizabeth sent Admiral Hawkins slave-hunting, she presented +him with a ship, named, with startling lack of moral perception, +after the Man of Sorrows. In a book on the slave trade I picked up +at Sierra Leone there is the diary of an officer who accompanied +Hawkins. "After," he writes, "going every day on shore to take the +inhabitants by burning and despoiling of their towns," the ship was +becalmed. "But," he adds gratefully, "the Almighty God, who never +suffereth his elect to perish, sent us the breeze."</p> + +<p>The slave book shows that as late as 1780 others of the "elect" of +our own South were publishing advertisements like this, which is one +of the shortest and mildest. It is from a Virginia newspaper: "The +said fellow is outlawed, and I will give ten pounds reward for <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>his +head severed from his body, or forty shillings if brought alive."</p> + +<p>At about this same time an English captain threw overboard, chained +together, one hundred and thirty sick slaves. He claimed that had he +not done so the ship's company would have also sickened and died, +and the ship would have been lost, and that, therefore, the +insurance companies should pay for the slaves. The jury agreed with +him, and the Solicitor-General said: "What is all this declamation +about human beings! This is a case of chattels or goods. It is +really so—it is the case of throwing over goods. For the +purpose—the purpose of the insurance, they are goods and property; +whether right or wrong, we have nothing to do with it." In 1807 +England declared the slave trade illegal. A year later the United +States followed suit, but although on the seas her frigates chased +the slavers, on shore a part of our people continued to hold slaves, +until the Civil War rescued both them and the slaves.</p> + +<p>As early as 1718 Raynal and Diderot estimated that up to that time +there had been exported from Africa to the North and South <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>Americas +nine million slaves. Our own historian, Bancroft, calculated that in +the eighteenth century the English alone imported to the Americas +three million slaves, while another 2,500,000 purchased or kidnapped +on the West Coast were lost in the surf, or on the voyage thrown +into the sea. For that number Bancroft places the gross returns as +not far from four hundred millions of dollars.</p> + +<p>All this is history, and to the reader familiar, but I do not +apologize for reviewing it here, as without the background of the +slave trade, the West Coast, as it is to-day, is difficult to +understand. As we have seen, to kings, to chartered "Merchant +Adventurers," to the cotton planters of the West Indies and of our +South, and to the men of the North who traded in black ivory, the +West Coast gave vast fortunes. The price was the lives of millions +of slaves. And to-day it almost seems as though the sins of the +fathers were being visited upon the children; as though the juju of +the African, under the spell of which his enemies languish and die, +has been cast upon the white man. We have to look only at home. In +the millions of dead, and in the misery of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>the Civil War, and +to-day in race hatred, in race riots, in monstrous crimes and as +monstrous lynchings, we seem to see the fetish of the West Coast, +the curse, falling upon the children to the third and fourth +generation of the million slaves that were thrown, shackled, into +the sea.</p> + +<p>The first mention in history of Sierra Leone is when in 480 B.C., +Hanno, the Carthaginian, anchored at night in its harbor, and then +owing to "fires in the forests, the beating of drums, and strange +cries that issued from the bushes," before daylight hastened away. +We now skip nineteen hundred years. This is something of a gap, but +except for the sketchy description given us by Hanno of the place, +and his one gaudy night there, Sierra Leone until the fifteenth +century utterly disappears from the knowledge of man. Happy is the +country without a history!</p> + +<p>Nineteen hundred years having now supposed to elapse, the second act +begins with De Cintra, who came in search of slaves, and instead +gave the place its name. Because of the roaring of the wind around +the peak that rises over the harbor he called it the Lion Mountain.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>After the fifteenth century, in a succession of failures, five +different companies of "Royal Adventurers" were chartered to trade +with her people, and, when convenient, to kidnap them; pirates in +turn kidnapped the British governor, the French and Dutch were +always at war with the settlement, and native raids, epidemics, and +fevers were continuous. The history of Sierra Leone is the history +of every other colony along the West Coast, with the difference that +it became a colony by purchase, and was not, as were the others, a +trading station gradually converted into a colony. During the war in +America, Great Britain offered freedom to all slaves that would +fight for her, and, after the war, these freed slaves were conveyed +on ships of war to London, where they were soon destitute. They +appealed to the great friend of the slave in those days, Granville +Sharp, and he with others shipped them to Sierra Leone, to +establish, with the aid of some white emigrants, an independent +colony, which was to be a refuge and sanctuary for others like +themselves. Liberia, which was the gift of philanthropists of +Baltimore to American freed slaves, was, no doubt, inspired by this +earlier <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>effort. The colony became a refuge for slaves from every +part of the Coast, the West Indies and Nova Scotia, and to-day in +that one colony there are spoken sixty different coast dialects and +those of the hinterland.</p> + +<p>Sierra Leone, as originally purchased in 1786, consisted of twenty +square miles, for which among other articles of equal value King +Naimbanna received a "crimson satin embroidered waistcoat, one +puncheon of rum, ten pounds of beads, two cheeses, one box of +smoking pipes, a mock diamond ring, and a tierce of pork."</p> + +<p>What first impressed me about Sierra Leone was the heat. It does not +permit one to give his attention wholly to anything else. I always +have maintained that the hottest place on earth is New York, and I +have been in other places with more than a local reputation for +heat; some along the Equator, Lourenço Marquez, which is only +prevented from being an earthen oven because it is a swamp; the Red +Sea, with a following breeze, and from both shores the baked heat of +the desert, and Nagasaki, on a rainy day in midsummer.</p> + +<p>But New York in August radiating stored-up <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>heat from iron-framed +buildings, with the foul, dead air shut in by the skyscrapers, with +a humidity that makes you think you are breathing through a +steam-heated sponge, is as near the lower regions as I hope any of +us will go. And yet Sierra Leone is no mean competitor.</p> + +<p>We climbed the moss-covered steps to the quay to face a great white +building that blazed like the base of a whitewashed stove at white +heat. Before it were some rusty cannon and a canoe cut out of a +single tree, and, seated upon it selling fruit and sun-dried fish, +some native women, naked to the waist, their bodies streaming with +palm oil and sweat. At the same moment something struck me a blow on +the top of the head, at the base of the spine and between the +shoulder blades, and the ebony ladies and the white "factory" were +burnt up in a scroll of flame.</p> + +<a name="img3" id="img3"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-03.jpg" width="500" height="326" alt="A White Building, that Blazed Like the Base of a +Whitewashed Stove at White Heat." title="A White Building, that Blazed Like the Base of a +Whitewashed Stove at White Heat." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">A White Building, that Blazed Like the Base of a +Whitewashed Stove at White Heat. </p> + +<p>I heard myself in a far-away voice asking where one could buy a sun +helmet and a white umbrella, and until I was under their protection, +Sierra Leone interested me no more.</p> + +<p>One sees more different kinds of black people in Sierra Leone than +in any other port <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>along the Coast; Senegalese and Senegambians, +Kroo boys, Liberians, naked bush boys bearing great burdens from the +forests, domestic slaves in fez and colored linen livery, carrying +hammocks swung from under a canopy, the local electric hansom, +soldiers of the W.A.F.F., the West African Frontier Force, in Zouave +uniform of scarlet and khaki, with bare legs; Arabs from as far in +the interior as Timbuctu, yellow in face and in long silken robes; +big fat "mammies" in well-washed linen like the washerwomen of +Jamaica, each balancing on her head her tightly rolled umbrella, and +in the gardens slim young girls, with only a strip of blue and white +linen from the waist to the knees, lithe, erect, with glistening +teeth and eyes, and their sisters, after two years in the mission +schools, demurely and correctly dressed like British school marms. +Sierra Leone has all the hall marks of the crown colony of the +tropics; good wharfs, clean streets, innumerable churches, public +schools operated by the government as well as many others run by +American and English missions, a club where the white "mammies," as +all women are called, and the white officers—for Sierra <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>Leone is a +coaling station on the Cape route to India, and is garrisoned +accordingly—play croquet, and bowl into a net.</p> + +<p>When the officers are not bowling they are tramping into the +hinterland after tribes on the warpath from Liberia, and coming +back, perhaps wounded or racked with fever, or perhaps they do not +come back. On the day we landed they had just buried one of the +officers. On Saturday afternoon he had been playing tennis, during +the night the fever claimed him, and Sunday night he was dead.</p> + +<p>That night as we pulled out to the steamer there came toward us in +black silhouette against the sun, setting blood-red into the lagoon, +two great canoes. They were coming from up the river piled high with +fruit and bark, with the women and children lying huddled in the +high bow and stern, while amidships the twelve men at the oars +strained and struggled until we saw every muscle rise under the +black skin.</p> + +<p>As their stroke slackened, the man in the bow with the tom-tom beat +more savagely upon it, and shouted to them in shrill sharp cries. +Their eyes shone, their teeth clenched, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>the sweat streamed from +their naked bodies. They might have been slaves chained to the +thwarts of a trireme.</p> + +<p>Just ahead of them lay at anchor the only other ship beside our own +in port, a two-masted schooner, the <i>Gladys E. Wilden</i>, out of +Boston. Her captain leaned upon the rail smoking his cigar, his +shirt-sleeves held up with pink elastics, on the back of his head a +derby hat. As the rowers passed under his bows he looked critically +at the streaming black bodies and spat meditatively into the water. +His own father could have had them between decks as cargo. Now for +the petroleum and lumber he brings from Massachusetts to Sierra +Leone he returns in ballast.</p> + +<p>Because her lines were so home-like and her captain came from Cape +Cod, we wanted to call on the <i>Gladys E. Wilden</i>, but our own +captain had different views, and the two ships passed in the night, +and the man from Boston never will know that two folks from home +were burning signals to him.</p> + +<p>Because our next port of call, Grand Bassam, is the chief port of +the French Ivory Coast, which is 125,000 square miles in <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>extent, we +expected quite a flourishing seaport. Instead, Grand Bassam was a +bank of yellow sand, a dozen bungalows in a line, a few wind-blown +cocoanut palms, an iron pier, and a French flag. Beyond the cocoanut +palms we could see a great lagoon, and each minute a wave leaped +roaring upon the yellow sand-bank and tried to hurl itself across +it, eating up the bungalows on its way, into the quiet waters of the +lake. Each time we were sure it would succeed, but the yellow bank +stood like rock, and, beaten back, the wave would rise in white +spray to the height of a three-story house, hang glistening in the +sun and then, with the crash of a falling wall, tumble at the feet +of the bungalows.</p> + +<p>We stopped at Grand Bassam to put ashore a young English girl who +had come out to join her husband. His factory is a two days' launch +ride up the lagoon, and the only other white woman near it does not +speak English. Her husband had wished her, for her health's sake, to +stay in his home near London, but her first baby had just died, and +against his unselfish wishes, and the advice of his partner, she had +at once set out to join him. She was <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>a very pretty, sad, unsmiling +young wife, and she spoke only to ask her husband's partner +questions about the new home. His answers, while they did not seem +to daunt her, made every one else at the table wish she had remained +safely in her London suburb.</p> + +<p>Through our glasses we all watched her husband lowered from the iron +pier into a canoe and come riding the great waves to meet her.</p> + +<p>The Kroo boys flashed their trident-shaped paddles and sang and +shouted wildly, but he sat with his sun helmet pulled over his eyes +staring down into the bottom of the boat; while at his elbow, +another sun helmet told him yes, that now he could make out the +partner, and that, judging by the photograph, that must be She in +white under the bridge.</p> + +<p>The husband and the young wife were swung together over the side to +the lifting waves in a two-seated "mammy chair," like one of those +<i>vis-à-vis</i> swings you see in public playgrounds and picnic groves, +and they carried with them, as a gift from Captain Burton, a fast +melting lump of ice, the last piece of fresh meat they will taste in +many a day, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>the blessings of all the ship's company. And then, +with inhospitable haste there was a rattle of anchor chains, a quick +jangle of bells from the bridge to the engine-room, and the +<i>Bruxellesville</i> swept out to sea, leaving the girl from the London +suburb to find her way into the heart of Africa. Next morning we +anchored in a dripping fog off Sekondi on the Gold Coast, to allow +an English doctor to find his way to a fever camp. For nine years he +had been a Coaster, and he had just gone home to fit himself, by a +winter's vacation in London, for more work along the Gold Coast. It +is said of him that he has "never lost a life." On arriving in +London he received a cable telling him three doctors had died, the +miners along the railroad to Ashanti were rotten with fever, and +that he was needed.</p> + +<a name="img4" id="img4"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 453px;"> +<img src="images/img-04.jpg" width="453" height="450" alt="The "Mammy Chair" is Like Those Swings You See in +Public Playgrounds." title="The "Mammy Chair" is Like Those Swings You See in +Public Playgrounds." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The "Mammy Chair" is Like Those Swings You See in +Public Playgrounds. </p> + +<p>So he and his wife, as cheery and bright as though she were setting +forth on her honeymoon, were going back to take up the white man's +burden. We swung them over the side as we had the other two, and +that night in the smoking-room the Coasters drank "Luck to him," +which, in the vernacular of this unhealthy shore, means "Life to +him," and to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>the plucky, jolly woman who was going back to fight +death with the man who had never lost a life.</p> + +<p>As the ship was getting under way, a young man in "whites" and a sun +helmet, an agent of a trading company, went down the sea ladder by +which I was leaning. He was smart, alert; his sleeves, rolled +recklessly to his shoulders, showed sinewy, sunburnt arms; his +helmet, I noted, was a military one. Perhaps I looked as I felt; +that it was a pity to see so good a man go back to such a land, for +he looked up at me from the swinging ladder and smiled understanding +as though we had been old acquaintances.</p> + +<p>"You going far?" he asked. He spoke in the soft, detached voice of +the public-school Englishman.</p> + +<p>"To the Congo," I answered.</p> + +<p>He stood swaying with the ship, looking as though there were +something he wished to say, and then laughed, and added gravely, +giving me the greeting of the Coast: "Luck to you."</p> + +<p>"Luck to YOU," I said.</p> + +<p>That is the worst of these gaddings about, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>these meetings with men +you wish you could know, who pass like a face in the crowded street, +who hold out a hand, or give the password of the brotherhood, and +then drop down the sea ladder and out of your life forever.</p> + + + +<hr class="short" /> +<br /> + +<a name="II" id="II"></a> +<h2>II</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span> + +<h3>MY BROTHER'S KEEPER</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>To me, the fact of greatest interest about the Congo is that it is +owned, and the twenty millions of people who inhabit it are owned by +one man. The land and its people are his private property. I am not +trying to say that he governs the Congo. He does govern it, but that +in itself would not be of interest. His claim is that he owns it. +Though backed by all the mailed fists in the German Empire, and all +the <i>Dreadnoughts</i> of the seas, no other modern monarch would make +such a claim. It does not sound like anything we have heard since +the days and the ways of Pharaoh. And the most remarkable feature of +it is, that the man who makes this claim is the man who was placed +over the Congo as a guardian, to keep it open to the trade of the +world, to suppress slavery. That, in the Congo, he has killed trade +and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>made the products of the land his own, that of the natives he +did not kill he has made slaves, is what to-day gives the Congo its +chief interest. It is well to emphasize how this one man stole a +march on fourteen Powers, including the United States, and stole +also an empire of one million square miles.</p> + +<p>Twenty-five years ago all of Africa was divided into many parts. The +part which still remained to be distributed among the Powers was +that which was watered by the Congo River and its tributaries.</p> + +<p>Along the north bank of the Congo River ran the French Congo; the +Portuguese owned the lands to the south, and on the east it was shut +in by protectorates and colonies of Germany and England. It was, and +is, a territory as large, were Spain and Russia omitted, as Europe. +Were a map of the Congo laid upon a map of Europe, with the mouth of +the Congo River where France and Spain meet at Biarritz, the +boundaries of the Congo would reach south to the heel of Italy, to +Greece, to Smyrna; east to Constantinople and Odessa; northeast to +St. Petersburg and Finland, and northwest to the extreme limits of +Scotland. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>Distances in this country are so enormous, the means of +progress so primitive, that many of the Belgian officers with whom I +came south and who already had travelled nineteen days from Antwerp, +had still, before they reached their posts, to steam, paddle, and +walk for three months.</p> + +<p>In 1844 to dispose amicably of this great territory, which was much +desired by several of the Powers, a conference was held at Berlin. +There it was decided to make of the Congo Basin an Independent +State, a "free-for-all" country, where every flag could trade with +equal right, and with no special tariff or restriction.</p> + +<p>The General Act of this conference agreed: "The trade of ALL nations +shall enjoy complete freedom." "No Power which exercises or shall +exercise Sovereign rights in the above-mentioned regions shall be +allowed to <i>grant therein a monopoly or favor of any kind in matters +of trade</i>." "ALL the Powers exercising Sovereign rights or influence +in the afore-said territories bind themselves to watch over the +preservation of the native tribes, and to care for the improvement +of <i>the condition of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>their moral and material welfare</i>, and <i>to +help in suppressing slavery</i>." The italics are mine. These +quotations from the act are still binding upon the fourteen Powers, +including the United States.</p> + +<p>For several years previous to the Conference of Berlin, Leopold of +Belgium, as a private individual, had shown much interest in the +development of the Congo. The opening up of that territory was +apparently his hobby. Out of his own pocket he paid for expeditions +into the Congo Basin, employed German and English explorers, and +protested against the then existing iniquities of the Arabs, who for +ivory and slaves raided the Upper Congo. Finally, assisted by many +geographical societies, he founded the International Association, to +promote "civilization and trade" in Central Africa; and enlisted +Henry M. Stanley in this service.</p> + +<p>That, in the early years, Leopold's interest in the Congo was +unselfish may or may not be granted, but, knowing him, as we now +know him, as one of the shrewdest and, of speculators, the most +unscrupulous, at the time of the Berlin Conference, his self-seeking +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>may safely be accepted. Quietly, unostentatiously, he presented +himself to its individual members as a candidate for the post of +administrator of this new territory.</p> + +<p>On the face of it he seemed an admirable choice. He was a sovereign +of a kingdom too unimportant to be feared; of the newly created +State he undoubtedly possessed an intimate knowledge. He promised to +give to the Dutch, English, and Portuguese traders, already for many +years established on the Congo, his heartiest aid, and, for those +traders still to come, to maintain the "open door." His professions +of a desire to help the natives were profuse. He became the +unanimous choice of the conference.</p> + +<p>Later he announced to the Powers signing the act, that from Belgium +he had received the right to assume the title of King of the +Independent State of the Congo. The Powers recognized his new title.</p> + +<p>The fact that Leopold, King of Belgium, was king also of the État +Indépendant du Congo confused many into thinking that the Free State +was a colony, or under the protection, of Belgium. As we have seen, +it is not. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>A Belgian may serve in the army of the Free State, or in +a civil capacity, as may a man of any nation, but, although with few +exceptions only Belgians are employed in the Free State, and +although to help the King in the Congo, the Belgian Government has +loaned him great sums of money, politically and constitutionally the +two governments are as independent of each other as France and +Spain.</p> + +<p>And so, in 1885, Leopold, by the grace of fourteen governments, was +appointed their steward over a great estate in which each of the +governments still holds an equal right; a trustee and keeper over +twenty millions of "black brothers" whose "moral and material +welfare" each government had promised to protect.</p> + +<p>There is only one thing more remarkable than the fact that Leopold +was able to turn this public market into a private park, and that +is, that he has been permitted to do so. It is true he is a man of +wonderful ability. For his own ends he is a magnificent organizer. +But in the fourteen governments that created him there have been, +and to-day there are, men, if less unscrupulous, of quite as great +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>ability; statesmen, jealous and quick to guard the rights of the +people they represent, people who since the twelfth century have +been traders, who since 1808 have declared slavery abolished.</p> + +<p>And yet, for twenty-five years these statesmen have watched Leopold +disobey every provision in the act of the conference. Were they to +visit the Congo, they could see for themselves the jungle creeping +in and burying their trading posts, their great factories turned +into barracks. They know that the blacks they mutually agreed to +protect have been reduced to slavery worse than that they suffered +from the Arabs, that hundreds of thousands of them have fled from +the Congo, and that those that remain have been mutilated, maimed, +or, what was more merciful, murdered. And yet the fourteen +governments, including the United States, have done nothing.</p> + +<p>Some tell you they do not interfere because they are jealous one of +the other; others say that it is because they believe the Congo will +soon be taken over by Belgium, and with Belgium in control, they +argue, they would be dealing with a responsible government, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>instead +of with a pirate. But so long as Leopold is King of Belgium one +doubts if Belgians in the Congo would rise above the level of their +King. The English, when asked why they do not assert their rights, +granted not only to them, but to thirteen other governments, reply +that if they did they would be accused of "ulterior motives." What +ulterior motives? If you pursue a pickpocket and recover your watch +from him, are your motives in doing so open to suspicion?</p> + +<p>Personally, although this is looking some way ahead, I would like to +see the English take over and administrate the Congo. Wherever I +visit a colony governed by Englishmen I find under their +administration, in spite of opium in China and gin on the West +Coast, that three people are benefited: the Englishman, the native, +and the foreign trader from any other part of the world. Of the +colonies of what other country can one say the same?</p> + +<p>As a rule our present governments are not loath to protect their +rights. But toward asserting them in the Congo they have been moved +neither by the protests of traders, chambers of commerce, +missionaries, the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>public press, nor by the cry of the black man to +"let my people go." By only those in high places can it be +explained. We will leave it as a curious fact, and return to the +"Unjust Steward."</p> + +<p>His first act was to wage wars upon the Arabs. From the Soudan and +from the East Coast they were raiding the Congo for slaves and +ivory, and he drove them from it. By these wars he accomplished two +things. As the defender of the slave, he gained much public credit, +and he kept the ivory. But war is expensive, and soon he pointed out +to the Powers that to ask him out of his own pocket to maintain +armies in the field and to administer a great estate was unfair. He +humbly sought their permission to levy a few taxes. It seemed a +reasonable request. To clear roads, to keep boats upon the great +rivers, to mark it with buoys, to maintain wood stations for the +steamers, to improve the "moral and material welfare of the +natives," would cost money, and to allow Leopold to bring about +these improvements, which would be for the good of all, he was +permitted to levy the few taxes. That was twenty years ago; to-day I +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>saw none of these improvements, and the taxes have increased.</p> + +<p>From the first they were so heavy that the great trade houses, which +for one hundred years in peace and mutual goodwill bartered with the +natives, found themselves ruined. It was not alone the export taxes, +lighterage dues, port dues, and personal taxes that drove them out +of the Congo; it was the King appearing against them as a rival +trader, the man appointed to maintain the "open door." And a trader +with methods they could not or would not imitate. Leopold, or the +"State," saw for the existence of the Congo only two reasons: Rubber +and Ivory. And the collecting of this rubber and ivory was, as he +saw it, the sole duty of the State and its officers. When he threw +over the part of trustee and became the Arab raider he could not +waste his time, which, he had good reason to fear, might be short, +upon products that, if fostered, would be of value only in later +years. Still less time had he to give to improvements that cost +money and that would be of benefit to his successors. He wanted only +rubber; he wanted it at once, and he cared not at all how <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>he +obtained it. So he spun, and still spins, the greatest of all +"get-rich-quick" schemes; one of gigantic proportions, full of +tragic, monstrous, nauseous details.</p> + +<p>The only possible way to obtain rubber is through the native; as +yet, in teeming forests, the white man can not work and live. Of +even Chinese coolies imported here to build a railroad ninety per +cent. died. So, with a stroke of the pen, Leopold declared all the +rubber in the country the property of the "State," and then, to make +sure that the natives would work it, ordered that taxes be paid in +rubber. If, once a month (in order to keep the natives steadily at +work the taxes were ordered to be paid each month instead of once a +year), each village did not bring in so many baskets of rubber the +King's cannibal soldiers raided it, carried off the women as +hostages, and made prisoners of the men, or killed and ate them. For +every kilo of rubber brought in in excess of the quota the King's +agent, who received the collected rubber and forwarded it down the +river, was paid a commission. Or was "paid by results." Another +bonus was given him based on the price at <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>which he obtained the +rubber. If he paid the native only six cents for every two pounds, +he received a bonus of three cents, the cost to the State being but +nine cents per kilo, but, if he paid the natives twelve cents for +every two pounds, he received as a bonus less than one cent. In a +word, the more rubber the agent collected the more he personally +benefited, and if he obtained it "cheaply" or for nothing—that is, +by taking hostages, making prisoners, by the whip of hippopotamus +hide, by torture—so much greater his fortune, so much richer +Leopold.</p> + +<a name="img5" id="img5"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-05.jpg" width="500" height="302" alt="A Village on the Kasai River." title="A Village on the Kasai River." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">A Village on the Kasai River. </p> + +<p>Few schemes devised have been more cynical, more devilish, more +cunningly designed to incite a man to cruelty and abuse. To +dishonesty it was an invitation and a reward. It was this system of +"payment by results," evolved by Leopold sooner than allow his +agents a fixed and sufficient wage, that led to the atrocities.</p> + +<p>One result of this system was that in seven years the natives +condemned to slavery in the rubber forests brought in rubber to the +amount of fifty-five millions of dollars. But its chief results were +the destruction of entire villages, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>the flight from their homes in +the Congo of hundreds of thousands of natives, and for those that +remained misery, death, the most brutal tortures and degradations, +unprintable, unthinkable.</p> + +<p>I am not going to enter into the question of the atrocities. In the +Congo the tip has been given out from those higher up at Brussels to +"close up" the atrocities; and for the present the evil places in +the Tenderloin and along the Broadway of the Congo are tightly shut. +But at those lonely posts, distant a month to three months' march +from the capital, the cruelties still continue. I did not see them. +Neither, last year, did a great many people in the United States see +the massacre of blacks in Atlanta. But they have reason to believe +it occurred. And after one has talked with the men and women who +have seen the atrocities, has seen in the official reports that +those accused of the atrocities do not deny having committed them, +but point out that they were merely obeying orders, and after one +has seen that even at the capital of Boma all the conditions of +slavery exist, one is assured that in the jungle, away from the +sight of men, all <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>things are possible. Merchants, missionaries, and +officials even in Leopold's service told me that if one could spare +a year and a half, or a year, to the work in the hinterland he would +be an eye-witness of as cruel treatment of the natives as any that +has gone before, and if I can trust myself to weigh testimony and +can believe my eyes and ears I have reason to know that what they +say is true. I am convinced that to-day a man, who feels that a year +and a half is little enough to give to the aid of twenty millions of +human beings, can accomplish in the Congo as great and good work as +that of the Abolitionists.</p> + +<p>Three years ago atrocities here were open and above-board. For +instance. In the opinion of the State the soldiers, in killing game +for food, wasted the State cartridges, and in consequence the +soldiers, to show their officers that they did not expend the +cartridges extravagantly on antelope and wild boar, for each empty +cartridge brought in a human hand, the hand of a man, woman, or +child. These hands, drying in the sun, could be seen at the posts +along the river. They are no longer in evidence. Neither is the +flower-bed <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>of Lieutenant Dom, which was bordered with human skulls. +A quaint conceit.</p> + +<p>The man to blame for the atrocities, for each separate atrocity, is +Leopold. Had he shaken his head they would have ceased. When the hue +and cry in Europe grew too hot for him and he held up his hand they +did cease. At least along the main waterways. Years before he could +have stopped them. But these were the seven fallow years, when +millions of tons of red rubber were being dumped upon the wharf at +Antwerp; little, roughly rolled red balls, like pellets of +coagulated blood, which had cost their weight in blood, which would +pay Leopold their weight in gold.</p> + +<p>He can not plead ignorance. Of all that goes on in his big +plantation no man has a better knowledge. Without their personal +honesty, he follows every detail of the "business" of his rubber +farm with the same diligence that made rich men of George Boldt and +Marshall Field. Leopold's knowledge is gained through many spies, by +voluminous reports, by following up the expenditure of each centime, +of each arm's-length of blue <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>cloth. Of every Belgian employed on +his farm, and ninety-five per cent. are Belgians, he holds the +<i>dossier</i>; he knows how many kilos a month the agent whips out of +his villages, how many bottles of absinthe he smuggles from the +French side, whether he lives with one black woman or five, why his +white wife in Belgium left him, why he left Belgium, why he dare not +return. The agent knows that Leopold, King of the Belgians, knows, +and that he has shared that knowledge with the agent's employer, the +man who by bribes of rich bonuses incites him to crime, the man who +could throw him into a Belgian jail, Leopold, King of the Congo.</p> + +<p>The agent decides for him it is best to please both Leopolds, and +Leopold makes no secret of what best pleases him. For not only is he +responsible for the atrocities, in that he does not try to suppress +them, but he is doubly guilty in that he has encouraged them. This +he has done with cynical, callous publicity, without effort at +concealment, without shame. Men who, in obtaining rubber, committed +unspeakable crimes, the memory of which makes other men +uncomfortable in their presence, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>Leopold rewarded with rich +bonuses, pensions, higher office, gilt badges of shame, and rapid +advancement. To those whom even his own judges sentenced to many +years' imprisonment he promptly granted the royal pardon, promoted, +and sent back to work in the vineyard.</p> + +<p>"That is the sort of man for <i>me</i>," his action seemed to say. "See +how I value that good and faithful servant. That man collected much +rubber. You observe I do not ask how he got it. I will not ask you. +All you need do is to collect rubber. Use our improved methods. Gum +copal rubbed in the kinky hair of the chief and then set on fire +burns, so my agents tell me, like vitriol. For collecting rubber the +chief is no longer valuable, but to his successor it is an +object-lesson. Let me recommend also the <i>chicotte</i>, the torture +tower, the 'hostage' house, and the crucifix. Many other stimulants +to labor will no doubt suggest themselves to you and to your +cannibal 'sentries.' Help to make me rich, and don't fear the +'State.' '<i>L'Etat, c'est moi!</i>' Go as far as you like!"</p> + +<p>I said the degradations and tortures <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>practised by the men "working +on commission" for Leopold are unprintable, but they have been +printed, and those who wish to read a calmly compiled, careful, and +correct record of their deeds will find it in the "Red Rubber" of +Mr. E.R. Morel. An even better book by the same authority, on the +whole history of the State, is his "King Leopold's Rule in the +Congo." Mr. Morel has many enemies. So, early in the nineteenth +century, had the English Abolitionists, Wilberforce and Granville +Sharp. After they were dead they were buried in the Abbey, and their +portraits were placed in the National Gallery. People who wish to +assist in freeing twenty millions of human beings should to-day +support Mr. Morel. It will be of more service to the blacks than, +after he is dead, burying him in Westminster Abbey.</p> + +<p>Mr. Morel, the American and English missionaries, and the English +Consul, Roger Casement, and other men, in Belgium, have made a +magnificent fight against Leopold; but the Powers to whom they have +appealed have been silent. Taking courage of this silence, Leopold +has divided the Congo into <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>several great territories in which the +sole right to work rubber is conceded to certain persons. To those +who protested that no one in the Congo "Free" State but the King +could trade in rubber, Leopold, as an answer, pointed with pride at +the preserves of these foreigners. And he may well point at them +with pride, for in some of those companies he owns a third, and in +most of them he holds a half, or a controlling interest. The +directors of the foreign companies are his cronies, members of his +royal household, his brokers, bankers. You have only to read the +names published in the lists of the Brussels Stock Exchange to see +that these "trading companies," under different aliases, are +Leopold. Having, then, "conceded" the greater part of the Congo to +himself, Leopold set aside the best part of it, so far as rubber is +concerned, as a <i>Domaine Privé</i>. Officially the receipts of this pay +for running the government, and for schools, roads and wharfs, for +which taxes were levied, but for which, after twenty years, one +looks in vain. Leopold claims that through the Congo he is out of +pocket; that this carrying the banner of civilization in <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>Africa +does not pay. Through his press bureaus he tells that his sympathy +for his black brother, his desire to see the commerce of the world +busy along the Congo, alone prevents him giving up what is for him a +losing business. There are several answers to this. One is that in +the Kasai Company alone Leopold owns 2,010 shares of stock. Worth +originally $50 a share, the value of each share rose to $3,100, +making at one time his total shares worth $5,421,000. In the +A.B.I.R. Concession he owns 1,000 shares, originally worth $100 +each, later worth $940. In the "vintage year" of 1900 each of these +shares was worth $5,050, and the 1,000 shares thus rose to the value +of $5,050,000.</p> + +<p>These are only two companies. In most of the others half the shares +are owned by the King.</p> + +<p>As published in the "State Bulletin," the money received in eight +years for rubber and ivory gathered in the <i>Domaine Privé</i> differs +from the amount given for it in the market at Antwerp. The official +estimates show a loss to the government. The actual sales show that +the government, over and above its own <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>estimate of its expenses, +instead of losing, made from the <i>Domaine Privé</i> alone $10,000,000. +We are left wondering to whom went that unaccounted-for $10,000,000. +Certainly the King would not take it, for, to reimburse himself for +his efforts, he early in the game reserved for himself another tract +of territory known as the <i>Domaine de la Couronne</i>. For years he +denied that this existed. He knew nothing of Crown Lands. But, at +last, in the Belgian Chamber, it was publicly charged that for years +from this private source, which he had said did not exist, Leopold +had been drawing an income of $15,000,000. Since then the truth of +this statement has been denied, but at the time in the Chamber it +was not contradicted.</p> + +<p>To-day, grown insolent by the apathy of the Powers, Leopold finds +disguising himself as a company, as a laborer worthy of his hire, +irksome. He now decrees that as "Sovereign" over the Congo all of +the Congo belongs to him. It is as much his property as is a +pheasant drive, as is a staked-out mining claim, as your hat is your +property. And the twenty millions of people who inhabit it are there +only <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>on his sufferance. They are his "tenants." He permits each +the hut in which he lives, and the garden adjoining that hut, but +his work must be for Leopold, and everything else, animal, mineral, +or vegetable, belongs to Leopold. The natives not only may not sell +ivory or rubber to independent traders, but if it is found in their +possession it is seized; and if you and I bought a tusk of ivory +here it would be taken from us and we could be prosecuted. This is +the law. Other men rule over territories more vast even than the +Congo. The King of England rules an empire upon which the sun never +sets. But he makes no claim to own it. Against the wishes of even +the humblest crofter, the King would not, because he knows he could +not, enter his cottage. Nor can we imagine even Kaiser William going +into the palm-leaf hut of a charcoal-burner in German East Africa +and saying: "This is my palm-leaf hut. This is my charcoal. You must +not sell it to the English, or the French, or the American. If they +buy from you they are 'receivers of stolen goods.' To feed my +soldiers you must drag my river for my fish. For me, in my swamp and +in my jungle, you <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>must toil twenty-four days of each month to +gather my rubber. You must not hunt the elephants, for they are my +elephants. Those tusks that fifty years ago your grandfather, with +his naked spear, cut from an elephant, and which you have tried to +hide from me under the floor of this hut, are my ivory. Because that +elephant, running wild through the jungle fifty years ago, belonged +to me. And you yourself are mine, your time is mine, your labor is +mine, your wife, your children, all are mine. They belong to me."</p> + +<a name="img6" id="img6"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-06.jpg" width="500" height="319" alt=""Tenants" of Leopold, Who Claims that the Congo +Belongs to Him, and that These Native People Are There Only as His +Tenants." title=""Tenants" of Leopold, Who Claims that the Congo +Belongs to Him, and that These Native People Are There Only as His +Tenants." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">"Tenants" of Leopold, Who Claims that the Congo +Belongs to Him, <br /> +and that These Native People Are There Only as His +Tenants. </p> + +<p>This, then, is the "open door" as I find it to-day in the Congo. It +is an incredible state of affairs, so insolent, so magnificent in +its impertinence, that it would be humorous, were it not for its +background of misery and suffering, for its hostage houses, its +chain gangs, its <i>chicottes</i>, its nameless crimes against the human +body, its baskets of dried hands held up in tribute to the Belgian +blackguard.</p> + + + +<hr class="short" /> +<br /> + +<h2><a name="III" id="III"></a>III</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span> + +<h3>THE CAPITAL OF THE CONGO</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>Leopold's "shop" has its front door at Banana. Its house flag is a +golden star on a blue background. Banana is the port of entry to the +Congo. You have, no doubt, seen many ports of Europe—Antwerp, +Hamburg, Boulogne, Lisbon, Genoa, Marseilles. Banana is the port of +entry to a country as large as Western Europe, and while the imports +and exports of Europe trickle through all these cities, the commerce +of the Congo enters and departs entirely at Banana. You can then +picture the busy harbor, the jungle of masts, the white bridges and +awnings of the steamers. By the fat funnels and the flags you can +distinguish the English tramps, the German merchantmen, the French, +Dutch, Italian, Portuguese traders, the smart "liners" from +Liverpool, even the Arab dhows with bird-wing sails, even the steel, +four-masted <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>schooners out of Boston, U.S.A. You can imagine the +toiling lighters, the slap-dash tenders, the launches with shrieking +whistles.</p> + +<p>Of course, you suspect it is not a bit like that. But were it for +fourteen countries the "open door" to twenty millions of people, +that is how it might look.</p> + +<p>Instead, it is the private entrance to the preserves of a private +individual. So what you really see is, on the one hand, islands of +mangrove bushes, with their roots in the muddy water; on the other, +Banana, a strip of sand and palm trees without a wharf, quay, +landing stage, without a pier to which you could make fast anything +larger than a rowboat.</p> + +<p>In a canoe naked natives paddle alongside to sell fish; a peevish +little man in a sun hat, who, in order to save Leopold three +salaries, holds four port offices, is being rowed to the gangway; on +shore the only other visible inhabitant of Banana, a man with no +nerves, is disturbing the brooding, sweating silence by knocking the +rust off the plates of a stranded mud-scow. Welcome to our city! +Welcome to busy, bustling Banana, the port of entry of the Congo +Free State.</p> + +<a name="img7" id="img7"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-07.jpg" width="500" height="352" alt="The Facilities for Landing at Banana, the Port of +Entry to the Congo, Are Limited." title="The Facilities for Landing at Banana, the Port of +Entry to the Congo, Are Limited." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Facilities for Landing at Banana, the Port of +Entry to the Congo, Are Limited. </p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>In a canoe we were paddled to the back yard of the café of Madame +Samuel, and from that bower of warm beer and sardine tins trudged +through the sun up one side of Banana and down the other. In between +the two paths were the bungalows and gardens of forty white men and +two white women. Many of the gardens, as was most of Banana, were +neglected, untidy, littered with condensed-milk tins. Others, more +carefully tended, were laid out in rigid lines. With all tropical +nature to draw upon, nothing had been imagined. The most ambitious +efforts were designs in whitewashed shells and protruding beer +bottles. We could not help remembering the gardens in Japan, of the +poorest and the most ignorant coolies. Do I seem to find fault with +Banana out of all proportion to its importance? It is because +Banana, the Congo's most advanced post of civilization, is typical +of all that lies beyond.</p> + +<p>From what I had read of the Congo I expected a broad sweep of muddy, +malaria-breeding water, lined by low-lying swamp lands, gloomy, +monotonous, depressing.</p> + +<p>But on the way to Boma and, later, when <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>I travelled on the Upper +Congo, I thought the river more beautiful than any great river I had +ever seen. It was full of wonderful surprises. Sometimes it ran +between palm-covered banks of yellow sand as low as those of the +Mississippi or the Nile; and again, in half an hour, the banks were +rock and as heavily wooded as the mountains of Montana, or as white +and bold as the cliffs of Dover, or we passed between great hills, +covered with what looked like giant oaks, and with their peaks +hidden in the clouds. I found it like no other river, because in +some one particular it was like them all. Between Banana and Boma +the banks first screened us in with the tangled jungle of the +tropics, and then opened up great wind-swept plateaux, leading to +hills that suggested—of all places—England, and, at that, +cultivated England. The contour of the hills, the shape of the +trees, the shade of their green contrasted with the green of the +grass, were like only the cliffs above Plymouth. One did not look +for native kraals and the wild antelope, but for the square, +ivy-topped tower of the village church, the loaf-shaped hayricks, +slow-moving masses of sheep. But <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>this that looks like a pasture +land is only coarse limestone covered with bitter, unnutritious +grass, which benefits neither beast nor man.</p> + +<p>At sunset we anchored in the current three miles from Boma, and at +daybreak we tied up to the iron wharf. As the capital of the +government Boma contains the residence and gardens of the governor, +who is the personal representative of Leopold, both as a shopkeeper +and as a king by divine right. He is a figurehead. The real +administrator is M. Vandamme, the Secrétaire-Général, the +ubiquitous, the mysterious, whose name before you leave Southampton +is in the air, of whom all men, whether they speak in French or +English, speak well. It is from Boma that M. Vandamme sends +collectors of rubber, politely labeled inspecteurs, directeurs, +judges, capitaines, and sous-lieutenants to their posts, and +distributes them over one million square miles.</p> + +<p>Boma is the capital of a country which is as large as six nations of +the European continent. For twenty-five years it has been the +capital. Therefore, the reader already guesses that <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>Boma has only +one wharf, and at that wharf there is no custom-house, no warehouse, +not even a canvas awning under which, during the six months of rainy +season, one might seek shelter for himself and his baggage.</p> + +<p>Our debarkation reminded me of a landing of filibusters. A wharf +forty yards long led from the steamer to the bank. Down this marched +the officers of the army, the clerks, the bookkeepers, and on the +bank and in the street each dumped his boxes, his sword, his +camp-bed, his full-dress helmet. It looked as though a huge eviction +had taken place, as though a retreating army, having gained the +river's edge, were waiting for a transport. It was not as though to +the government the coming of these gentlemen was a complete +surprise; regularly every three weeks at that exact spot a like +number disembark. But in years the State has not found it worth +while to erect for them even an open zinc shed. The cargo invoiced +to the State is given equal consideration.</p> + +<p>"Prisoners of the State," each wearing round his neck a steel ring +from which a chain stretches to the ring of another "prisoner," +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>carried the cargo to the open street, where lay the luggage of the +officers, and there dropped it. Mingled with steamer chairs, tin +bathtubs, gun-cases, were great crates of sheet iron, green boxes of +gin, bags of Teneriffe potatoes, boilers of an engine. Upon the +scene the sun beat with vicious, cruel persistence. Those officers +who had already served in the Congo dropped their belongings under +the shadow of a solitary tree. Those who for the first time were +seeing the capital of the country they had sworn to serve sank upon +their boxes and, with dismay in their eyes, mopped their red and +dripping brows.</p> + +<a name="img8" id="img8"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-08.jpg" width="500" height="308" alt=""Prisoners" of the State in Chains at Matadi." title=""Prisoners" of the State in Chains at Matadi."/> +</div> + +<p class="cap">"Prisoners" of the State in Chains at Matadi. </p> + +<p>Boma is built at the foot of a hill of red soil. It is a town of +scattered buildings made of wood and sheet-iron plates, sent out in +crates, and held together with screws. To Boma nature has been +considerate. She has contributed many trees, two or three long +avenues of palms, and in the many gardens caused flowers to blossom +and flourish. In the report of the "Commission of Enquiry" which +Leopold was forced to send out in 1904 to investigate the +atrocities, and each member of which, for his four months' work, +received <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>$20,000, Boma is described as possessing "the daintiness +and <i>chic</i> of a European watering-place."</p> + +<p>Boma really is like a seaport of one of the Central American republics. +It has a temporary sufficient-to-the-day-for-to-morrow-we-die air. +It looks like a military post that at any moment might be abandoned. +To remove this impression the State has certain exhibits which seem +to point to a stable and good government. There is a well-conducted +hospital and clean, well-built barracks; for the amusement of the +black soldiers even a theatre, and for the higher officials +attractive bungalows, a bandstand, where twice a week a negro band +plays by ear, and plays exceedingly well. There is even a +lawn-tennis court, where the infrequent visitor to the Congo is +welcomed, and, by the courteous Mr. Vandamme, who plays tennis as +well as he does every thing else, entertained. Boma is the shop +window of Leopold's big store. The good features of Boma are like +those attractive articles one sometimes sees in a shop window, but +which in the shop one fails to find—at least, I did not find them +in the shop. Outside of Boma <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>I looked in vain for a school +conducted by the State, like the one at Boma, such as those the +United States Government gave by the hundred to the Philippines. I +found not one. And I looked for such a hospital as the one I saw at +Boma, such as our government has placed for its employes along, and +at both ends of, the Isthmus of Panama, and, except for the one at +Leopoldville, I saw none.</p> + +<p>In spite of the fact that Boma is a "European watering-place," all +the servants of the State with whom I talked wanted to get away from +it, especially those who already had served in the interior. To +appreciate what Boma lacks one has only to visit the neighboring +seaports on the same coast; the English towns of Sierra Leone and +Calabar, the French town of Libreville in the French Congo, the +German seaport Duala in the Cameroons, but especially Calabar in +Southern Nigeria. In actual existence the new Calabar is eight years +younger than Boma, and in its municipal government, its +street-making, cleaning, and lighting, wharfs, barracks, prisons, +hospitals, it is a hundred years in advance. Boma is not a capital; +it is the distributing factory for a huge trading <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>concern, and a +particularly selfish one. There is, as I have said, only one wharf, +and at that wharf, without paying the State, only State boats may +discharge cargo, so the English, Dutch, and German boats are forced +to "tie up" along the river front. There the grass is eight feet +high and breeds mosquitoes and malaria, and conceals the wary +crocodile. At night, from the deck of the steamer, all one can see +of this capital is a fringe of this high grass in the light from the +air ports, and on shore three gas-lamps. No cafés are open, no +sailors carouse, no lighted window suggests that some one is giving +a dinner, that some one is playing bridge. Darkness, gloom, silence +mark this "European watering-place."</p> + +<p>"You ask me," demanded a Belgian lieutenant one night as we stood +together by the rail, "whether I like better the bush, where there +is no white man in a hundred miles, or to be stationed at Boma?"</p> + +<p>He threw out his hands at the gas-lamps, rapidly he pointed at each +of them in turn.</p> + +<p>"Voilà, Boma!" he said.</p> + +<p>From Boma we steamed six hours farther up the river to Matadi. On +the way we stopped <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>at Noqui, the home of Portuguese traders on the +Portuguese bank, which, as one goes up-stream, lies to starboard. +Here the current runs at from four to five miles an hour, and has so +sharply cut away the bank that we are able to run as near to it with +the stern of our big ship as though she were a canoe. To one used +more to ocean than to Congo traffic it was somewhat bewildering to +see the five-thousand-ton steamer make fast to a tree, a sand-bank +looming up three fathoms off her quarter, and the blades of her +propeller, as though they were the knives of a lawn-mower, cutting +the eel-grass.</p> + +<p>At Matadi the Congo makes one of her lightning changes. Her banks, +which have been low and woody, with, on the Portuguese side, +glimpses of boundless plateaux, become towering hills of rock. At +Matadi the cataracts and rapids begin, and for two hundred miles +continue to Stanley Pool, which is the beginning of the Upper Congo. +Leopoldville is situated on Stanley Pool, just to the right of where +the rapids start their race to the south. With Leopoldville above +and Boma below, still nearer the mouth of the river, Matadi makes a +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>centre link in the chain of the three important towns of the Lower +Congo.</p> + +<p>When Henry M. Stanley was halted by the cataracts and forced to +leave the river he disembarked his expedition on the bank opposite +Matadi, and a mile farther up-stream. It was from this point he +dragged and hauled his boats, until he again reached smooth water at +Stanley Pool. The wagons on which he carried the boats still can be +seen lying on the bank, broken and rusty. Like the sight of old gun +carriages and dismantled cannon, they give one a distinct thrill. +Now, on the bank opposite from where they lie, the railroad runs +from Matadi to Leopoldville.</p> + +<p>The Congo forces upon one a great admiration for Stanley. Unless +civilization utterly alters it, it must always be a monument to his +courage, and as you travel farther and see the difficulties placed +in his way, your admiration increases. There are men here who make +little of what Stanley accomplished; but they are men who seldom +leave their own compound, and, who, when they do go up the river, +travel at ease, not in a canoe, or on foot <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>through the jungle, but +in the smoking-room of the steamer and in a first-class railroad +carriage. That they are able so to travel is due to the man they +would belittle. The nickname given to Stanley by the natives is +to-day the nickname of the government. Matadi means rock. When +Stanley reached the town of Matadi, which is surrounded entirely by +rock, he began with dynamite to blast roads for his caravan. The +natives called him Bula Matadi, the Breaker of Rocks, and, as in +those days he was the Government, the Law, and the Prophets, Bula +Matadi, who then was the white man who governed, now signifies the +white man's government. But it is a very different government, and a +very different white man. With the natives the word is universal. +They say "Bula Matadi wood post." "Not traders' chop, Bula Matadi's +chop." "Him no missionary steamer, him Bula Matadi steamer."</p> + +<p>The town of Matadi is of importance as the place where, owing to the +rapids, passengers and cargoes are reshipped on the railroad to the +<i>haut Congo</i>. It is a railroad terminus only, and it looks it. The +railroad station and store-houses <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>are close to the river bank, and, +spread over several acres of cinders, are the railroad yard and +machine shops. Above those buildings of hot corrugated zinc and the +black soil rises a great rock. It is not so large as Gibraltar, or +so high as the Flatiron Building, but it is a little more steep than +either. Three narrow streets lead to its top. They are of flat +stones, with cement gutters. The stones radiate the heat of stove +lids. They are worn to a mirror-like smoothness, and from their +surface the sun strikes between your eyes, at the pit of your +stomach, and the soles of your mosquito boots. The three streets +lead to a parade ground no larger than and as bare as a brickyard. +It is surrounded by the buildings of Bula Matadi, the post-office, +the custom-house, the barracks, and the Café Franco-Belge. It has a +tableland fifty yards wide of yellow clay so beaten by thousands of +naked feet, so baked by the heat, that it is as hard as a brass +shield. Other tablelands may be higher, but this is the one nearest +the sun. You cross it wearily, in short rushes, with your heart in +your throat, and seeking shade, as a man crossing the zone of fire +seeks cover from the bullets. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>When you reach the cool, dirty +custom-house, with walls two feet thick, you congratulate yourself +on your escape; you look back into the blaze of the flaming plaza +and wonder if you have the courage to return.</p> + +<a name="img9" id="img9"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 336px;"> +<img src="images/img-09.jpg" width="336" height="450" alt="Bush Boys in the Plaza at Matadi Seeking Shade." +title="Bush Boys in the Plaza at Matadi Seeking Shade." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Bush Boys in the Plaza at Matadi Seeking Shade. </p> + +<p>At the custom-house I paid duty on articles I could not possibly +have bought anywhere in the Congo, as, for instance, a tent and a +folding-bed, and for a license to carry arms. A young man with a +hammer and tiny branding irons beat little stars and the number of +my license to <i>porter d'armes</i> on the stock of each weapon. Without +permission of Bula Matadi on leaving the Congo, one can not sell his +guns, or give them away. This is a precaution to prevent weapons +falling into the hands of the native. For some reason a native with +a gun alarms Bula Matadi. Just on the other bank of the river the +French, who do not seem to fear the black brother, sell him +flint-lock rifles, as many as his heart desires.</p> + +<p>On the steamer there was a mild young missionary coming out, for the +first time, to whom some unobserving friend had given a fox-terrier. +The young man did not care for the dog. He had never owned a dog, +and did not <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>know what to do with this one. Her name was "Fanny," +and only by the efforts of all on board did she reach the Congo +alive. There was no one, from the butcher to the captain, including +the passengers, who had not shielded Fanny from the cold, and later +from the sun, fed her, bathed her, forced medicine down her throat, +and raced her up and down the spar deck. Consequently we all knew +Fanny, and it was a great shock when from the custom-house I saw her +running around the blazing parade ground, her eyes filled with fear +and "lost dog" written all over her, from her drooping tongue to her +drooping tail. Captain Burton and I called "Fanny," and, not seeking +suicide for ourselves, sent half a dozen black boys to catch her. +But Fanny never liked her black uncles; on the steamer the Kroo boys +learned to give her the length of her chain, and so we were forced +to plunge to her rescue into the valley of heat. Perhaps she thought +we were again going to lock her up on the steamer, or perhaps that +it was a friendly game, for she ran from us as fast as from the +black boys. In Matadi no one ever had crossed the parade ground +except at a funeral march, and the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>spectacle of two large white +men playing tag with a small fox-terrier attracted an immense +audience. The officials and clerks left work and peered between the +iron-barred windows, the "prisoners" in chains ceased breaking rock +and stared dumbly from the barracks, the black "sentries" shrieked +and gesticulated, the naked bush boys, in from a long caravan +journey, rose from the side of their burdens and commented upon our +manœuvres in gloomy, guttural tones. I suspect they thought we +wanted Fanny for "chop." Finally Fanny ran into the legs of a German +trader, who grabbed her by the neck and held her up to us.</p> + +<p>"You want him? Hey?" he shouted.</p> + +<p>"Ay, man," gasped Burton, now quite purple, "did you think we were +trying to amuse the dog?"</p> + +<p>I made a leash of my belt, and the captain returned to the ship +dragging his prisoner after him. An hour later I met the youthful +missionary leading Fanny by a rope.</p> + +<p>"I must tell you about Fanny," he cried. "After I took her to the +Mission I forgot to tie her up—as I suppose I should have done—and +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>she ran away. But, would you believe it, she found her way straight +back to the ship. Was it not intelligent of her?"</p> + +<p>I was too far gone with apoplexy, heat prostration, and sunstroke to +make any answer, at least one that I could make to a missionary.</p> + +<p>The next morning Fanny, the young missionary, and I left for +Leopoldville on the railroad. It is a narrow-gauge railroad built +near Matadi through the solid rock and later twisting and turning so +often that at many places one can see the track on three different +levels. It is not a State road, but was built and is owned by a +Dutch company, and, except that it charges exorbitant rates and does +not keep its carriages clean, it is well run, and the road-bed is +excellent. But it runs a passenger train only three times a week, +and though the distance is so short, and though the train starts at +6:30 in the morning, it does not get you to Leopoldville the same +day. Instead, you must rest over night at Thysville and start at +seven the next morning. That afternoon at three you reach +Leopoldville. For the two hundred and fifty miles the fare is two +hundred francs, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>and one is limited to sixty pounds of luggage. That +was the weight allowed by the Japanese to each war correspondent, +and as they gave us six months in Tokio in which to do nothing else +but weigh our equipment, I left Matadi without a penalty. Had my +luggage exceeded the limit, for each extra pound I would have had to +pay the company ten cents. To the Belgian officers and agents who go +for three years to serve the State in the bush the regulation is +especially harsh, and in a company so rich, particularly mean. To +many a poor officer, and on the pay they receive there are no rich +ones, the tax is prohibitive. It forces them to leave behind +medicines, clothing, photographic supplies, all ammunition, which +means no chance of helping out with duck and pigeon the daily menu +of goat and tinned sausages, and, what is the greatest hardship, all +books. This regulation, which the State permitted to the +concessionaires of the railroad, sends the agents of the State into +the wilderness physically and mentally unequipped, and it is no +wonder the weaker brothers go mad, and act accordingly.</p> + +<p>My black boys travelled second-class, which <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>means an open car with +narrow seats very close together and a wooden roof. On these cars +passengers are allowed twenty pounds of luggage and permitted to +collect two hundred and fifty miles of heat and dust. To a black boy +twenty pounds is little enough, for he travels with much more +baggage than an average "blanc." I am not speaking of the Congo boy. +All the possessions the State leaves him he could carry in his +pockets, and he has no pockets. But wherever he goes the Kroo boy, +Mendi boy, or Sierra Leone boy carries all his belongings with him +in a tin trunk painted pink, green, or yellow. He is never separated +from his "box," and the recognized uniform of a Kroo boy at work, is +his breechcloth, and hanging from a ribbon around his knee, the key +to his box. If a boy has no box he generally carries three keys.</p> + +<p>In the first-class car were three French officers en route to +Brazzaville, the capital of the French Congo, and a dog, a sad +mongrel, very dirty, very hungry. On each side of the tiny toy car +were six revolving-chairs, so the four men, not to speak of the dog, +quite filled it. And to our own bulk each added hand-bags, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>cases of +beer, helmets, gun-cases, cameras, water-bottles, and, as the road +does not supply food of any kind, his chop-box. A chop-box is +anything that holds food, and for food of every kind, for the hours +of feeding, and the verb "to feed," on the West Coast, the only +word, the "lazy" word, is "chop."</p> + +<p>The absent-minded young missionary, with Fanny jammed between his +ankles, and looking out miserably upon the world, and two other +young missionaries, travelled second-class.</p> + +<p>They were even more crowded together than were we, but not so much +with luggage as with humanity. But as a protest against the high +charges of the railroad the missionaries always travel in the open +car. These three young men were for the first time out of England, +and in any fashion were glad to start on their long journey up the +Congo to Bolobo. To them whatever happened was a joke. It was a joke +even when the colored "wife" of one of the French officers used the +broad shoulders of one of them as a pillow and slept sweetly. She +was a large, good-natured, good-looking mulatto, and at the frequent +stations the French officer ran back to her with "white man's chop," +a tin <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>of sausages, a pineapple, a bottle of beer. She drank the +beer from the bottle, and with religious tolerance offered it to the +Baptists. They assured her without the least regret that they were +teetotalers. To the other blacks in the open car the sight of a +white man waiting on one of their own people was a thrilling +spectacle. They regarded the woman who could command such services +with respect. It would be interesting to know what they thought of +the white man. At each station the open car disgorged its occupants +to fill with water the beer bottle each carried, and to buy from the +natives kwango, the black man's bread, a flaky, sticky flour that +tastes like boiled chestnuts; and pineapples at a franc for ten. And +such pineapples! Not hard and rubber-like, as we know them at home, +but delicious, juicy, melting in the mouth like hothouse grapes, +and, also, after each mouthful, making a complete bath necessary. +One of the French officers had a lump of ice which he broke into +pieces and divided with the others. They saluted magnificently many +times, and as each drowned the morsel in his tin cup of beer, one of +them cried with <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>perfect simplicity: "C'est Paris!" This reminded me +that the ship's steward had placed much ice in my chop basket, and I +carried some of it to another car in which were five of the White +Sisters. For nineteen days I had been with them on the steamer, but +they had spoken to no one, and I was doubtful how they would accept +my offering. But the Mother Superior gave permission, and they took +the ice through the car window, their white hoods bristling with the +excitement of the adventure. They were on their way to a post still +two months' journey up the river, nearly to Lake Tanganyika, and for +three years or, possibly, until they died, that was the last ice +they would see.</p> + +<p>At Bongolo station the division superintendent came in the car and +everybody offered him refreshment, and in return he told us, in the +hope of interesting us, of a washout, and then casually mentioned +that an hour before an elephant had blocked the track. It seemed so +much too good to be true that I may have expressed some doubt, for +he said: "Why, of course and certainly. Already this morning one was +at Sariski Station and another at <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>Sipeto." And instead of looking +out of the window I had been reading an American magazine, filched +from the smoking-room, which was one year old!</p> + +<p>At Thysville the railroad may have opened a hotel, but when I was +there to hunt for a night's shelter it turned you out bag and +baggage. The French officers decided to risk a Portuguese trading +store known as the "Ideal Hotel," and the missionaries very kindly +gave me the freedom of their Rest House. It is kept open for +those of the Mission who pass between the Upper and Lower Congo. +At the station the young missionaries were met by two older +missionaries—Mr. Weekes, who furnished the "Commission of Enquiry" +with much evidence, which they would not, or were not allowed to, +print, and Mr. Jennings. With them were twenty "boys" from the +Mission and, with each of them carrying a piece of our baggage on +his head, we climbed the hill, and I was given a clean, comfortable, +completely appointed bedroom. Our combined chop we turned over to a +black brother. He is the custodian of the Rest House and an +excellent cook. While he was <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>preparing it my boys spread out my +folding rubber tub. Had I closed the door I should have smothered, +so, in the presence of twenty interested black Baptists, I took an +embarrassing but one of the most necessary baths I can remember.</p> + +<p>There still was a piece of the ice remaining, and as the interest in +the bathtub had begun to drag I handed it to one of my audience. He +yelled as though I had thrust into his hand a drop of vitriol, and, +leaping in the air, threw the ice on the floor and dared any one to +touch it. From the "personal" boys who had travelled to Matadi the +Mission boys had heard of ice. But none had ever seen it. They +approached it as we would a rattlesnake. Each touched it and then +sprang away. Finally one, his eyes starting from his head, +cautiously stroked the inoffensive brick and then licked his +fingers. The effect was instantaneous. He assured the others it was +"good chop," and each of them sat hunched about it on his heels, +stroking it, and licking his fingers, and then with delighted +thrills rubbing them over his naked body. The little block of ice +that at Liverpool was only a "<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>quart of water" had assumed the value +of a diamond.</p> + +<p>Dinner was enlivened by an incident. Mr. Weekes, with orders simply +to "fry these," had given to the assistant of the cook two tins of +sausages. The small <i>chef</i> presented them to us in the pan in which +he had cooked them, but he had obeyed instructions to the letter and +had fried the tins unopened.</p> + +<p>After dinner we sat until late, while the older men told the young +missionaries of atrocities of which, in the twenty years and within +the last three years, they had been witnesses. Already in Mr. +Morel's books I had read their testimony, but hearing from the men +themselves the tales of outrage and cruelty gave them a fresh and +more intimate value, and sent me to bed hot and sick with +indignation. But, nevertheless, the night I slept at Thysville was +the only cool one I knew in the Congo. It was as cool as is a night +in autumn at home. Thysville, between the Upper and the Lower Congo, +with its fresh mountain air, is an obvious site for a hospital for +the servants of the State. To the Congo it should be what <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>Simla is +to the sick men of India; but the State is not running hospitals. It +is in the rubber business.</p> + +<p>All steamers for the Upper Congo and her great tributaries, whether +they belong to the State or the Missions, start from Leopoldville. +There they fit out for voyages, some of which last three and four +months. So it is a place of importance, but, like Boma, it looks as +though the people who yesterday built it meant to-morrow to move +out. The river-front is one long dump-heap. It is a grave-yard for +rusty boilers, deck-plates, chains, fire-bars. The interior of the +principal storehouse for ships' supplies, directly in front of the +office of the captain of the port, looks like a junk-shop for old +iron and newspapers. I should have enjoyed taking the captain of the +port by the neck and showing him the water-front and marine shops at +Calabar; the wharfs and quays of stone, the open places spread with +gravel, the whitewashed cement gutters, the spare parts of +machinery, greased and labeled in their proper shelves, even the +condemned scrap-iron in orderly piles; the whole yard as trim as a +battleship.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>On the river-front at Leopoldville a grossly fat man, collarless, +coatless, purple-faced, perspiring, was rushing up and down. He was +the captain of the port. Black women had assembled to greet +returning black soldiers, and the captain was calling upon the black +sentries to drive them away. The sentries, yelling, fell upon the +women with their six-foot staves and beat them over the head and +bare shoulders, and as they fled, screaming, the captain of the port +danced in the sun shaking his fists after them and raging violently. +Next morning I was told he had tried to calm his nerves with +absinthe, which is not particularly good for nerves, and was +exceedingly unwell. I was sorry for him. The picture of discipline +afforded by the glazed-eyed official, reeling and cursing in the +open street, had been illuminating.</p> + +<p>Although at Leopoldville the State has failed to build wharfs, the +esthetic features of the town have not been neglected, and there is +a pretty plaza called Stanley Park. In the centre of this plaza is a +pillar with, at its base, a bust of Leopold, and on the top of the +pillar a plaster-of-Paris lady, nude, and, not unlike <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>the +Bacchante of MacMonnies. Not so much from the likeness as from +history, I deduced that the lady must be Cléo de Mérode. But whether +the monument is erected to her or to Leopold, or to both of them, I +do not know.</p> + +<a name="img10" id="img10"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 258px;"> +<img src="images/img-10.jpg" width="258" height="450" alt="The Monument in Stanley Park, Erected, not to +Stanley, but to Leopold." title= "The Monument in Stanley Park, Erected, not to +Stanley, but to Leopold." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Monument in Stanley Park, Erected, not to +Stanley, but to Leopold. </p> + +<p>I left Leopoldville in the <i>Deliverance</i>. Some of the State boats +that make the long trip to Stanleyville are very large ships. They +have plenty of deck room and many cabins. With their flat, raft-like +hull, their paddle-wheel astern, and the covered sun deck, they +resemble gigantic house-boats. Of one of these boats the +<i>Deliverance</i> was only one-third the size, but I took passage on her +because she would give me a chance to see not only something of the +Congo, but also one of its great tributaries, the less travelled +Kasai. The <i>Deliverance</i> was about sixty-five feet over all and drew +three feet of water. She was built like a mud-scow, with a deck of +iron plates. Amidships, on this deck, was a tiny cabin with berths +for two passengers and standing room for one. The furnaces and +boiler were forward, banked by piles of wood. All the river boats +burn only wood. Her engines were in the stern. These engines and the +driving-rod <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>to the paddle-wheel were uncovered. This gives the +<i>Deliverance</i> the look of a large automobile without a tonneau. You +were constantly wondering what had gone wrong with the carbureter, +and if it rained what would happen to her engines. Supported on iron +posts was an upper deck, on which, forward, stood the captain's box +of a cabin and directly in front of it the steering-wheel. The +telegraph, which signalled to the openwork engine below, and a +dining table as small as a chess-board, completely filled the +"bridge." When we sat at table the captain's boy could only just +squeeze himself between us and the rail. It was like dining in a +private box. And certainly no theatre ever offered such scenery, nor +did any menagerie ever present so many strange animals.</p> + +<p>We were four white men: Captain Jensen, his engineer, and the other +passenger, Captain Anfossi, a young Italian. Before he reached his +post he had to travel one month on the <i>Deliverance</i> and for another +month walk through the jungle. He was the most cheerful and amusing +companion, and had he been returning after three years of exile to +his home <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>he could not have been more brimful of spirits. Captain +Jensen was a Dane (almost every river captain is a Swede or a Dane) +and talked a little English, a little French, and a little Bangala. +The mechanician was a Finn and talked the native Bangala, and +Anfossi spoke French. After chop, when we were all assembled on the +upper deck, there would be the most extraordinary talks in four +languages, or we would appoint one man to act as a clearing-house, +and he would translate for the others.</p> + +<p>On the lower deck we carried twenty "wood boys," whose duty was to +cut wood for the furnace, and about thirty black passengers. They +were chiefly soldiers, who had finished their period of service for +the State, with their wives and children. They were crowded on the +top of the hatches into a space fifteen by fifteen feet between our +cabin door and the furnace. Around the combings of the hatches, and +where the scuppers would have been had the <i>Deliverance</i> had +scuppers, the river raced over the deck to a depth of four or five +inches. When the passengers wanted to wash their few clothes or +themselves they carried on their ablutions and laundry work where +they happened <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>to be sitting. But for Anfossi and myself to go from +our cabin to the iron ladder of the bridge it was necessary to wade +both in the water and to make stepping stones of the passengers. I +do not mean that we merely stepped over an occasional arm or leg. I +mean we walked on them. You have seen a football player, in a hurry +to make a touchdown, hurdle without prejudice both friends and foes. +Our progress was like this. But by practice we became so expert that +without even awakening them we could spring lightly from the plump +stomach of a black baby to its mother's shoulder, from there leap to +the father's ribs, and rebound upon the rungs of the ladder.</p> + +<a name="img11" id="img11"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-11.jpg" width="500" height="318" alt="The Deliverance." title="The Deliverance." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The <i>Deliverance</i>. </p> + +<p>The river marched to the sea at the rate of four to five miles an +hour. The <i>Deliverance</i> could make about nine knots an hour, so we +travelled at the average rate of five miles; but for the greater +part of each day we were tied to a bank while the boys went ashore +and cut enough wood to carry us farther. And we never travelled at +night. Owing to the changing currents, before the sun set we ran +into shore and made fast to a tree. I explained how in America the +river boats used search-lights, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>and was told that on one boat the +State had experimented with a searchlight, but that particular +searchlight having got out of order the idea of night travelling was +condemned.</p> + +<p>Ours was a most lazy progress, but one with the most beautiful +surroundings and filled with entertainment. From our private box we +looked out upon the most wonderful of panoramas. Sometimes we were +closely hemmed in by mountains of light-green grass, except where, +in the hollows, streams tumbled in tiny waterfalls between gigantic +trees hung with strange flowering vines and orchids. Or we would +push into great lakes of swirling brown water, dotted with flat +islands overgrown with reed grass higher than the head of a man. +Again the water turned blue and the trees on the banks grew into +forests with the look of cultivated, well-cared-for parks, but with +no sign of man, not even a mud hut or a canoe; only the strangest of +birds and the great river beasts. Sometimes the sky was overcast and +gray, the warm rain shut us in like a fog, and the clouds hid the +peaks of the hills, or there would come a swift black tornado and +the rain beat into our private box, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>and each would sit crouched in +his rain coat, while the engineer smothered his driving-rods in palm +oil, and the great drops drummed down upon the awning and drowned +the fire in our pipes. After these storms, as though it were being +pushed up from below, the river seemed to rise in the centre, to +become convex. By some optical illusion, it seemed to fall away on +either hand to the depth of three or four feet.</p> + +<p>But as a rule we had a brilliant, gorgeous sunshine that made the +eddying waters flash and sparkle, and caused the banks of sand to +glare like whitewashed walls, and turn the sharp, hard fronds of the +palms into glittering sword-blades. The movement of the boat +tempered the heat, and in lazy content we sat in our lookout box and +smiled upon the world. Except for the throb of the engine and the +slow splash, splash, splash of the wheel there was no sound. We +might have been adrift in the heart of a great ocean. So complete +was the silence, so few were the sounds of man's presence, that at +times one almost thought that ours was the first boat to disturb the +Congo.</p> + +<p>Although we were travelling by boat, we <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>spent as much time on land +as on the water. Because the <i>Deliverance</i> burnt wood and, like an +invading army, "lived on the country," she was always stopping to +lay in a supply. That gave Anfossi and myself a chance to visit the +native villages or to hunt in the forest.</p> + +<p>To feed her steamers the State has established along the river-bank +posts for wood, and in theory at these places there always is a +sufficient supply of wood to carry a steamer to the next post. But +our experience was either that another steamer had just taken all +the wood or that the boys had decided to work no more and had hidden +themselves in the bush. The State posts were "clearings," less than +one hundred yards square, cut out of the jungle. Sometimes only +black men were in charge, but as a rule the <i>chef de poste</i> was a +lonely, fever-ridden white, whose only interest in our arrival was +his hope that we might spare him quinine. I think we gave away as +many grains of quinine as we received logs of wood. Empty-handed we +would turn from the wood post and steam a mile or so farther up the +river, where we would run into a bank, and a boy with a steel hawser +would leap overboard <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>and tie up the boat to the roots of a tree. +Then all the boys would disappear into the jungle and attack the +primeval forest. Each was supplied with a machete and was expected +to furnish a <i>bras</i> of wood. A <i>bras</i> is a number of sticks about as +long and as thick as your arm, placed in a pile about three feet +high and about three feet wide. To fix this measure the head boy +drove poles into the bank three feet apart, and from pole to pole at +the same distance from the ground stretched a strip of bark. When +each boy had filled one of these openings all the wood was carried +on board, and we would unhitch the <i>Deliverance</i>, and she would +proceed to burn up the fuel we had just collected. It took the +twenty boys about four hours to cut the wood, and the <i>Deliverance</i> +the same amount of time to burn it. It was distinctly a +hand-to-mouth existence. As I have pointed out, when it is too dark +to see the currents, the Congo captains never attempt to travel. So +each night at sunset Captain Jensen ran into the bank, and as soon +as the plank was out all the black passengers and the crew passed +down it and spent the night on shore. In five minutes the women +would have <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>the fires lighted and the men would be cutting grass +for bedding and running up little shelters of palm boughs and +hanging up linen strips that were both tents and mosquito nets.</p> + +<a name="img12" id="img12"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 290px;"> +<img src="images/img-12.jpg" width="290" height="450" alt="The Native Wife of a Chef de Poste." +title="The Native Wife of a Chef de Poste." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Native Wife of a <i>Chef de Poste</i>. </p> + +<p>In the moonlight the natives with their camp-fires and torches made +most wonderful pictures. Sometimes for their sleeping place the +captain would select a glade in the jungle, or where a stream had +cut a little opening in the forest, or a sandy island, with tall +rushes on either side and the hot African moon shining on the white +sand and turning the palms to silver, or they would pitch camp in a +buffalo wallow, where the grass and mud had been trampled into a +clay floor by the hoofs of hundreds of wild animals. But the fact +that they were to sleep where at sunrise and at sunset came +buffaloes, elephants, and panthers, disturbed the women not at all, +and as they bent, laughing, over the iron pots, the firelight shone +on their bare shoulders and was reflected from their white teeth and +rolling eyes and brazen bangles.</p> + +<p>Until late in the night the goats would bleat, babies cry, and the +"boys" and "mammies" talked, sang, quarrelled, beat tom-toms, and +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>squeezed mournful groans out of the accordion of civilization. One +would have thought we had anchored off a busy village rather than at +a place where, before that night, the inhabitants had been only the +beasts of the jungle and the river.</p> + + + +<hr class="short" /> +<br /> + + +<h2><a name="IV" id="IV"></a>IV</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span> + +<h3>AMERICANS IN THE CONGO</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>In trying to sum up what I found in the Congo Free State, I think +what one fails to find there is of the greatest significance. To +tell what the place is like, you must tell what it lacks. One must +write of the Congo always in the negative. It is as though you +asked: "What sort of a house is this one Jones has built?" and were +answered: "Well, it hasn't any roof, and it hasn't any cellar, and +it has no windows, floors, or chimneys. It's that kind of a house."</p> + +<p>When first I arrived in the Congo the time I could spend there +seemed hopelessly inadequate. After I'd been there a month, it +seemed to me that in a very few days any one could obtain a +painfully correct idea of the place, and of the way it is +administered. If an orchestra starts on an piece of music with all +the instruments out of tune, it need not <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>play through the entire +number for you to know that the instruments are out of tune.</p> + +<p>The charges brought against Leopold II, as King of the Congo, are +three:</p> + +<p>(<i>a</i>) That he has made slaves of the twenty million blacks he +promised to protect.</p> + +<p>(<i>b</i>) That, in spite of his promise to keep the Congo open to trade, +he has closed it to all nations.</p> + +<p>(<i>c</i>) That the revenues of the country and all of its trade he has +retained for himself.</p> + +<p>Any one who visits the Congo and remains only two weeks will be +convinced that of these charges Leopold is guilty. In that time he +will not see atrocities, but he will see that the natives are +slaves, that no foreigner can trade with them, that in the interest +of Leopold alone the country is milked.</p> + +<p>He will see that the government of Leopold is not a government. It +preserves the perquisites and outward signs of government. It coins +money, issues stamps, collects taxes. But it assumes none of the +responsibilities of government. The Congo Free State is only a great +trading house. And in it Leopold is the only wholesale and retail +trader. He gives a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>bar of soap for rubber, and makes a "turn-over" +of a cup of salt for ivory. He is not a monarch. He is a shopkeeper.</p> + +<p>And were the country not so rich in rubber and ivory, were the +natives not sweated so severely, he also would be a bankrupt +shopkeeper. For the Congo is not only one vast trading post, but +also it is a trading post badly managed. Even in the republics of +Central America where the government changes so frequently, and +where each new president is trying to make hay while he can, there +is better administration, more is done for the people, the rights of +other nations are better respected.</p> + +<p>Were the Congo properly managed, it would be one of the richest +territories on the surface of the earth. As it is, through ignorance +and cupidity, it is being despoiled and its people are the most +wretched of human beings. In the White Book containing the reports +of British vice-consuls on conditions in the Congo from April of +last year to January of this year, Mr. Mitchell tells how the +enslavement of the people still continues, how "they" (the +conscripts, as they are <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>called) "are hunted in the forest by +soldiers, and brought in chained by the neck like criminals." They +then, though conscripted to serve in the army, are set to manual +labor. They are slaves. The difference between the slavery under +Leopold and the slavery under the Arab raiders is that the Arab was +the better and kinder master. He took "prisoners" just as Leopold +seizes "conscripts," but he had too much foresight to destroy whole +villages, to carry off all the black man's live stock, and to uproot +his vegetable gardens. He purposed to return. And he did not wish to +so terrify the blacks that to escape from him they would penetrate +farther into the jungle. His motive was purely selfish, but his +methods, compared with those of Leopold, were almost considerate. +The work the State to-day requires of the blacks is so oppressive +that they have no time, no heart, to labor for themselves.</p> + +<p>In every other colony—French, English, German—in the native +villages I saw vegetable gardens, goats, and chickens, large, +comfortable, three-room huts, fences, and, especially in the German +settlement of the Cameroons <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>at Duala, many flower gardens. In Bell +Town at Duala I walked for miles through streets lined with such +huts and gardens, and saw whole families, the very old as well as +the very young, sitting contentedly in the shade of their trees, or +at work in their gardens. In the Congo native villages I saw but one +old person, of chickens or goats that were not to be given to the +government as taxes I saw none, and the vegetable gardens, when +there were any such, were cultivated for the benefit of the <i>chef de +poste</i>, and the huts were small, temporary, and filthy. The dogs in +the kennels on my farm are better housed, better fed, and much +better cared for, whether ill or well, than are the twenty millions +of blacks along the Congo River. And that these human beings are so +ill-treated is due absolutely to the cupidity of one man, and to the +apathy of the rest of the world. And it is due as much to the apathy +and indifference of whoever may read this as to the silence of Elihu +Root or Sir Edward Grey. No one can shirk his responsibility by +sneering, "Am I my brother's keeper?" The Government of the United +States and the thirteen other countries have promised <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>to protect +these people, to care for their "material and moral welfare," and +that promise is morally binding upon the people of those countries. +How much Leopold cares for the material welfare of the natives is +illustrated by the prices he pays the "boys" who worked on the +government steamer in which I went up the Kasai. They were bound on +a three months' voyage, and for each month's work on this trip they +were given in payment their rice and eighty cents. That is, at the +end of the trip they received what in our money would be equivalent +to two dollars and forty cents. And that they did not receive in +money, but in "trade goods," which are worth about ten per cent less +than their money value. So that of the two dollars and eighty cents +that is due them, these black boys, who for three months sweated in +the dark jungle cutting wood, are robbed by this King of twenty-four +cents. One would dislike to grow rich at that price.</p> + +<a name="img13" id="img13"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-13.jpg" width="500" height="318" alt="English Missionaries, and Some of Their Charges." +title="English Missionaries, and Some of Their Charges." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">English Missionaries, and Some of Their Charges. </p> + +<p>In the French Congo I asked the traders at Libreville what they paid +their boys for cutting mahogany. I found the price was four francs a +day without "chop," or three and a half <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span>francs with "chop." That +is, on one side of the river the French pay in cash for one day's +work what Leopold pays in trade goods for the work of a month. As a +result the natives run away to the French side, and often, I might +almost say invariably, when at the <i>poste de bois</i> on the Congo side +we would find two cords of wood, on the other bank at the post for +the French boats we would count two hundred and fifty cords of wood. +I took photographs of the native villages in all the colonies, in +order to show how they compared—of the French and Belgian wood +posts, the one well stocked and with the boys lying about asleep or +playing musical instruments, or alert to trade and barter, and on +the Belgian side no wood, and the unhappy white man alone, and +generally shivering with fever. Had the photographs only developed +properly they would have shown much more convincingly than one can +write how utterly miserable is the condition of the Congo negro. And +the condition of the white man at the wood posts is only a little +better. We found one man absolutely without supplies. He was only +twenty-four hours distant from Leopoldville, but no <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>supplies had +been sent him. He was ill with fever, and he could eat nothing but +milk. Captain Jensen had six cans of condensed milk, which the State +calculated should suffice for him and his passengers for three +months. He turned the lot over to the sick man.</p> + +<p>We found another white man at the first wood post on the Kasai just +above where it meets the Congo. He was in bed and dangerously ill +with enteric fever. He had telegraphed the State at Leopoldville and +a box of medicines had been sent to him; but the State doctors had +forgotten to enclose any directions for their use. We were as +ignorant of medicines as the man himself, and, as it was impossible +to move him, we were forced to leave him lying in his cot with the +row of bottles and tiny boxes, that might have given him life, +unopened at his elbow. It was ten days before the next boat would +touch at his post. I do not know that it reached him in time. One +could tell dozens of such stories of cruelty to natives and of +injustice and neglect to the white agents.</p> + +<p>The fact that Leopold has granted to American syndicates control +over two great <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>territories in the Congo may bring about a better +state of affairs, and, in any event, it may arouse public interest +in this country. It certainly should be of interest to Americans +that some of the most prominent of their countrymen have gone into +close partnership with a speculator as unscrupulous and as notorious +as is Leopold, and that they are to exploit a country which as yet +has been developed only by the help of slavery, with all its +attendant evils of cruelty and torture.</p> + +<p>That Leopold has no right to give these concessions is a matter +which chiefly concerns the men who are to pay for them, but it is an +interesting fact.</p> + +<p>The Act of Berlin expressly states: <i>"No Power which exercises, or +shall exercise, sovereign rights in the above-mentioned regions, +shall be allowed to grant therein a monopoly or favor of any kind in +matters of trade."</i></p> + +<p>Leopold is only a steward placed by the Powers over the Congo. He is +a janitor. And he has no more authority to give even a foot of +territory to Belgians, Americans, or Chinamen than the janitor of an +apartment house has authority to fill the rooms with his <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>wife's +relations or sell the coal in the basement.</p> + +<p>The charge that the present concessionaires have no title that any +independent trader or miner need respect is one that is sure to be +brought up when the Powers throw Leopold out, and begin to clean +house. The concessionaires take a sporting chance that Leopold will +not be thrown out. It should be remembered that it is to his and to +their advantage to see that he is not.</p> + +<p>In November of 1906, Leopold gave the International Forestry and +Mining Company of the Congo mining rights in territories adjoining +his private park, the <i>Domaine de la Couronne</i>, and to the American +Congo Company he granted the right to work rubber along the Congo +River to where it joins the Kasai. This latter is a territory of +four thousand square miles. The company also has the option within +the next eleven years of buying land in any part of a district which +is nearly one-half of the entire Congo. Of the Forestry and Mining +Company one-half of the profits go to Leopold, one-fourth to +Belgians, and the remaining fourth to the Americans. Of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>profits +of the American Congo Company, Leopold is entitled to one-half and +the Americans to the other half. This company was one originally +organized to exploit a new method of manufacturing crude rubber from +the plant. The company was taken over by Thomas F. Ryan and his +associates. Back of both companies are the Guggenheims, who are to +perform the actual work in the mines and in the rubber plantation. +Early in March a large number of miners and engineers were selected +by John Hays Hammond, the chief engineer of the Guggenheim +Exploration Companies, and A. Chester Beatty, and were sent to +explore the territory granted in the mining concession. Another +force of experts are soon to follow. The legal representative of the +syndicates has stated that in the Congo they intend to move "on +commercial lines." By that we take it they mean they will give the +native a proper price for his labor; and instead of offering +"bonuses" and "commissions" to their white employees will pay them +living wages. The exact terms of the concessions are wrapped in +mystery. Some say the territories ceded to the concessionaires <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>are +to be governed by them, policed by them, and that within the +boundaries of these concessions the Americans are to have absolute +control. If this be so the syndicates are entering upon an +experiment which for Americans is almost without precedent. They +will be virtually what in England is called a chartered company, +with the difference that the Englishmen receive their charter from +their own government, while the charter under which the Americans +will act will be granted by a foreign Power, and for what they may +do in the Congo their own government could not hold them +responsible. They are answerable only to the Power that issued the +charter; and that Power is the just, the humane, the merciful +Leopold.</p> + +<p>The history of the early days of chartered companies in Africa, +notoriously those of the Congo, Northern Nigeria, Rhodesia, and +German Central Africa does not make pleasant reading. But until the +Americans in the Congo have made this experiment, it would be most +unfair (except that the company they choose to keep leaves them open +to suspicion) not to give them the benefit of the doubt. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>One can at +least say for them that they seem to be absolutely ignorant of the +difficulties that lie before them. At least that is true of all of +them to whom I have talked.</p> + +<p>The attorney of the Rubber Company when interviewed by a +representative of a New York paper is reported to have said: "We +have purchased a privilege from a Sovereign State and propose to +operate it along purely commercial lines. With King Leopold's +management of Congo affairs in the past, or, with <i>what he may do in +an administrative way in the future, we have absolutely nothing to +do</i>." The italics are mine.</p> + +<p>When asked: "Under your concessions are you given similar powers +over the native blacks as are enjoyed by other concessionaires?" the +answer of the attorney, as reported, was: "The problem of labor is +not mentioned in the concession agreement, neither is the question +of local administration. We are left to solve the labor problem in +our own way, on a purely commercial basis, and with the question of +government we have absolutely nothing whatever to do. The labor +problem will not be formidable. Our mills are simple affairs. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>One +man can manage them, and the question of the labor on the rubber +concession is reduced to the minimum." This answer of the learned +attorney shows an ignorance of "labor" conditions in the Congo which +is, unless assumed, absolutely abject.</p> + +<p>If the American syndicates are not to police and govern the +territories ceded them, but if these territories are to continue to +be administered by Leopold, it is not possible for the Americans to +have "absolutely nothing to do" with that administration. Leopold's +sole idea of administration is that every black man is his slave, in +other words, the only men the Americans can depend upon for labor +are slaves. Of the profits of these American companies Leopold is to +receive one-half. He will work his rubber with slaves.</p> + +<p>Are the Americans going to use slaves also, or do they intend "on +commercial lines" to pay those who work for them living wages? And +if they do, at the end of the fiscal year, having paid a fair price +for labor, are they prepared to accept a smaller profit than will +their partner Leopold, who obtains his labor with the aid of a chain +and a whip?</p> + +<a name="img14" id="img14"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 287px;"> +<img src="images/img-14.jpg" width="287" height="450" alt="The Laboring Man Upon Whom the American +Concessionaires Must Depend." title="The Laboring Man Upon Whom the American +Concessionaires Must Depend." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Laboring Man Upon Whom the American +Concessionaires Must Depend. </p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>The attorney for the company airily says: "The labor problem will +not be formidable."</p> + +<p>If the man knows what he is talking about, he can mean but one +thing.</p> + +<p>The motives that led Leopold to grant these concessions are possibly +various. The motives that induced the Americans to take his offer +were probably less complicated. With them it was no question of +politics. They wanted the money; they did not need it, for they all +are rich—they merely wanted it. But Leopold wants more than the +half profits he will obtain from the Americans. If the Powers should +wake from their apathy and try to cast him out of the Congo, he +wants, through his American partners, the help of the United States. +Should he be "dethroned," by granting these concessions now on a +share and share alike basis with Belgians, French, and Americans, he +still, through them, hopes to draw from the Congo a fair income. And +in the meanwhile he looks to these Americans to kill any action +against him that may be taken in our Senate and House of +Representatives, even in the White House and Department of State.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>For the last two years Chester A. Beatty has been visiting Leopold +at Belgium, and has obtained the two concessions, and Leopold has +obtained, or hopes he has obtained, the influence of many American +shareholders. The fact that the people of the United States +possessed no "vested interest" in the Congo was the important fact +that placed any action on our part in behalf of that distressed +country above suspicion. If we acted, we did so because the United +States, as one of the signatory Powers of the Berlin Act, had +promised to protect the natives of the Congo; and we could truly +claim that we acted only in the name of humanity. Leopold has now +robbed us of that claim. He hopes that the enormous power wielded by +the Americans with whom he is associated, will prevent any action +against him in this country.</p> + +<p>But the deal has already been made public, and the motives of those +who now oppose improvement of conditions in the Congo, and who +support Leopold, will be at once suspected.</p> + +<p>To me the most interesting thing about the tract of land ceded to +Mr. Ryan, apart from <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>the number of hippopotamuses I saw on it, was +that the people living along the Congo say that it is of no value. +They told me that two years ago, after working it for some time, +Leopold abandoned it as unprofitable, and they added that, when +Leopold cannot whip rubber out of the forest, it is hard to believe +that it can be obtained there legitimately by any one else. On the +bank I saw the "factories" to which the unprofitable rubber had been +carried from the interior. They had formerly belonged to Leopold, +now they are the property of Mr. Ryan and of the American Congo +Company. In only two years they already are in ruins, and the jungle +has engulfed them.</p> + +<p>I was on the land owned by the company a dozen times or more, but I +did not go into the interior. Even had I done so, I am not an expert +on rubber, and would have understood nothing of Para trees, Lagos +silk, and liane. I am speaking not of my own knowledge, only of what +was told me by people who live on the spot. I found that this +particular concession was well known, because, unlike the land given +to the Forestry and Mines <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>Company, it is not an inaccessible tract, +but is situated only eight miles from Leopoldville. In our language, +that is about as far as is the Battery to 160th Street. Leopoldville +is the chief place on the Congo River, and every one there who spoke +to me of the concession knew where it was situated, and repeated +that it had been given up by Leopold as unprofitable, and that he +had unloaded it on Mr. Ryan. They seem to think it very clever of +the King to have got rid of it to the American millionaire. To one +knowing Mr. Ryan only from what he reads of him in the public press, +he does not seem to be the sort of man to whom Leopold could sell a +worthless rubber plantation. However, it is a matter which concerns +only Mr. Ryan and those who may think of purchasing shares in the +company. The Guggenheims, who are to operate this rubber, say that +Leopold did not know how to get out the full value of the land, and +that they, by using the machinery they will install, will be able to +make a profit, where Leopold, using only native labor, suffered a +loss.</p> + +<p>To the poor the ways of the truly rich are past finding out. After a +man has attained a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>fortune sufficient to keep him in yachts and +automobiles, one would think he could afford to indulge himself in +the luxury of being squeamish; that as to where he obtained any +further increase of wealth, he would prefer to pick and choose.</p> + +<p>On the contrary, these Americans go as far out of their way as +Belgium to make a partner of the man who has wrung his money from +wretched slaves, who were beaten, starved, and driven in chains. +This concession cannot make them rich. It can only make them richer. +And not richer in fact, for all the money they may whip out of the +Congo could not give them one thing that they cannot now command, +not an extra taste to the lips, not a fresh sensation, not one added +power for good. To them it can mean only a figure in ink on a page +of a bank-book. But what suffering, what misery it may mean to the +slaves who put it there! Why should men as rich as these elect to go +into partnership with one who sweats his dollars out of the naked +black? How really fine, how really wonderful it would be if these +same men, working together, decided to set free these twenty million +people—if, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span>instead of joining hands with Leopold, they would +overthrow him and march into the Congo free men, without his chain +around their ankles, and open it to the trade of the world, and give +justice and a right to live and to work and to sell and buy to +millions of miserable human beings. These Americans working together +could do it. They could do it from Washington. Or five hundred men +with two Maxim guns could do it. The "kingdom" of the Congo is only +a house of cards. Five hundred filibusters could take Boma, proclaim +the Congo open to the traders of the world, as the Act of Berlin +declares it to be, and in a day make of Leopold the jest of Europe. +They would only be taking possession of what has always belonged to +them.</p> + +<p>Down in the Congo I talked to many young officers of Leopold's army. +They had been driven to serve him by the whips of failure, poverty, +or crime. I do not know that the American concessionaires are driven +by any such scourge. These younger men, who saw the depths of their +degradation, who tasted the dirty work they were doing, were daily +risking <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>life by fever, through lack of food, by poisoned arrows, +and for three hundred dollars a year. Their necessity was great. +They had the courage of their failure. They were men one could pity. +One of them picked at the band of blue and gold braid around the +wrist of his tunic, and said: "Look, it is our badge of shame."</p> + +<p>To me those foreign soldiers of fortune, who, sooner than starve at +home or go to jail, serve Leopold in the jungle, seem more like men +and brothers than these truly rich, who, of their own free will, +safe in their downtown offices, become partners with this blackguard +King.</p> + +<p>What will be the outcome of the American advance into the Congo? +Will it prove the salvation of the Congo? Will it be, if that were +possible, a greater evil?</p> + +<p>E.R. Morel, who is the leader in England of the movement for the +improvement of the Congo, has written: "It is a little difficult to +imagine that the trust magnates are moulded upon the unique model of +Leopold II, and are prepared for the asking to become associates in +slave-driving. The trouble is that they probably know nothing about +African <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>conditions, that they have been primed by the King with his +detestable theories, and are starting their enterprises on the basis +that the natives of Central Africa must be regarded as mere +'laborers' for the white man's benefit, possessing no rights in land +nor in the produce of the soil. If Mr. Ryan and his colleagues are +going to acquire their rubber over four thousand square miles, by +'commercial methods,' we welcome their advent. But we would point +out to them that, in such a case, they had better at once abandon +all idea of three or four hundred per cent dividends with which the +wily autocrat at Brussels has doubtless primed them. No such +monstrous profits are to be acquired in tropical Africa under a +trade system. If, on the other hand, the methods they are prepared +to adopt are the methods King Leopold and his other concessionaires +have adopted for the past thirteen years, devastation and +destruction, and the raising of more large bodies of soldiers, are +their essential accompaniments; and the widening of the area of the +Congo hell is assured."</p> + +<p>The two things in the American invasion of the Congo that promise +good to that <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>unhappy country are that our country is represented at +Boma by a most intelligent, honest, and fearless young man in the +person of James A. Smith, our Consul-General, and that the actual +work of operating the mines and rubber is in the hands of the +Guggenheims. They are well known as men upright in affairs, and as +philanthropists and humanitarians of the common-sense type. Like +other rich men of their race, they have given largely to charity and +to assist those less fortunate than themselves.</p> + +<p>For thirteen years in mines in Mexico, in China, and Alaska, they +have had to deal with the problem of labor, and they have met it +successfully. Workmen of three nationalities they have treated with +fairness.</p> + +<p>"Why should you suppose," Mr. Daniel Guggenheim asked me, "that in +the Congo we will treat the negroes harshly? In Mexico we found the +natives ill-paid and ill-fed. We fed them and paid them well. Not +from any humanitarian idea, but because it was good business. It is +not good business to cut off a workman's hands or head. We are not +ashamed of the way we have always treated <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>our workmen, and in the +Congo we are not going to spoil our record."</p> + +<p>I suggested that in Mexico he did not have as his partner Leopold, +tempting him with slave labor, and that the distance from Broadway +to his concessions in the Congo was so great that as to what his +agents might do there he could not possibly know. To this Mr. +Guggenheim answered that "Neither Leopold nor anyone else can +dictate how we shall treat the native labor," that if his agents +were cruel they would be instantly dismissed, and that for what +occurred in the Congo on the land occupied by the American Congo +Company his brothers and himself alone were responsible, and that +they accepted that responsibility.</p> + +<p>But already on his salary list he has men who are sure to get him +into trouble, men of whose <i>dossiers</i> he is quite ignorant.</p> + +<p>From Belgium, Leopold has unloaded on the American companies several +of his "valets du roi," press agents, and tools, men who for years +have been defenders of his dirty work in the Congo; and of the +Americans, one, who is prominently <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>exploited by the Belgians, had +to leave Africa for theft.</p> + +<p>That Mr. Guggenheim wishes and intends to give to the black in the +Congo fair treatment there is no possible doubt. But that on +Broadway, removed from the scene of operations in time some four to +six months, and in actual distance eight thousand miles, he can +control the acts of his agents and his partners, remains to be +proved. He is attacking a problem much more momentous than the +handling of Mexican <i>peons</i> or Chinese coolies, and every step of +the working out of this problem will be watched by the people of +this country.</p> + +<p>And should they find that the example of the Belgian concessionaires +in their treatment of the natives is being imitated by even one of +the American Congo Company the people of this country will know it, +and may the Lord have mercy on his soul!</p> + + + +<hr class="short" /> +<br /> + +<h2><a name="V" id="V"></a>V</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span> + +<h3>HUNTING THE HIPPO</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>Except once or twice in the Zoo, I never had seen a hippopotamus, +and I was most anxious, before I left the Congo, to meet one. I +wanted to look at him when he was free, and his own master, without +iron bars or keepers; when he believed he was quite alone, and was +enjoying his bath in peace and confidence. I also wanted to shoot +him, and to hang in my ancestral halls his enormous head with the +great jaws open and the inside of them painted pink and the small +tusks hungrily protruding. I had this desire, in spite of the fact +that for every hippo except the particular one whose head I coveted, +I entertained the utmost good feeling.</p> + +<p>As a lad, among other beasts the hippopotamus had appealed to my +imagination. Collectively, I had always looked upon them as <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>most +charming people. They come of an ancient family. Two thousand four +hundred years ago they were mentioned by Herodotus. And Herodotus to +the animal kingdom is what Domesday Book is to the landed gentry. To +exist beautifully for twenty-four hundred years without a single +mésalliance, without having once stooped to trade, is certainly a +strong title to nobility. Other animals by contact with man have +become degraded. The lion, the "King of Beasts," now rides a +bicycle, and growls, as previously rehearsed, at the young woman in +spangles, of whom he is secretly afraid. And the elephant, the +monarch of the jungle, and of a family as ancient and noble as that +of the hippopotamus, the monarch of the river, has become a beast of +burden and works for his living. You can see him in Phœnix Park +dragging a road-roller, in Siam and India carrying logs, and at +Coney Island he bends the knee to little girls from Brooklyn. The +royal proboscis, that once uprooted trees, now begs for peanuts.</p> + +<p>But, you never see a hippopotamus chained to a road-roller, or +riding a bicycle. He is still the gentleman, the man of elegant +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>leisure, the aristocrat of aristocrats, harming no one, and, in his +ancestral river, living the simple life.</p> + +<p>And yet, I sought to kill him. At least, one of him, but only one. +And, that I did not kill even one, while a bitter disappointment, is +still a source of satisfaction.</p> + +<p>In the Congo River we saw only two hippos, and both of them were +dead. They had been shot from a steamer. If the hippo is killed in +the water, it is impossible to recover the body at once. It sinks +and does not rise, some say, for an hour, others say for seven +hours. As in an hour the current may have carried the body four +miles below where it sank, the steamer does not wait, and the +destruction of the big beast is simple murder. There should be a law +in the Congo to prevent their destruction, and, no doubt, if the +State thought it could make a few francs out of protecting the +hippo, as it makes many million francs by preserving the elephant, +which it does for the ivory, such a law would exist. We soon saw +many hippos, but although we could not persuade the only other +passenger not to fire at them, there are a few hippos still alive in +the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>Congo. For, the only time the Captain and I were positive he +hit anything, was when he fired over our heads and blew off the roof +of the bridge.</p> + +<p>When first we saw the two dead hippos, one of them was turning and +twisting so violently that we thought he was alive. But, as we drew +near, we saw the strange convulsions were due to two enormous and +ugly crocodiles, who were fiercely pulling at the body. Crocodiles +being man-eaters, we had no feelings about shooting them, either in +the water or up a tree; and I hope we hit them. In any event, after +we fired the body drifted on in peace.</p> + +<p>On my return trip, going with the stream, when the boat covers about +four times the distance she makes when steaming against it, I saw +many hippos. In one day I counted sixty-nine. But on our way up the +Congo, until we turned into the Kasai River, we saw none.</p> + +<p>So, on the first night we camped in the Kasai I had begun to think I +never would see one, and I went ashore both skeptical and +discouraged. We had stopped, not at a wood post, but at a place on +the river's bank previously <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>untouched by man, where there was a +stretch of beach, and then a higher level with trees and tall +grasses. Driven deep in this beach were the footprints of a large +elephant. They looked as though some one had amused himself by +sinking a bucket in the mud, and then pulling it out. For sixty +yards I followed the holes and finally lost them in a confusion of +other tracks. The place had been so trampled upon that it was beaten +into a basin. It looked as though every animal in the Kasai had met +there to hold a dance. There were the deep imprints of the hippos +and the round foot of the elephant, with the marks of the big toes +showing as clearly as though they had been scooped out of the mud +with a trowel, the hoofs of buffalo as large as the shoe of a cart +horse, and the arrow-like marks of the antelope, some in dainty +little Vs, others measuring three inches across, and three inches +from the base to the point. They came from every direction, down the +bank and out of the river; and crossed and recrossed, and beneath +the fresh prints that had been made that morning at sunrise, were +those of days before rising up sharply out of the sun-dried clay, +like <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>bas-reliefs in stucco. I had gone ashore in a state of mind so +skeptical that I was as surprised as Crusoe at the sight of +footprints. It was as though the boy who did not believe in fairies +suddenly stumbled upon them sliding down the moonbeams. One felt +distinctly apologetic—as though uninvited he had pushed himself +into a family gathering. At the same time there was the excitement +of meeting in their own homes the strange peoples I had seen only in +the springtime, when the circus comes to New York, in the basement +of Madison Square Garden, where they are our pitiful prisoners, +bruising their shoulders against bars. Here they were monarchs of +all they surveyed. I was the intruder; and, looking down at the +marks of the great paws and delicate hoofs, I felt as much out of +place as would a grizzly bear in a Fifth Avenue club. And I behaved +much as would the grizzly bear. I rushed back for my rifle intent on +killing something.</p> + +<p>The sun had just set; the moon was shining faintly: it was the +moment the beasts of the jungle came to the river to drink. Anfossi, +although he had spent three years in the Congo and had three years' +contract still to work out, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>was as determined to kill something as +was the tenderfoot from New York.</p> + +<p>Sixty yards from the stern of the <i>Deliverance</i> was the basin I had +discovered; at an equal distance from her bow, a stream plunged into +the river. Anfossi argued the hippos would prefer to drink the clear +water of the stream, to the muddy water of the basin, and elected to +watch at the stream. I carried a deck chair to the edge of my basin +and placed it in the shadow of the trees. Anfossi went into our +cabin for his rifle. At that exact moment a hippopotamus climbed +leisurely out of the river and plunged into the stream. One of the +soldiers on shore saw him and rushed for the boat. Anfossi sent my +boy on the jump for me and, like a gentleman, waited until I had +raced the sixty yards. But when we reached the stream there was +nothing visible but the trampled grass and great holes in the mud +and near us in the misty moonlight river something that puffed and +blew slowly and luxuriously, as would any fat gentleman who had been +forced to run for it. Had I followed Anfossi's judgment and gone +along the bank sixty yards ahead, instead of sixty yards astern <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>of +the <i>Deliverance</i>, at the exact moment at which I sank into my deck +chair, the hippo would have emerged at my feet. It is even betting +as to which of us would have been the more scared.</p> + +<p>The next day, and for days after, we saw nothing but hippos. We saw +them floating singly and in family groups, with generally four or +five cows to one bull, and sometimes in front a baby hippo no larger +than a calf, which the mother with her great bulk would push against +the swift current, as you see a tugboat in the lee of a great liner. +Once, what I thought was a spit of rocks suddenly tumbled apart and +became twenty hippos, piled more or less on top of each other. +During that one day, as they floated with the current, enjoying +their afternoon's nap, we saw thirty-four. They impressed me as the +most idle, and, therefore, the most aristocratic of animals. They +toil not, neither do they spin; they had nothing to do but float in +the warm water and the bright sunshine; their only effort was to +open their enormous jaws and yawn luxuriously, in the pure content +of living, in absolute boredom. They reminded you only of fat gouty +old <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>gentlemen, puffing and blowing in the pool at the Warm Springs.</p> + +<p>The next chance we had at one of them on shore came on our first +evening in the Kasai just before sunset. Captain Jensen was steering +for a flat island of sand and grass where he meant to tie up for the +night. About fifty yards from the spot for which we were making, was +the only tree on the island, and under it with his back to us, and +leisurely eating the leaves of the lower branches, exactly as though +he were waiting for us by appointment, was a big gray hippo. His +back being toward us, we could not aim at his head, and he could not +see us. But the <i>Deliverance</i> is not noiseless, and, hearing the +paddle-wheel, the hippo turned, saw us, and bolted for the river. +The hippopotamus is as much at home in the water as the seal. To get +to the water, if he is surprised out of it, and to get under it, if +he is alarmed while in it, is instinct. If he does venture ashore, +he goes only a few rods from the bank and then only to forage. His +home is the river, and he rushes to bury himself in it as naturally +as the squirrel makes for a tree. This particular hippo ran for the +river as fast <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>as a horse coming at a slow trot. He was a very badly +scared hippo. His head was high in the air, his fat sides were +shaking, and the one little eye turned toward us was filled with +concern. Behind him the yellow sun was setting into the lagoons. On +the flat stretch of sand he was the only object, and against the +horizon loomed as large as a freight car. That must be why we both +missed him. I tried to explain that the reason I missed him was +that, never before having seen so large an animal running for his +life, I could not watch him do it and look at the gun sights. No one +believed that was why I missed him. I did not believe it myself. In +any event neither of us hit his head, and he plunged down the bank +to freedom, carrying most of the bank with him. But, while we still +were violently blaming each other, at about two hundred yards below +the boat, he again waddled out of the river and waded knee deep up +the little stream. Keeping the bunches of grass between us, I ran up +the beach, aimed at his eye and this time hit him fairly enough. +With a snort he rose high in the air, and so, for an instant, +balanced his enormous bulk. The action was like that of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>a horse +that rears on his hind legs, when he is whipped over the nose. And +apparently my bullet hurt him no more than the whip the horse, for +he dropped heavily to all fours, and again disappeared into the +muddy river. Our disappointment and chagrin were intense, and at +once Anfossi and I organized a hunt for that evening. To encourage +us, while we were sitting on the bridge making a hasty dinner, +another hippopotamus had the impertinence to rise, blowing like a +whale, not ten feet from where we sat. We could have thrown our tin +cups and hit him; but he was in the water, and now we were seeking +only those on land.</p> + +<a name="img15" id="img15"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 324px;"> +<img src="images/img-15.jpg" width="324" height="450" alt="Mr. Davis and Native "Boy," on the Kasai River." +title="Mr. Davis and Native "Boy," on the Kasai River." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Mr. Davis and Native "Boy," on the Kasai River. </p> + +<p>Two years ago when the atrocities along the Kasai made the natives +fear the white man and the white man fear the natives, each of the +river boats was furnished with a stand of Albini rifles. Three of +the black soldiers, who were keen sportsmen, were served with these +muskets, and as soon as the moon rose, the soldiers and Anfossi, my +black boy, with an extra gun, and I set forth to clear the island of +hippos. To the stranger it was a most curious hunt. The island was +perfectly flat and bare, and the river had eaten into it and +overflowed it with <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>tiny rivulets and deep, swift-running streams. +Into these rivulets and streams the soldiers plunged, one in front, +feeling the depth of the water with a sounding rod, and as he led we +followed. The black men made a splendid picture. They were naked but +for breech-cloths, and the moonlight flashed on their wet skins and +upon the polished barrels of the muskets. But, as a sporting +proposition, as far as I could see, we had taken on the hippopotamus +at his own game. We were supposed to be on an island, but the water +was up to our belts and running at five miles an hour. I could not +understand why we had not openly and aboveboard walked into the +river. Wading waist high in the water with a salmon rod I could +understand, but not swimming around in a river with a gun. The force +of the shallowest stream was the force of the great river behind it, +and wherever you put your foot, the current, on its race to the sea, +annoyed at the impediment, washed the sand from under the sole of +your foot and tugged at your knees and ankles. To add to the +interest the three soldiers held their muskets at full cock, and as +they staggered for a footing each pointed his <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>gun at me. There also +was a strange fish about the size of an English sole that sprang out +of the water and hurled himself through space. Each had a white +belly, and as they skimmed past us in the moonlight it was as though +some one was throwing dinner plates. After we had swum the length of +the English Channel, we returned to the boat. As to that midnight +hunt I am still uncertain as to whether we were hunting the hippos +or the hippos were hunting us.</p> + +<p>The next morning we had our third and last chance at a hippo.</p> + +<p>It is distinctly a hard-luck story. We had just gone on the bridge +for breakfast when we saw him walking slowly from us along an island +of white sand as flat as your hand, and on which he loomed large as +a haystack. Captain Jensen was a true sportsman. He jerked the bell +to the engine-room, and at full speed the <i>Deliverance</i> raced for +the shore. The hippo heard us, and, like a baseball player caught +off base, tried to get back to the river. Captain Jensen danced on +the deck plates:</p> + +<p>"Schoot it! schoot it!" he yelled, "Gotfurdamn! schoot it!" When +Anfossi and I fired, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>the <i>Deliverance</i> was a hundred yards from the +hippo, and the hippo was not five feet from the bank. In another +instant, he would have been over it and safe. But when we fired, he +went down as suddenly as though a safe had dropped on him. Except +that he raised his head, and rolled it from side to side, he +remained perfectly still. From his actions, or lack of actions, it +looked as though one of the bullets had broken his back; and when +the blacks saw he could not move they leaped and danced and +shrieked. To them the death of the big beast promised much chop.</p> + +<p>But Captain Jensen was not so confident. "Schoot it," he continued +to shout, "we lose him yet! Gotfurdamn! schoot it!"</p> + +<p>My gun was an American magazine rifle, holding five cartridges. We +now were very near the hippo, and I shot him in the head twice, and, +once, when he opened them, in the jaws. At each shot his head would +jerk with a quick toss of pain, and at the sight the blacks screamed +with delight that was primitively savage. After the last shot, when +Captain Jensen had brought the <i>Deliverance</i> broadside to the bank, +the hippo ceased to move. The <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>boat had not reached the shore before +the boys with the steel hawser were in the water; the gangplank was +run out, and the black soldiers and wood boys, with their knives, +were dancing about the hippo and hacking at his tail. Their idea was +to make him the more quickly bleed to death. I ran to the cabin for +more cartridges. It seemed an absurd precaution. I was as sure I had +the head of that hippo as I was sure that my own was still on my +neck. My only difficulty was whether to hang the head in the front +hall or in the dining-room. It might be rather too large for the +dining-room. That was all that troubled me. After three minutes, +when I was back on deck, the hippo still lay immovable. Certainly +twenty men were standing about him; three were sawing off his tail, +and the women were chanting triumphantly a song they used to sing in +the days when the men were allowed to hunt, and had returned +successful with food.</p> + +<p>On the bridge was Anfossi with his camera. Before the men had +surrounded the hippo he had had time to snap one picture of it. I +had just started after my camera, when from the blacks there was a +yell of alarm, of rage, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>amazement. The hippo had opened his +eyes and raised his head. I shoved the boys out of the way, and, +putting the gun close to his head, fired pointblank. I wanted to put +him out of pain. I need not have distressed myself. The bullet +affected him no more than a quinine pill. What seemed chiefly to +concern him, what apparently had brought him back to life, was the +hacking at his tail. That was an indignity he could not brook.</p> + +<p>His expression, and he had a perfectly human expression, was one of +extreme annoyance and of some slight alarm, as though he were +muttering: "This is no place for <i>me</i>," and, without more ado, he +began to roll toward the river. Without killing some one, I could +not again use the rifle. The boys were close upon him, prying him +back with the gangplank, beating him with sticks of firewood, trying +to rope him with the steel hawser. On the bridge Captain Jensen and +Anfossi were giving orders in Danish and Italian, and on the bank I +swore in American. Everybody shoved and pushed and beat at the great +bulk, and the great bulk rolled steadily on. We might as well have +tried to budge the Fifth Avenue <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>Hotel. He reached the bank, he +crushed it beneath him, and, like a suspension bridge, splashed into +the water. Even then, we who watched him thought he would stick fast +between the boat and the bank, that the hawser would hold him. But +he sank like a submarine, and we stood gaping at the muddy water and +saw him no more. When I recovered from my first rage I was glad he +was still alive to float in the sun and puff and blow and open his +great jaws in a luxurious yawn. I could imagine his joining his +friends after his meeting with us, and remarking in reference to our +bullets: "I find the mosquitoes are quite bad this morning."</p> + +<p>With this chapter is published the photograph Anfossi took, from the +deck of the steamer, of our hippo—the hippo that was too stupid to +know when he was dead. It is not a good photograph, but of our hippo +it is all we have to show. I am still undecided whether to hang it +in the hall or the dining-room. +</p> + +<a name="img16" id="img16"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-16.jpg" width="500" height="345" alt="The Hippopotamus that Did Not Know He Was Dead." +title="The Hippopotamus that Did Not Know He Was Dead." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Hippopotamus that Did Not Know He Was Dead. </p> + +<p>The days I spent on my trip up the river were of delightful +sameness, sunshine by day, with the great panorama drifting past, +and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>quiet nights of moonlight. For diversion, there were many +hippos, crocodiles, and monkeys, and, though we saw only their +tracks and heard them only in the jungle, great elephants. And +innumerable strange birds—egrets, eagles, gray parrots, crimson +cranes, and giant flamingoes—as tall as a man and from tip to tip +measuring eight feet.</p> + +<p>Each day the programme was the same. The arrival at the wood post, +where we were given only excuses and no wood, and where once or +twice we unloaded blue cloth and bags of salt, which is the currency +of the Upper Congo, and the halt for hours to cut wood in the +forest.</p> + +<p>Once we stopped at a mission and noted the contrast it made with the +bare, unkempt posts of the State. It was the Catholic mission at +Wombali, and it was a beauty spot of flowers, thatched houses, +grass, and vegetables. There was a brickyard, and schools, and +sewing-machines, and the blacks, instead of scowling at us, nodded +and smiled and looked happy and contented. The Father was a great +red-bearded giant, who seemed to have still stored up in him all the +energy of the North. While <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>the steamer was unloaded he raced me +over the vegetable garden and showed me his farm. I had seen other +of the Catholic Missions, and I spoke of how well they looked, of +the signs they gave of hard work, and of consideration for the +blacks.</p> + +<p>"I am not of that Order," the Father said gravely. He was speaking +in English, and added, as though he expected some one to resent it: +"We are Jesuits." No one resented it, and he added: "We have our +Order in your country. Do you know Fordham College?"</p> + +<p>Did I know it? If you are trying to find our farm, the automobile +book tells you to leave Fordham College on your left after Jerome +Avenue.</p> + +<p>"Of course, I know it," I said. "They have one of the best baseball +nines near New York; they play the Giants every spring."</p> + +<p>The Reverend Father started.</p> + +<p>"They play with Giants!" he gasped.</p> + +<p>I did not know how to say "baseball nines" in French, but at least +he was assured that whatever it was, it was one of the best near New +York.</p> + +<p>Then Captain Jensen's little black boy ran <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>up to tell me the +steamer was waiting, and began in Bangalese to beg something of the +Father. The priest smiled and left us, returning with a rosary and +crucifix, which the boy hung round his neck, and then knelt, and the +red-bearded Father laid his fingers on the boy's kinky head. He was +a very happy boy over his new possession, and it was much coveted by +all the others. One of the black mammies, to ward off evil from the +little naked baby at her breast, offered an arm's length of blue +cloth for "the White Man's fetish."</p> + +<a name="img17" id="img17"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-17.jpg" width="500" height="304" alt="The Jesuit Brothers at the Wombali Mission." +title="The Jesuit Brothers at the Wombali Mission." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Jesuit Brothers at the Wombali Mission. </p> + +<p>My voyage up the Kasai ended at Dima, the headquarters of the Kasai +Concession. I had been told that at Dima I would find a rubber +plantation, and I had gone there to see it. I found that the +plantation was four days distant, and that the boat for the +plantation did not start for six days. I also had been told by the +English missionaries at Dima, that I would find an American mission. +When I reached Dima I learned that the American mission was at a +station further up the river, which could not be reached sooner than +a month. That is the sort of information upon which in the Congo +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>one is forced to regulate his movements. As there was at Dima +neither mission nor plantation, and as the only boat that would +leave it in ten days was departing the next morning, I remained +there only one night. It was a place cut out of the jungle, two +hundred yards square, and of all stations I saw in the Congo, the +best managed. It is the repair shop for the steamers belonging to +the Kasai Concession, as well as the headquarters of the company and +the residence of the director, M. Dryepoint. He and Van Damme seemed +to be the most popular officials in the Congo. M. Dryepoint was up +the river, so I did not meet him, but I was most courteously and +hospitably entertained by M. Fumière. He gave me a whole house to +myself, and personally showed me over his small kingdom. All the +houses were of brick, and the paths and roads were covered with +gravel and lined with flowers. Nothing in the Congo is more curious +than this pretty town of suburban villas and orderly machine shops; +with the muddy river for a street and the impenetrable jungle for a +back yard. The home of the director at Dima is the proud boast of +the entire Congo. And all <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span>they say of it is true. It did have a +billiard table and ice, and a piano, and M. Fumière invited me to +join his friends at an excellent dinner. In furnishing this +celebrated house, the idea had apparently been to place in it the +things one would least expect to find in the jungle, or, without +wishing to be ungracious, anywhere. So, although there are no women +at Dima, there are great mirrors in brass frames, chandeliers of +glass with festoons and pendants of glass, metal lamps with shades +of every color, painted plaster statuettes and carved silk-covered +chairs. In the red glow of the lamps, surrounded by these Belgian +atrocities, M. Fumière sat down to the pianola. The heat of Africa +filled the room; on one side we could have touched the jungle, on +the other in the river the hippopotamus puffed and snorted. M. +Fumière pulled out the stops, and upon the heat and silence of the +night, floated the "Evening Star," Mascagni's "Intermezzo," and +"Chin-chin Chinaman."</p> + +<p>Next morning I left for Leopoldville in a boat much larger than the +<i>Deliverance</i>, but with none of her cheer or good-fellowship. This +boat was run by the black wife of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>captain. Trailing her velvet +gown, and cleaning her teeth with a stick of wood, she penetrated to +every part of the steamer, making discipline impossible and driving +the crew out of control.</p> + +<p>I was glad to escape at Kinchassa to the clean and homelike bungalow +and beautiful gardens of the only Englishman still in the employ of +the State, Mr. Cuthbert Malet, who gave me hospitably of his scanty +store of "Scotch," and, what was even more of a sacrifice, of his +precious handful of eggs. A week later I was again in Boma, waiting +for the <i>Nigeria</i> to take me back to Liverpool.</p> + +<p>Before returning to the West Coast and leaving the subject of the +Congo, I wish to testify to what seemed to me the enormously +important work that is being done by the missionaries. I am not +always an admirer of the missionary. Some of those one meets in +China and Japan seem to be taking much more interest in their own +bodies than in the souls of others. But, in the Congo, almost the +only people who are working in behalf of the natives are those +attached to the missions. Because they bear witness against Leopold, +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>much is said by his hired men and press agents against them. But +they are deserving of great praise. Some of them are narrow and +bigoted, and one could wish they were much more tolerant of their +white brothers in exile, but compared with the good they do, these +faults count for nothing. It is due to them that Europe and the +United States know the truth about the Congo. They were the first to +bear witness, and the hazardous work they still are doing for their +fellow men is honest, practical Christianity.</p> + + + +<hr class="short" /> +<br /> + +<h2><a name="VI" id="VI"></a>VI</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span> + +<h3>OLD CALABAR</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>While I was up the Congo and the Kasai rivers, Mrs. Davis had +remained at Boma, and when I rejoined her, we booked passage home on +the <i>Nigeria</i>. We chose the <i>Nigeria</i>, which is an Elder-Dempster +freight and passenger steamer, in preference to the fast mail +steamer because of the ports of the West Coast we wished to see as +many as possible. And, on her six weeks' voyage to Liverpool, the +<i>Nigeria</i> promised to spend as much time at anchor as at sea. On the +Coast it is a more serious matter to reserve a cabin than in New +York. You do not stop at an uptown office, and on a diagram of the +ship's insides, as though you were playing roulette, point at a +number. Instead, as you are to occupy your cabin, not for one, but +for six, weeks, you search, as vigilantly as a navy officer looking +for contraband, the ship herself and each cabin.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>But going aboard was a simple ceremony. The Hôtel Splendide stands +on the bank of the Congo River. After saying "Good-by" to her +proprietor, I walked to the edge of the water and waved my helmet. +In the Congo, a white man standing in the sun without a hat is a +spectacle sufficiently thrilling to excite the attention of all, and +at once Captain Hughes of the <i>Nigeria</i> sent a cargo boat to the +rescue, and on the shoulders of naked Kroo boys Mrs. Davis and the +maid, and the trunks, spears, tents, bathtubs, carved idols, native +mats, and a live mongoos were dropped into it, and we were paddled +to the gangway.</p> + +<p>"If that's all, we might as well get under way," said Captain +Hughes. The anchor chains creaked, from the bank the proprietor of +the Splendide waved his hand, and the long voyage to Liverpool had +begun. It was as casual as halting and starting a cable-car.</p> + +<p>According to schedule, after leaving the Congo, we should have gone +south and touched at Loanda. But on this voyage, outward bound, the +<i>Nigeria</i> had carried, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>to help build the railroad at Lobito Bay, a +deckload of camels. They had proved trying passengers, and instead +of first touching at the Congo, Captain Hughes had continued on +south and put them ashore. So we were robbed of seeing both Loanda +and the camels.</p> + +<p>This line, until Calabar is reached, carries but few passengers, +and, except to receive cargo, the ship is not fully in commission. +During this first week she is painted, and holystoned, her carpets +are beaten, her cabins scrubbed and aired, and the passengers mess +with the officers. So, of the ship's life, we acquired an intimate +knowledge, her interests became our own, and the necessity of +feeding her gaping holds with cargo was personal and acute. On a +transatlantic steamer, when once the hatches are down, the captain +need think only of navigation; on these coasters, the hatches never +are down, and the captain, that sort of captain dear to the heart of +the owners, is the man who fills the holds.</p> + +<p>A skipper going ashore to drum up trade was a novel spectacle. +Imagine the captain of one of the Atlantic greyhounds prying among +the warehouses on West Street, demanding of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>the merchants: +"Anything going my way, this trip?" He would scorn to do it. Before +his passengers have passed the custom officers, he is in mufti, and +on his way to his villa on Brooklyn Heights, or to the Lambs Club, +and until the Blue Peter is again at the fore, little he cares for +passengers, mails, or cargo. But the captain of a "coaster" must be +sailor and trader, too. He is expected to navigate a coast, the +latest chart of which is dated somewhere near 1830, and at which the +waves rush in walls of spray, sometimes as high as a three-story +house. He must speak all the known languages of Europe, and all the +unknown tongues of innumerable black brothers. At each port he must +entertain out of his own pocket the agents of all the trading +houses, and, in his head, he must keep the market price, "when laid +down in Liverpool," of mahogany, copra, copal, rubber, palm oil, and +ivory. To see that the agent has not overlooked a few bags of ground +nuts, or a dozen puncheons of oil, he must go on shore and peer into +the compound of each factory, and on board he must keep peace +between the Kroo boys and the black deck passengers, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>and see that +the white passengers with a temperature of 105, do not drink more +than is good for them. At least, those are a few of the duties the +captains on the ships controlled by Sir Alfred Jones, who is Elder +and Dempster, are expected to perform. No wonder Sir Alfred is +popular.</p> + +<p>Our first port of call was Landana, in Portuguese territory, but two +ships of the Woermann Line were there ahead of us and had gobbled up +all the freight. So we could but up anchor and proceed to +Libreville, formerly the capital of the French Congo. At five in the +morning by the light of a ship's lantern, we were paddled ashore to +drum up trade. We found two traders, Ives and Thomas, who had +waiting for the <i>Nigeria</i> at the mouth of the Gabun River six +hundred logs of mahogany, and, in consequence, there was general +rejoicing, and Scotch and "sparklets," and even music from a German +music-box that would burst into song only after it had been fed with +a copper. One of the clerks said that Ives had forgotten how to +extract the coppers and in consequence was using the music-box as a +savings bank.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>In the French Congo the natives are permitted to trade; in the +Congo Free State they are not, or, rather, they have nothing with +which to trade, and the contrast between the empty "factories" of +the Congo and those of Libreville, crowded with natives buying and +selling, was remarkable. There also was a conspicuous difference in +the quality and variety of the goods. In Leopold's Congo "trade" +goods is a term of contempt. It describes articles manufactured only +for those who have no choice and must accept whatever is offered. +When your customers must take what you please to give them the +quality of your goods is likely to deteriorate. Salt of the poorest +grade, gaudy fabrics that neither "wear" nor "wash," bars of coarse +soap (the native is continually washing his single strip of cloth), +and axe-heads made of iron, are what Leopold thinks are a fair +exchange for the forced labor of the black.</p> + +<p>But the articles I found in the factories in Libreville were what, +in the Congo, are called "white man's goods" and were of excellent +quality and in great variety. There were even French novels and +cigars. Some of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span>latter, called the Young American on account of +the name and the flag on the lid, tempted me, until I saw they were +manufactured by Dusseldorffer and Vanderswassen, and one suspected +Rotterdam.</p> + +<p>In Ives's factory I saw for the first time a "trade" rifle, or Tower +musket. In the vernacular of the Coast, they are "gas-pipe" guns. +They are put together in England, and to a white man are a most +terrifying weapon. The original Tower muskets, such as, in the days +of '76, were hung over the fireplace of the forefathers of the Sons +of the Revolution, were manufactured in England, and stamped with +the word "Tower," and for the reigning king G.R. I suppose at that +date at the Tower of London there was an arsenal; but I am ready to +be corrected. To-day the guns are manufactured at Birmingham, but +they still have the flint lock, and still are stamped with the word +"Tower" and the royal crown over the letters G.R., and with the +arrow which is supposed to mark the property of the government. The +barrel is three feet four inches long, and the bore is that of an +artesian well. The native fills four inches of this <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>cavity with +powder and the remaining three feet with rusty nails, barbed wire, +leaden slugs, and the legs and broken parts of iron pots. An officer +of the W.A.F.F.'s, in a fight in the bush in South Nigeria, had one +of these things fired at him from a distance of fifteen feet. He +told me all that saved him was that when the native pulled the +trigger the recoil of the gun "kicked" the muzzle two feet in the +air and the native ten feet into the bush. I bought a Tower rifle at +the trade price, a pound, and brought it home. But although my +friends have offered to back either end of the gun as being the more +destructive, we have found no one with a sufficient sporting spirit +to determine the point.</p> + +<p>Libreville is a very pretty town, but when it was laid out the +surveyors just missed placing the Equator in its main street. It is +easy to understand why with such a live wire in the vicinity +Libreville is warm. From the same cause it also is rich in flowers, +vines, and trees growing in generous, undisciplined abundance, +making of Libreville one vast botanical garden, and burying the town +and its bungalows <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>under screens of green and branches of scarlet +and purple flowers. Close to the surf runs an avenue bordered by +giant cocoanut palms and, after the sun is down, this is the +fashionable promenade. Here every evening may be seen in their +freshest linen the six married white men of Libreville, and, in the +latest Paris frocks, the six married ladies, while from the verandas +of the factories that line the sea front and from under the paper +lanterns of the Café Guion the clerks and traders sip their absinthe +and play dominoes, and cast envious glances at the six fortunate +fellow exiles.</p> + +<p>For several days we lay a few miles south of Libreville, off the +mouth of the Gabun River, taking in the logs of mahogany. It was a +continuous performance of the greatest interest. I still do not +understand why all those engaged in it were not drowned, or pounded +to a pulp. Just before we touched at the Gabun River, two tramp +steamers, chartered by Americans, carried off a full cargo of this +mahogany to the States. It was an experiment the result of which the +traders of Libreville are awaiting with interest. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>The mahogany that +the reader sees in America probably comes from Hayti, Cuba, or +Belize, and is of much finer quality than that of the Gabun River, +which latter is used for making what the trade calls "fancy" +cigar-boxes and cheap furniture. But before it becomes a cigar-box +it passes through many adventures. Weeks before the steamer arrives +the trader, followed by his black boys, explores the jungle and +blazes the trees. Then the boys cut trails through the forest, and, +using logs for rollers, drag and push the tree trunks to the bank of +the river. There the tree is cut into huge cubes, weighing about a +ton, and measuring twelve to fifteen feet in length and three feet +across each face. A boy can "shape" one of these logs in a day.</p> + +<p>Although his pay varies according to whether the tributaries of the +river are full or low, so making the moving of the logs easy or +difficult, he can earn about three pounds ten shillings a month, +paid in cash. Compared with the eighty cents a month paid only a few +miles away in the Congo Free State, and in "trade" goods, these are +good wages. When the log is shaped the mark of the trader is branded +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>on it with an iron, just as we brand cattle, and it is turned loose +on the river. At the mouth of the river there is little danger of +the log escaping, for the waves are stronger than the tide, and +drive the logs upon the shore. There, in the surf, we found these +tons of mahogany pounding against each other. In the ship's +steam-launch were iron chains, a hundred yards long, to which, at +intervals, were fastened "dogs," or spikes. These spikes were driven +into the end of a log, the brand upon the log was noted by the +captain and trader, and the logs, chained together like the vertebræ +of a great sea serpent, were towed to the ship's side. There they +were made fast, and three Kroo boys knocked the spike out of each +log, warped a chain around it, and made fast that chain to the steel +hawser of the winch. As it was drawn to the deck a Senegalese +soldier, acting for the Customs, gave it a second blow with a +branding hammer, and, thundering and smashing, it swung into the +hold.</p> + +<a name="img18" id="img18"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 333px;"> +<img src="images/img-18.jpg" width="333" height="450" alt="There, in the Surf, We Found These Tons of Mahogany, +Pounding Against Each Other." title="There, in the Surf, We Found These Tons of Mahogany, +Pounding Against Each Other." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">There, in the Surf, We Found These Tons of Mahogany, +Pounding Against Each Other. </p> + +<p>In the "round up" of the logs the star performers were the three +Kroo boys at the ship's side. For days, in fascinated horror, the +six passengers watched them, prayed for <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>them, and made bets as to +which would be the first to die. One understands that a Kroo boy is +as much at home in the sea as on shore, but these boys were neither +in the sea nor on shore. They were balancing themselves on blocks of +slippery wood that weighed a ton, but which were hurled about by the +great waves as though they were life-belts. All night the hammering +of the logs made the ship echo like a monster drum, and all day +without an instant's pause each log reared and pitched, spun like a +barrel, dived like a porpoise, or, broadside, battered itself +against the iron plates. But, no matter what tricks it played, a +Kroo boy rode it as easily as though it were a horse in a +merry-go-round.</p> + +<p>It was a wonderful exhibition. It furnished all the thrills that one +gets when watching a cowboy on a bucking bronco, or a trained seal. +Again and again a log, in wicked conspiracy with another log, would +plan to entice a Kroo boy between them, and smash him. At the sight +the passengers would shriek a warning, the boy would dive between +the logs, and a mass of twelve hundred pounds of mahogany would +crash against a mass <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>weighing fifteen hundred with a report like +colliding freight cars.</p> + +<p>And then, as, breathless, we waited to see what once was a Kroo boy +float to the surface, he would appear sputtering and grinning, and +saying to us as clearly as a Kroo smile can say it: "He never +touched me!"</p> + +<a name="img19" id="img19"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 376px;"> +<img src="images/img-19.jpg" width="376" height="450" alt="A Log of Mahogany Jammed in the Anchor Chains." +title="A Log of Mahogany Jammed in the Anchor Chains." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">A Log of Mahogany Jammed in the Anchor Chains. </p> + +<p>Two days after we had stored away the mahogany we anchored off +Duala, the capital of the German Cameroons. Duala is built upon a +high cliff, and from the water the white and yellow buildings with +many pillars gave it the appearance of a city. Instead, it is a +clean, pretty town. With the German habit of order, it has been laid +out like barracks, but with many gardens, well-kept, shaded streets, +and high, cool houses, scientifically planned to meet the +necessities of the tropics. At Duala the white traders and officials +were plump and cheerful looking, and in the air there was more of +prosperity than fever. The black and white sentry boxes and the +native soldiers practising the stork march of the Kaiser's army were +signs of a rigid military rule, but the signs of Germany's efforts +in trade were more conspicuous. No<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>where on the coast did we see as +at Duala such gorgeous offices as those of the great trading house +of Woermann, the hated rivals of "Sir Alfred," such carved +furniture, such shining brass railings, and nowhere else did we see +plate-glass windows, in which, with unceasing wonder, the natives +stared at reflections of their own persons. In the river there was a +private dry dock of the Woermanns, and along the wharfs for acres +was lumber for the Woermanns, boxes of trade goods, puncheons and +casks for the Woermanns, private cooper shops and private machine +shops and private banks for the Woermanns. The house flag of the +Woermanns became as significant as that of a reigning sovereign. One +felt inclined to salute it.</p> + +<p>The success of the German merchant on the East Coast and over all +the world appears to be a question of character. He is patient, +methodical, painstaking; it is his habit of industry that is helping +him to close port after port to English, French, and American goods. +The German clerks do not go to the East Coast or to China and South +America to drink absinthe or whiskey, or to play dominoes or +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>cricket. They work twice as long as do the other white men, and +during those longer office hours they toil twice as hard. One of our +passengers was a German agent returning for his vacation. I used to +work in the smoking-room and he always was at the next table, also +at work, on his ledgers and account books. He was so industrious +that he bored me, and one day I asked him why, instead of spoiling +his vacation with work, he had not balanced his books before he left +the Coast.</p> + +<p>"It is an error," he said; "I can not find him." And he explained +that in the record of his three years' stewardship, which he was to +turn over to the directors in Berlin, there was somewhere a mistake +of a sixpence.</p> + +<p>"But," I protested, "what's sixpence to you? You drink champagne all +day. You begin at nine in the morning!"</p> + +<p>"I drink champagne," said the clerk, "because for three years I have +myself alone in the bush lived, but, can I to my directors go with a +book not balanced?" He laid his hand upon his heart and shook his +head. "It is my heart that tells me 'No!'"</p> + +<p>After three weeks he gave a shout, his face <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>blushed with pleasure, +and actual tears were in his eyes. He had dug out the error, and at +once he celebrated the recovery of the single sixpence by giving me +twenty-four shillings' worth of champagne. It is a true story, and +illustrates, I think, the training and method of the German mind, of +the industry of the merchants who are trading over all the seas. As +a rule the "trade" goods "made in Germany" are "shoddy." They do not +compare in quality with those of England or the States; in every +foreign port you will find that the English linen is the best, that +the American agricultural implements, American hardware, saws, axes, +machetes, are superior to those manufactured in any other country. +But the German, though his goods are poorer, cuts the coat to please +the customer. He studies the wishes of the man who is to pay. He is +not the one who says: "Take it, or leave it."</p> + +<p>The agent of one of the largest English firms on the Ivory Coast, +one that started by trading in slaves, said to me: "Our largest +shipment to this coast is gin. This is a French colony, and if the +French traders and I were patriots instead of merchants we would +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>buy from our own people, but we buy from the Germans, because trade +follows no flag. They make a gin out of potatoes colored with rum or +gin, and label it 'Demerara' and 'Jamaica.' They sell it to us on +the wharf at Antwerp for ninepence a gallon, and we sell it at nine +francs per dozen bottles. Germany is taking our trade from us +because she undersells us, and because her merchants don't wait for +trade to come to them, but go after it. Before the Woermann boat is +due their agent here will come to my factory and spy out all I have +in my compound. 'Why don't you ship those logs with us?' he'll ask.</p> + +<p>"'Can't spare the boys to carry them to the beach,' I'll say.</p> + +<p>"'I'll furnish the boys,' he'll answer. That's the German way.</p> + +<p>"The Elder-Dempster boats lie three miles out at sea and blow a +whistle at us. They act as though by carrying our freight they were +doing us a favor. These German ships, to save you the long pull, +anchor close to the beach and lend you their own shore boats and +their own boys to work your cargo. And if you give them a few tons +to carry, like as <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>not they'll 'dash' you to a case of 'fizz.' And +meanwhile the English captain is lying outside the bar tooting his +whistle and wanting to know if you think he's going to run his ship +aground for a few bags of rotten kernels. And he can't see, and the +people at home can't see, why the Germans are crowding us off the +Coast."</p> + +<p>Just outside of Duala, in the native village of Bell Town, is the +palace and the harem of the ruler of the tribe that gave its name to +the country, Mango Bell, King of the Cameroons. His brother, Prince +William, sells photographs and "souvenirs." We bought photographs, +and on the strength of that hinted at a presentation at court. +Brother William seemed doubtful, so we bought enough postal cards to +establish us as <i>étrangers de distinction</i>, and he sent up our +names. With Pivani, Hatton & Cookson's chief clerk we were escorted +to the royal presence. The palace is a fantastic, pagoda-like +building of three stories; and furnished with many mirrors, carved +oak sideboards, and lamp-shades of colored glass. Mango Bell, King +of the Cameroons, sounds like a character in a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>comic opera, but the +king was an extremely serious, tall, handsome, and self-respecting +negro. Having been educated in England, he spoke much more correct +English than any of us. Of the few "Kings I Have Met," both tame and +wild, his manners were the most charming. Back of the palace is an +enormously long building under one roof. Here live his thirty-five +queens. To them we were not presented.</p> + +<a name="img20" id="img20"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-20.jpg" width="500" height="394" alt="The Palace of the King of the Cameroons." +title="The Palace of the King of the Cameroons." /></div> + +<p class="cap">The Palace of the King of the Cameroons. </p> + +<p>Prince William asked me if I knew where in America there was a +street called Fifth Avenue. I suggested New York. He referred to a +large Bible, and finding, much to his surprise, that my guess was +correct, commissioned me to buy him, from a firm on that street, +just such another Bible as the one in his hand. He forgot to give me +the money to pay for it, but loaned us a half-dozen little princes +to bear our purchases to the wharf. For this service their royal +highnesses graciously condescended to receive a small "dash," and +with the chief clerk were especially delighted. He, being a +sleight-of-hand artist, apparently took five-franc pieces out of +their Sunday clothes and from their kinky hair. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span>When we left they +were rapidly disrobing to find if any more five-franc pieces were +concealed about their persons.</p> + +<p>The morning after we sailed from Duala we anchored in the river in +front of Calabar, the capital of Southern Nigeria. Of all the ports +at which we touched on the Coast, Calabar was the hottest, the best +looking, and the best administered. It is a model colony, but to +bring it to the state it now enjoys has cost sums of money entirely +out of proportion to those the colony has earned. The money has been +spent in cutting down the jungle, filling in swamps that breed +mosquitoes and fever, and in laying out gravel walks, water mains, +and open cement gutters, and in erecting model hospitals, barracks, +and administrative offices. Even grass has been made to grow, and +the high bluff upon which are situated the homes of the white +officials and Government House has been trimmed and cultivated and +tamed until it looks like an English park. It is a complete +imitation, even to golf links and tennis courts. But the fight that +has been made against the jungle has not stopped with golf links. In +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>1896 the death rate was ten men out of every hundred. That +corresponds to what in warfare is a decimating fire, upon which an +officer, without danger of reproof, may withdraw his men. But at +Calabar the English doctors did not withdraw, and now the death rate +is as low as three out of every hundred. That Calabar, or any part +of the West Coast, will ever be made entirely healthy is doubtful. +Man can cut down a forest and fill in a swamp, but he can not reach +up, as to a gas jet, and turn off the sun. And at Calabar, even at +night when the sun has turned itself off, the humidity and the heat +leave one sweating, tossing, and gasping for air. In Calabar the +first thing a white man learns is not to take any liberties with the +sun. When he dresses, eats, drinks, and moves about the sun is as +constantly on his mind, as it is on the face of the sun-dial. The +chief ascent to the top of the bluff where the white people live is +up a steep cement walk about eighty yards long. At the foot of this +a white man will be met by four hammock-bearers, and you will see +him get into the hammock and be carried in it the eighty yards.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>For even that short distance he is taking no chances. But while he +nurses his vitality and cares for his health he does not use the sun +as an excuse for laziness or for slipshod work. I have never seen a +place in the tropics where, in spite of the handicap of damp, fierce +heat, the officers and civil officials are so keenly and constantly +employed, where the bright work was so bright, and the whitewash so +white.</p> + +<p>Out at the barracks of the West African Frontier Force, the +W.A.F.F.'s, the officers, instead of from the shade of the veranda +watching the non-coms. teach a native the manual, were themselves at +work, and each was howling orders at the black recruits and smashing +a gun against his hip and shoulder as smartly as a drill sergeant. I +found the standard maintained at Calabar the more interesting +because the men were almost entirely their own audience. If they +make the place healthy, and attractive-looking, and dress for +dinner, and shy at cocktails, and insist that their tan shoes shall +glow like meershaum pipes, it is not because of the refining +presence of lovely women, but because the men themselves like things +that way. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>The men of Calabar have learned that when the sun is at +110, morals, like material things, disintegrate, and that, though +the temptation is to go about in bath-room slippers and pajamas, one +is wiser to bolster up his drenched and drooping spirit with a stiff +shirt front and a mess jacket. They tell that in a bush station in +upper Nigeria, one officer got his D.S.O. because with an audience +of only a white sergeant he persisted in a habit of shaving twice a +day.</p> + + +<a name="img21" id="img21"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-21.jpg" width="500" height="326" alt="The Home of the Thirty Queens of King Mango Bell." +title="The Home of the Thirty Queens of King Mango Bell." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Home of the Thirty Queens of King Mango Bell. </p> + +<p>There are very few women in Calabar. There are three or four who are +wives of officials, two nurses employed by the government, and the +Mother Superior and Sisters of the Order of St. Joseph, and, of +course, all of them are great belles. For the Sisters, especially +the officers, the government people, the traders, the natives, even +the rival missionaries, have the most tremendous respect and +admiration. The sacrifice of the woman who, to be near her husband +on the Coast, consents to sicken and fade and grow old before her +time, and of the nurse who, to preserve the health of others, risks +her own, is very great; but the sacrifice of the Sisters, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>who have +renounced all thought of home and husband, and who have exiled +themselves to this steaming swamp-land, seems the most unselfish. In +order to support the 150 little black boys and girls who are at +school at the mission, the Sisters rob themselves of everything +except the little that will keep them alive. Two, in addition to +their work at the mission, act as nurses in the English hospital, +and for that they receive together $600. This forms the sole regular +income of the five women; for each $120 a year. With anything else +that is given them in charity, they buy supplies for the little +converts. They live in a house of sandstone and zinc that holds the +heat like a flat-iron, they are obliged to wear a uniform that is of +material and fashion so unsuited to the tropics that Dr. Chichester, +in charge of the hospital, has written in protest against it to +Rome, and on many days they fast, not because the Church bids them +so to do, but because they have no food. And with it all, these five +gentlewomen are always eager, cheerful, sweet of temper, and a +living blessing to all who meet them. What now troubles them is that +they have no room to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>accommodate the many young heathen who come to +them to be taught to wear clothes, and to be good little boys and +girls. This is causing the Sisters great distress. Any one who does +not believe in that selfish theory, that charity begins at home, but +who would like to help to spread Christianity in darkest Africa and +give happiness to five noble women, who are giving their lives for +others, should send a postal money order to Marie T. Martin, the +Reverend Mother Superior of the Catholic Mission of Old Calabar, +Southern Nigeria.</p> + +<p>And if you are going to do it, as they say in the advertising pages, +"Do it now!"</p> + +<a name="img22" id="img22"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-22.jpg" width="500" height="320" alt="The Mother Superior and Sisters of St. Joseph and +Their Converts at Old Calabar." title= "The Mother Superior and Sisters of St. Joseph and +Their Converts at Old Calabar." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Mother Superior and Sisters of St. Joseph and +Their Converts at Old Calabar. </p> + +<p>At Calabar there is a royal prisoner, the King of Benin. He is not +an agreeable king like His Majesty of the Cameroons, but a grossly +fat, sensual-looking young man, who, a few years ago, when he was at +war with the English, made "ju ju" against them by sacrificing three +hundred maidens, his idea being that the ju ju would drive the +English out of Benin. It was poor ju ju, for it drove the young man +himself out of Benin, and now he is a king in exile. As far as I +could see, the social position of the king is insecure, and +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>certainly in Calabar he does not move in the first circles. One +afternoon, when the four or five ladies of Calabar and Mr. Bedwell, +the Acting Commissioner, and the officers of the W.A.F.F.'s were at +the clubhouse having ice-drinks, the king at the head of a retinue +of cabinet officers, high priests, and wives bore down upon the +club-house with the evident intention of inviting himself to tea. +Personally, I should like to have met a young man who could murder +three hundred girls and worry over it so little that he had not lost +one of his three hundred pounds, but the others were considerably +annoyed and sent an A.D.C. to tell him to "Move on!" as though he +were an organ-grinder, or a performing bear.</p> + +<p>"These kings," exclaimed a subaltern of the W.A.F.F.'s, indignantly, +"are trying to push in everywhere!"</p> + +<p>When we departed from Calabar, the only thing that reconciled me to +leaving it and its charming people, was the fact that when the ship +moved there was a breeze. While at anchor in the river I had found +that not being able to breathe by day or to sleep by night in time +is trying, even to the stoutest constitution.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>One of the married ladies of Calabar, her husband, an officer of +the W.A.F.F.'s, and the captain of the police sailed on the +<i>Nigeria</i> "on leave," and all Calabar came down to do them honor. +There was the commissioner's gig, and the marine captain's gig, and +the police captain's gig, and the gig from "Matilda's," the English +trading house, and one from the Dutch house and the French house, +and each gig was manned by black boys in beautiful uniforms and +fezzes, and each crew fought to tie up to the foot of the +accommodation ladder. It was as gay as a regatta. On the +quarter-deck the officers drank champagne, in the captain's cabin +Hughes treated the traders to beer, in the "square" the non-coms. of +the W.A.F.F.'s drank ale. The men who were going away on leave tried +not to look too happy, and those who were going back to the shore +drank deep and tried not to appear too carelessly gay. A billet on +the West Coast is regarded by the man who accepts it as a sort of +sporting proposition, as a game of three innings of nine months +each, during which he matches his health against the Coast. If he +lives he wins; if he dies the Coast wins.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>After Calabar, at each port off which we anchored, at Ponny, +Focardos, Lagos, Accra, Cape Coast Castle, and Sekonni, it was +always the same. Always there came over the side the man going +"Home," the man who had fought with the Coast and won. He was as +excited, as jubilant as a prisoner sentenced to death who had +escaped his executioners. And always the heartiest in their +congratulations were the men who were left behind, his brother +officers, or his fellow traders, the men of the Sun Hat Brigade, in +their unofficial uniforms, in shirtwaists, broad belts from which +dangled keys and a whistle, beautifully polished tan boots, and with +a wand-like whip or stick of elephant hide. They swarmed the decks +and overwhelmed the escaping refugee with good wishes. He had +cheated their common enemy. By merely keeping alive he had achieved +a glorious victory. In their eyes he had performed a feat of +endurance like swimming the English Channel. They crowded to +congratulate him as people at the pit-mouth congratulate the +entombed miner, who, after many days of breathing noisome gases, +drinks the pure air. Even the black boys seem to feel <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>the triumph +of the white master, and their paddles never flashed so bravely, and +their songs never rang so wildly, as when they were racing him away +from the brooding Coast with its poisonous vapors toward the big +white ship that meant health and home.</p> + +<p>Although most of the ports we saw only from across a mile or two of +breakers, they always sent us something of interest. Sometimes all +the male passengers came on board drunk. With the miners of the Gold +Coast and the "Palm Oil Ruffians" it used to be a matter of +etiquette not to leave the Coast in any other condition. Not so to +celebrate your escape seemed ungenerous and ungrateful. At Sekondi +one of the miners from Ashanti was so completely drunk, that he was +swung over the side, tied up like a plum-pudding, in a bag.</p> + +<p>When he emerged from the bag his expression of polite inquiry was +one with which all could sympathize. To lose consciousness on the +veranda of a café, and awake with a bump on the deck of a steamer +many miles at sea, must strengthen one's belief in magic carpets.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>Another entertainment for the white passengers was when the boat +boys fought for the black passengers as they were lowered in the +mammy-chair. As a rule, in the boats from shore, there were twelve +boys to paddle and three or four extra men to handle and unhook the +mammy-chair and the luggage. While the boys with the paddles +manœuvred to bring their boat next to the ship's side, the extra +boys tried to pull their rivals overboard, dragging their hands from +ropes and gunwales, and beating them with paddles. They did this +while every second the boat under them was spinning in the air or +diving ten feet into the hollow of the waves, and trying to smash +itself and every other boat into driftwood. From the deck the second +officer would swing a mammy-chair over the side with the idea of +dropping it into one of these boats. But before the chair could be +lowered, a rival boat would shove the first one away, and with a +third boat would be fighting for its place. Meanwhile, high above +the angry sea, the chair and its cargo of black women would be +twirling like a weathercock and banging against the ship's side. The +mammies were <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span>too terrified to scream, but the ship's officers +yelled and swore, the boat's crews shrieked, and the black babies +howled. Each baby was strapped between the shoulders of the mother. +A mammy-chair is like one of those two-seated swings in which people +sit facing one another. If to the shoulders of each person in the +swing was tied a baby, it is obvious that should the swing bump into +anything, the baby would get the worst of it. That is what happened +in the mammy-chair. Every time the chair spun around, the head of a +baby would come "crack!" against the ship's side. So the babies +howled, and no one of the ship's passengers, crowded six deep along +the rail, blamed them. The skull of the Ethiopian may be hard, but +it is most unfair to be swathed like a mummy so that you can neither +kick nor strike back, and then have your head battered against a +five-thousand-ton ship.</p> + +<p>How the boys who paddled the shore boats live long enough to learn +how to handle them is a great puzzle. We were told that the method +was to take out one green boy with a crew of eleven experts. But how +did the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>original eleven become experts? At Accra, where the waves +are very high and rough, are the best boat boys on the coast. We +watched the Custom House boat fight her way across the two miles of +surf to the shore. The fight lasted two hours. It was as thrilling +as watching a man cross Niagara Falls on a tight-rope. The greater +part of the two hours the boat stood straight in the air, as though +it meant to shake the crew into the sea, and the rest of the time it +ran between walls of water ten feet high and was entirely lost to +sight. Two things about the paddling on the West Coast make it +peculiar; the boys sit, not on the thwarts, but on the gunwales, as +a woman rides a side-saddle, and in many parts of the coast the boys +use paddles shaped like a fork or a trident. One asks how, sitting +as they do, they are able to brace themselves, and how with their +forked paddles they obtained sufficient resistance. A coaster's +explanation of the split paddle was that the boys did not want any +more resistance than they could prevent.</p> + +<a name="img23" id="img23"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 397px;"> +<img src="images/img-23.jpg" width="397" height="450" alt="The Kroo Boys Sit, Not On the Thwarts, but On the +Gunwales, as a Woman Rides a Side Saddle." title= "The Kroo Boys Sit, Not On the Thwarts, but On the +Gunwales, as a Woman Rides a Side Saddle." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Kroo Boys Sit, Not On the Thwarts, but On the +Gunwales, as a Woman Rides a Side Saddle. </p> + +<p>There is no more royal manner of progress than when one of these +boats lifts you over <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>the waves, with the boys chanting some wild +chorus, with their bare bodies glistening, their teeth and eyes +shining, the splendid muscles straining, and the dripping paddles +flashing like twelve mirrors.</p> + +<p>Some of the chiefs have canoes of as much as sixty men-power, +and when these men sing, and their bodies and voices are in +unison, a war canoe seems the only means of locomotion, and a +sixty-horse-power racing car becomes a vehicle suited only to the +newly rich.</p> + +<p>I knew I had left the West Coast when, the very night we sailed from +Sierra Leone, for greater comfort, I reached for a linen bed-spread +that during four stifling, reeking weeks had lain undisturbed at the +foot of the berth. During that time I had hated it as a monstrous +thing; as something as hot and heavy as a red flannel blanket, as a +buffalo robe. And when, on the following night, I found the +wind-screen was not in the air port, and that, nevertheless, I still +was alive, I knew we had passed out of reach of the Equator, and +that all that followed would be as conventional as the "trippers" +who <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>joined us at the Canary Isles; and as familiar as the low, gray +skies, the green, rain-soaked hills, and the complaining Channel +gulls that convoyed us into Plymouth Harbor.</p> + + + +<hr class="short" /> +<br /> + +<h2><a name="VII" id="VII"></a>VII</h2> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span> + +<h3>ALONG THE EAST COAST</h3> +<br /> + + +<p>Were a man picked up on a flying carpet and dropped without warning +into Lorenço Marquez, he might guess for a day before he could make +up his mind where he was, or determine to which nation the place +belonged.</p> + +<p>If he argued from the adobe houses with red-tiled roofs and walls of +cobalt blue, the palms, and the yellow custom-house, he might think +he was in Santiago; the Indian merchants in velvet and gold +embroideries seated in deep, dark shops which breathe out dry, +pungent odors, might take him back to Bombay; the Soudanese and +Egyptians in long blue night-gowns and freshly ironed fezzes would +remind him of Cairo; the dwarfish Portuguese soldiers, of Madeira, +Lisbon, and Madrid, and the black, bare-legged policemen in khaki +with great numerals on their chests, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>of Benin, Sierra Leone, or +Zanzibar. After he had noted these and the German, French, and +English merchants in white duck, and the Dutch man-of-warsmen, who +look like ship's stewards, the French marines in coal-scuttle +helmets, the British Jack-tars in their bare feet, and the native +Kaffir women, each wrapped in a single, gorgeous shawl with a black +baby peering from beneath her shoulder-blades, he would decide, by +using the deductive methods of Sherlock Holmes, that he was in the +Midway of the Chicago Fair.</p> + +<p>Several hundred years ago Da Gama sailed into Delagoa Bay and +founded the town of Lorenço Marquez, and since that time the +Portuguese have always felt that it is only due to him and to +themselves to remain there. They have great pride of race, and they +like the fact that they possess and govern a colony. So, up to the +present time, in spite of many temptations to dispose of it, they +have made the ownership of Delagoa Bay an article of their national +religion. But their national religion does not require of them to +improve their property. And to-day it is much as it <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>was when the +sails of Da Gama's fleet first stirred its poisonous vapors.</p> + +<p>The harbor itself is an excellent one and the bay is twenty-two +miles along, but there is only one landing-pier, and that such a +pier as would be considered inconsistent with the dignity of the +Larchmont Yacht Club. To the town itself Portugal has been content +to contribute as her share the gatherers of taxes, collectors of +customs and dispensers of official seals. She is indifferent to the +fact that the bulk of general merchandise, wine, and machinery that +enter her port is brought there by foreigners. She only demands that +they buy her stamps. Her importance in her own colony is that of a +toll-gate at the entrance of a great city.</p> + +<p>Lorenço Marquez is not a spot which one would select for a home. +When I was first there, the deaths from fever were averaging fifteen +a day, and men who dined at the club one evening were buried +hurriedly before midnight, and when I returned in the winter months, +the fever had abated, but on the night we arrived twenty men were +robbed. The fact that we complained to the police about <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>one of the +twenty robberies struck the commandant as an act of surprising and +unusual interest. We gathered from his manner that the citizens of +Lorenço Marquez look upon being robbed as a matter too personal and +selfish with which to trouble the police. It was perhaps credulous +of us, as our hotel was liberally labelled with notices warning its +patrons that "Owing to numerous robberies in this hotel, our guests +will please lock their doors." This was one of three hotels owned by +the same man. One of the others had been described to us as the +"tough" hotel, and at the other, a few weeks previous, a friend had +found a puff-adder barring his bedroom door. The choice was somewhat +difficult.</p> + +<p>On her way from Lorenço Marquez to Beira our ship, the <i>Kanzlar</i>, +kept close to the shore, and showed us low-lying banks of yellow +sand and coarse green bushes. There was none of the majesty of +outline which reaches from Table Bay to Durban, none of the blue +mountains of the Colony, nor the deeply wooded table-lands and great +inlets of Kaffraria. The rocks which stretch along the southern +coast and against which the waves <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>break with a report like the +bursting of a lyddite shell, had disappeared, and along Gazaland and +the Portuguese territory only swamps and barren sand-hills +accompanied us in a monotonous yellow line. From the bay we saw +Beira as a long crescent of red-roofed houses, many of them of four +stories with verandas running around each story, like those of the +summer hotels along the Jersey coast. It is a town built upon the +sands, with a low stone breakwater, but without a pier or jetty, the +lack of which gives it a temporary, casual air as though it were +more a summer resort than the one port of entry for all Rhodesia. It +suggested Coney Island to one, and to others Asbury Park and the +board-walk at Atlantic City. When we found that in spite of her +Portuguese flags and naked blacks, Beira reminded us of nothing +except an American summer-resort, we set to discovering why this +should be, and decided it was because, after the red dust of the +Colony and the Transvaal, we saw again stretches of white sand, and +instead of corrugated zinc, flimsy houses of wood, which you felt +were only opened for the summer season and which for <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>the rest of +the year remained boarded up against driven sands and equinoctial +gales. Beira need only to have added to her "Sea-View" and "Beach" +hotels, a few bathing-suits drying on a clothes-line, a tin-type +artist, and a merry-go-round, to make us feel perfectly at home. +Beira being the port on the Indian Ocean which feeds Mashonaland and +Matabeleland and the English settlers in and around Buluwayo and +Salisbury, English influence has proclaimed itself there in many +ways. When we touched, which was when the British soldiers were +moving up to Rhodesia, the place, in comparison with Lorenço +Marquez, was brisk, busy, and clean. Although both are ostensibly +Portuguese, Beira is to Lorenço Marquez what the cleanest street of +Greenwich Village, of New York City, is to "Hell's Kitchen" and the +Chinese Quarter. The houses were well swept and cool, the shops were +alluring, the streets were of clean shifting white sand, and the +sidewalks, of gray cement, were as well kept as a Philadelphia +doorstep. The most curious feature of Beira is her private tram-car +system. These cars run on tiny tracks which rise out of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span>sand +and extend from one end of the town to the other, with branch lines +running into the yards of shops and private houses. The motive power +for these cars is supplied by black boys who run behind and push +them. Their trucks are about half as large as those on the hand-cars +we see flying along our railroad tracks at home, worked by gangs of +Italian laborers. On some of the trucks there is only a bench, +others are shaded by awnings, and a few have carriage-lamps and +cushioned seats and carpets. Each of them is a private conveyance; +there is not one which can be hired by the public. When a merchant +wishes to go down town to the port, his black boys carry his private +tram-car from his garden and settle it on the rails, the merchant +seats himself, and the boys push him and his baby-carriage to +whatever part of the city he wishes to go. When his wife is out +shopping and stops at a store the boys lift her car into the sand in +order to make a clear track for any other car which may be coming +behind them. One would naturally suppose that with the tracks and +switch-boards and sidings already laid, the next step <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>would be to +place cars upon them for the convenience of the public, but this is +not the case, and the tracks through the city are jealously reserved +for the individuals who tax themselves five pounds a year to extend +them and to keep them in repair. After the sleds on the island of +Madeira these private street-cars of Beira struck me as being the +most curious form of conveyance I had ever seen.</p> + +<a name="img24" id="img24"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 298px;"> +<img src="images/img-24.jpg" width="298" height="450" alt="Going Visiting in Her Private Tram-car at Beira." +title="Going Visiting in Her Private Tram-car at Beira." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Going Visiting in Her Private Tram-car at Beira. </p> + +<p>Beira was occupied by the Companhia de Mozambique with the idea of +feeding Salisbury and Buluwayo from the north, and drawing away some +of the trade which at that time was monopolized by the merchants of +Cape Town and Durban. But the tse-tse fly belt lay between Beira on +the coast and the boundary of the Chartered Company's possessions, +and as neither oxen nor mules could live to cross this, it was +necessary, in order to compete with the Cape-Buluwayo line, to build +a railroad through the swamp and jungle. This road is now in +operation. It is two hundred and twenty miles in length, and in the +brief period of two months, during the long course of its progress +through the marshes, two hundred of the men working <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>on it died of +fever. Some years ago, during a boundary dispute between the +Portuguese and the Chartered Company, there was a clash between the +Portuguese soldiers and the British South African police. How this +was settled and the honor of the Portuguese officials satisfied, +Kipling has told us in the delightful tale of "Judson and the +Empire." It was off Beira that Judson fished up a buoy and anchored +it over a sand-bar upon which he enticed the Portuguese gunboat. A +week before we touched at Beira, the Portuguese had rearranged all +the harbor buoys, but, after the casual habits of their race, had +made no mention of the fact. The result was that the <i>Kanzlar</i> was +hung up for twenty-four hours. We tried to comfort ourselves by +thinking that we were undoubtedly occupying the same mud-bank which +had been used by the strategic Judson to further the course of +empire.</p> + +<p>The <i>Kanzlar</i> could not cross the bar to go to Chinde, so the +<i>Adjutant</i>, which belongs to the same line and which was created for +these shallow waters, came to the <i>Kanzlar</i>, bringing Chinde with +her. She brought every white <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span>man in the port, and those who could +not come on board our ship remained contentedly on the <i>Adjutant</i>, +clinging to her rail as she alternately sank below, or was tossed +high above us. For three hours they smiled with satisfaction as +though they felt that to have escaped from Chinde, for even that +brief time, was sufficient recompense for a thorough ducking and the +pains of sea-sickness. On the bridge of the <i>Adjutant</i>, in white +duck and pith helmets, were the only respectable members of Chinde +society. We knew that they were the only respectable members of +Chinde society, because they told us so themselves. On her lower +deck she brought two French explorers, fully dressed for the part as +Tartarin of Tarascon might have dressed it in white havelocks and +gaiters buckled up to the thighs, and clasping express rifles in new +leather cases. From her engine-room came stokers from Egypt, and +from her forward deck Malays in fresh white linen, Mohammedans in +fez and turban, Portuguese officials, chiefly in decorations, Indian +coolies and Zanzibari boys, very black and very beautiful, who wound +and unwound long blue strips of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>cotton about their shoulders, or +ears, or thighs as the heat, or the nature of the work of unloading +required. Among these strange peoples were goats, as delicately +colored as a meerschaum pipe, and with the horns of our red deer, +strange white oxen with humps behind the shoulders, those that are +exhibited in cages at home as "sacred buffalo," but which here are +only patient beasts of burden, and gray monkeys, wildcats, snakes +and crocodiles in cages addressed to "Hagenbeck, Hamburg." The +freight was no less curious; assegais in bundles, horns stretching +for three feet from point to point, or rising straight, like +poignards; skins, ground-nuts, rubber, and heavy blocks of bees-wax +wrapped in coarse brown sacking, and which in time will burn before +the altars of Roman Catholic churches in Italy, Spain, and France.</p> + +<p>People of the "Bromide" class who run across a friend from their own +city in Paris will say, "Well, to think of meeting <i>you</i> here. How +small the world is after all!" If they wish a better proof of how +really small it is, how closely it is knit together, how the +existence of one canning-house in Chicago supports <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>twenty stores in +Durban, they must follow, not the missionary or the explorers, not +the punitive expeditions, but the man who wishes to buy, and the man +who brings something to sell. Trade is what has brought the +latitudes together and made the world the small department store it +is, and forced one part of it to know and to depend upon the other.</p> + +<p>The explorer tells you, "I was the first man to climb Kilamajaro." +"I was the first to cut a path from the shores of Lake Nyassa into +the Congo Basin." He even lectures about it, in front of a wet sheet +in the light of a stereopticon, and because he has added some miles +of territory to the known world, people buy his books and learned +societies place initials after his distinguished name. But before +his grandfather was born and long before he ever disturbed the +waters of Nyassa the Phœnicians and Arabs and Portuguese and men +of his own time and race had been there before him to buy ivory, +both white and black, to exchange beads and brass bars and +shaving-mirrors for the tusks of elephants, raw gold, copra, rubber, +and the feathers of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>the ostrich. Statesmen will modestly say that a +study of the map showed them how the course of empire must take its +way into this or that undiscovered wilderness, and that in +consequence, at their direction, armies marched to open these tracts +which but for their prescience would have remained a desert. But +that was not the real reason. A woman wanted three feathers to wear +at Buckingham Palace, and to oblige her a few unimaginative traders, +backed by a man who owned a tramp steamer, opened up the East Coast +of Africa; another wanted a sealskin sacque, and fleets of ships +faced floating ice under the Northern Lights. The bees of the Shire +Riverway help to illuminate the cathedrals of St. Peters and Notre +Dame, and back of Mozambique thousands of rubber-trees are being +planted to-day, because, at the other end of the globe, people want +tires for their automobiles; and because the fashionable ornament of +the natives of Swaziland is, for no reason, no longer blue-glass +beads, manufacturers of beads in Switzerland and Italy find +themselves out of pocket by some thousands and thousands of pounds.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>The traders who were making the world smaller by bringing cotton +prints to Chinde to cover her black nakedness, her British Majesty's +consul at that port, and the boy lieutenant of the paddle-wheeled +gunboat which patrols the Zambesi River, were the gentlemen who +informed me that they were the only respectable members of Chinde +society. They came over the side with the gratitude of sailors whom +the <i>Kanzlar</i> might have picked up from a desert island, where they +had been marooned and left to rot. They observed the gilded glory of +the <i>Kanzlar</i> smoking-room, its mirrors and marble-topped tables, +with the satisfaction and awe of the California miner, who found all +the elegance of civilization in the red plush of a Broadway omnibus. +The boy-commander of the gunboat gazed at white women in the saloon +with fascinated admiration.</p> + +<p>"I have never," he declared, breathlessly, "I have never seen so +many beautiful women in one place at the same time! I'd forgotten +that there were so many white people in the world."</p> + +<p>"If I stay on board this ship another min<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>ute I shall go home," said +Her Majesty's consul, firmly. "You will have to hold me. It's coming +over me—I feel it coming. I shall never have the strength to go +back." He appealed to the sympathetic lieutenant. "Let's desert +together," he begged.</p> + +<a name="img25" id="img25"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 385px;"> +<img src="images/img-25.jpg" width="385" height="450" alt="One-half of the Street Cleaning Department of +Mozambique." title="One-half of the Street Cleaning Department of +Mozambique." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">One-half of the Street Cleaning Department of +Mozambique. </p> + +<p>In the swamps of the East Coast the white exiles lay aside the +cloaks and masks of crowded cities. They do not try to conceal their +feelings, their vices, or their longings. They talk to the first +white stranger they meet of things which in the great cities a man +conceals even from his room-mate, and men they would not care to +know, and whom they would never meet in the fixed social pathways of +civilization, they take to their hearts as friends. They are too few +to be particular, they have no choice, and they ask no questions. It +is enough that the white man, like themselves, is condemned to +exile. They do not try to find solace in the thought that they are +the "foretrekkers" of civilization, or take credit to themselves +because they are the path-finders and the pioneers who bear the heat +and burden of the day. They are sorry for themselves, because they +know, more keenly <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>than any outsider can know, how good is the life +they have given up, and how hard is the one they follow, but they do +not ask anyone else to be sorry. They would be very much surprised +if they thought you saw in their struggle against native and +Portuguese barbarism, fever, and savage tribes, a life of great good +and value, full of self-renunciation, heroism, and self-sacrifice.</p> + +<p>On the day they boarded the <i>Kanzlar</i> the pains of nostalgia were +sweeping over the respectable members of Chinde society like waves +of nausea, and tearing them. With a grim appreciation of their own +condition, they smiled mockingly at the ladies on the quarter-deck, +as you have seen prisoners grin through the bars; they were even +boisterous and gay, but their gayety was that of children at recess, +who know that when the bell rings they are going back to the desk.</p> + +<p>A little English boy ran through the smoking-room, and they fell +upon him, and quarrelled for the privilege of holding him on their +knees. He was a shy, coquettish little English boy, and the +boisterous, noisy men did not appeal to him. To them he meant home +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span>and family and the old nursery, papered with colored pictures from +the Christmas <i>Graphic</i>. His stout, bare legs and tangled curls and +sailor's hat, with "H.M.S. Mars" across it, meant all that was clean +and sweet-smelling in their past lives.</p> + +<p>"I'll arrest you for a deserter," said the lieutenant of the +gunboat. "I'll make the consul send you back to the <i>Mars</i>." He held +the boy on his knee fearfully, handling him as though he were some +delicate and precious treasure that might break if he dropped it.</p> + +<p>The agent of the Oceanic Development Company, Limited, whose +business in life is to drive savage Angonis out of the jungle, where +he hopes in time to see the busy haunts of trade, begged for the boy +with eloquent pleading.</p> + +<p>"You've had the kiddie long enough now," he urged. "Let me have him. +Come here, Mr. Mars, and sit beside me, and I'll give you fizzy +water—like lemon-squash, only nicer." He held out a wet bottle of +champagne alluringly.</p> + +<p>"No, he is coming to his consul," that youth declared. "He's coming +to his consul <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>for protection. You are not fit characters to +associate with an innocent child. Come to me, little boy, and do not +listen to those degraded persons." So the "innocent child" seated +himself between the consul and the chartered trader, and they patted +his fat calves and red curls and took his minute hands in their +tanned fists, eying him hungrily, like two cannibals. But the little +boy was quite unconscious and inconsiderate of their hunger, and, +with the cruelty of children, pulled himself free and ran away.</p> + +<p>"He was such a nice little kiddie," they said, apologetically, as +though they felt they had been caught in some act of weakness.</p> + +<p>"I haven't got a card with me; I haven't needed one for two years," +said the lieutenant, genially. "But fancy your knowing Sparks! He +has the next station to mine; I'm at one end of the Shire River and +he's at the other; he patrols from Fort Johnson up to the top of the +lake. I suppose you've heard him play the banjo, haven't you? That's +where we hit it off—we're both terribly keen about the banjo. I +suppose if it wasn't for my banjo, I'd go quite off my head down +here. I know <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>Sparks would. You see, I have these chaps at Chinde to +talk to, and up at Tete there's the Portuguese governor, but Sparks +has only six white men scattered along Nyassa for three hundred +miles."</p> + +<p>I had heard of Sparks and the six white men. They grew so lonely +that they agreed to meet once a month at some central station and +spend the night together, and they invited Sparks to attend the +second meeting. But when he arrived he found that they had organized +a morphine club, and the only six white men on Lake Nyassa were +sitting around a table with their sleeves rolled up, giving +themselves injections. Sparks told them it was a "disgusting +practice," and put back to his gunboat. I recalled the story to the +lieutenant, and he laughed mournfully.</p> + +<p>"Yes," he said; "and what's worse is that we're here for two years +more, with all this fighting going on at the Cape and in China. +Still, we have our banjos, and the papers are only six weeks old, +and the steamer stops once every month."</p> + +<a name="img26" id="img26"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-26.jpg" width="500" height="366" alt="Custom House, Zanzibar." +title="Custom House, Zanzibar." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Custom House, Zanzibar. </p> + +<p>Fortunately there were many bags of bees-wax to come over the side, +so we had time in <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>which to give the exiles the news of the outside +world, and they told us of their present and past lives: of how one +as an American filibuster had furnished coal to the Chinese Navy; +how another had sold "ready to wear" clothes in a New York +department store, and another had been attaché at Madrid, and +another in charge of the forward guns of a great battle-ship. We +exchanged addresses and agreed upon the restaurant where we would +meet two years hence to celebrate their freedom, and we emptied many +bottles of iced-beer, and the fact that it was iced seemed to affect +the exiles more than the fact that it was beer.</p> + +<p>But at last the ship's whistle blew with raucous persistence. It was +final and heartless. It rang down the curtain on the mirage which +once a month comes to mock Chinde with memories of English villages, +of well-kept lawns melting into the Thames, of London asphalt and +flashing hansoms. With a jangling of bells in the engine-room the +mirage disappeared, and in five minutes to the exiles of Chinde the +<i>Kanzlar</i> became a gray tub with a pennant of smoke on the horizon +line.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>I have known some men for many years, smoked and talked with them +until improper hours of the morning, known them well enough to +borrow their money, even their razors, and parted from them with +never a pang. But when our ship abandoned those boys to the unclean +land behind them, I could see them only in a blurred and misty +group. We raised our hats to them and tried to cheer, but it was +more of a salute than a cheer. I had never seen them before, I shall +never meet them again—we had just burned signals as our ships +passed in the night—and yet, I must always consider among the +friends I have lost, those white-clad youths who are making the ways +straight for others through the dripping jungles of the Zambesi, +"the only respectable members of Chinde Society."<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1"> *</a></p> + +<p class="foot"><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1">*</a> +N<small>OTE</small>—I did not lose the white-clad youths. The +lieutenant now is the commander of a cruiser, and the consul, a +consul-general; and they write me that the editor of the Chinde +newspaper, on his editorial page, has complained that he, also, +should be included among the respectable members of Chinde Society. +He claims his absence at Tete, at the time of the visit of the +<i>Kanzlar</i>, alone prevented his social position being publicly +recognized. That justice may be done, he, now, is officially, though +tardily, created a member of Chinde's respectable society. R.H.D.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>The profession of the slave-trader, unless it be that of his +contemporary, the pirate preying under his black flag, is the one +which holds you with the most grewsome and fascinating interest. Its +inhumanity, its legends of predatory expeditions into unknown +jungles of Africa, the long return marches to the Coast, the +captured blacks who fall dead in the trail, the dead pulling down +with their chains those who still live, the stifling holds of the +slave-ships, the swift flights before pursuing ships-of-war, the +casting away, when too closely chased, of the ship's cargo, and the +sharks that followed, all of these come back to one as he walks the +shore-wall of Mozambique. From there he sees the slave-dhows in the +harbor, the jungles on the mainland through which the slaves came by +the thousands, and still come one by one, and the ancient palaces of +the Portuguese governors, dead now some hundreds of years, to whom +this trade in human agony brought great wealth, and no loss of +honor.</p> + +<a name="img27" id="img27"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-27.jpg" width="500" height="363" alt="Chain-gangs of Petty Offenders Outside of Zanzibar." +title="Chain-gangs of Petty Offenders Outside of Zanzibar." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Chain-gangs of Petty Offenders Outside of Zanzibar. </p> + +<p>Mozambique in the days of her glory was, with Zanzibar, the great +slave-market of East Africa, and the Portuguese and the Arabs who +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>fattened on this traffic built themselves great houses there, and a +fortress capable, in the event of a siege, of holding the garrison +and all the inhabitants as well. To-day the slave-trade brings to +those who follow it more of adventure than of financial profit, but +the houses and the official palaces and the fortress still remain, +and they are, in color, indescribably beautiful. Blue and pink and +red and light yellow are spread over their high walls, and have been +so washed and chastened by the rain and sun, that the whole city has +taken on the faint, soft tints of a once brilliant water-color. The +streets themselves are unpeopled, empty and strangely silent. Their +silence is as impressive as their beauty. In the heat of the day, +which is from sunrise to past sunset, you see no one, you hear no +footfall, no voices, no rumble of wheels or stamp of horses' hoofs. +The bare feet of the native, who is the only human being who dares +to move abroad, makes no sound, and in Mozambique there are no +carriages and no horses. Two bullock-carts, which collect scraps and +refuse from the white staring streets, are the only carts in the +city, and with <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>the exception of a dozen 'rikshas are the only +wheeled vehicles the inhabitants have seen.</p> + +<p>I have never visited a city which so impressed one with the fact +that, in appearance, it had remained just as it was four hundred +years before. There is no decay, no ruins, no sign of disuse; it is, +on the contrary, clean and brilliantly beautiful in color, with +dancing blue waters all about it, and with enormous palms moving +above the towering white walls and red tiled roofs, but it is a city +of the dead. The open-work iron doors, with locks as large as +letter-boxes, are closed, the wooden window-shutters are barred, and +the wares in the shops are hidden from the sidewalk by heavy +curtains. There is a park filled with curious trees and with flowers +of gorgeous color, but the park is as deserted as a cemetery; along +the principal streets stretch mosaic pavements formed of great +blocks of white and black stone, they look like elongated +checker-boards, but no one walks upon them, and though there are +palaces painted blue, and government buildings in Pompeiian red, and +churches in chaste gray and white, there are no sentries to guard +the palaces, nor no black-robed priests enter <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>or leave the +churches. They are like the palaces of a theatre, set on an empty +stage, and waiting for the actors. It will be a long time before the +actors come to Mozambique. It is, and will remain, a city of the +fifteenth century. It is now only a relic of a cruel and barbarous +period, when the Portuguese governors, the "gentlemen adventurers," +and the Arab slave-dealers, under its blue skies, and hidden within +its barred and painted walls, led lives of magnificent debauchery, +when the tusks of ivory were piled high along its water-front, and +the dhows at anchor reeked with slaves, and when in the +market-place, where the natives now sit bargaining over a bunch of +bananas or a basket of dried fish, their forefathers were themselves +bought and sold.</p> + +<p>In the five hundred years in which he has claimed the shore line of +East Africa from south of Lorenço Marquez to north of Mozambique, +and many hundreds of miles inland, the Portuguese has been the dog +in the manger among nations. In all that time he has done nothing to +help the land or the people whom he pretends to protect, and he +keeps those who would improve both from <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>gaining any hold or +influence over either. It is doubtful if his occupation of the East +Coast can endure much longer. The English and the Germans now +surround him on every side. Even handicapped as they are by the lack +of the seaports which he enjoys, they have forced their way into the +country which lies beyond his and which bounds his on every side. +They have opened up this country with little railroads, with lonely +lengths of telegraph wires, and with their launches and gunboats +they have joined, by means of the Zambesi and Chinde Rivers, new +territories to the great Indian Ocean. His strip of land, which bars +them from the sea, is still unsettled and unsafe, its wealth +undeveloped, its people untamed. He sits at his café at the coast +and collects custom-dues and sells stamped paper. For fear of the +native he dares not march five miles beyond his sea-port town, and +the white men who venture inland for purposes of trade or to +cultivate plantations do so at their own risk, he can promise them +no protection.</p> + +<p>The land back of Mozambique is divided into "holdings," and the rent +of each holding is based upon the number of native huts it +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>contains. The tax per hut is one pound a year, and these holdings +are leased to any Portuguese who promises to pay the combined taxes +of all the huts. He also engages to cut new roads, to keep those +already made in repair, and to furnish a sufficient number of police +to maintain order. The lessees of these holdings have given rise to +many and terrible scandals. In the majority of cases, the lessee, +once out of reach of all authority and of public opinion, and +wielding the power of life and death, becomes a tyrant and +task-master over his district, taxing the natives to five and ten +times the amount which each is supposed to furnish, and treating +them virtually as his bondsmen. Up along the Shire River, the +lessees punish the blacks by hanging them from a tree by their +ankles and beating their bare backs with rhinoceros hide, until, as +it has been described to me by a reputable English resident, the +blood runs in a stream over the negro's shoulders, and forms a pool +beneath his eyes.</p> + +<a name="img28" id="img28"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-28.jpg" width="500" height="329" alt="The Ivory on the Right, Covered Only with Sacking, Is +Ready for Shipment to Boston, U.S.A." +title="The Ivory on the Right, Covered Only with Sacking, Is +Ready for Shipment to Boston, U.S.A." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Ivory on the Right, Covered Only with Sacking, Is +Ready for Shipment to Boston, U.S.A. </p> + +<p>You hear of no legitimate enterprise fostered by these lessees, of +no development of natural resources, but, instead, you are told +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>tales of sickening cruelty, and you can read in the consular +reports others quite as true; records of heartless treatment of +natives, of neglect of great resources, and of hurried snatching at +the year's crop and a return to the Coast, with nothing to show of +sustained effort or steady development. The incompetence of Portugal +cannot endure. Now that England has taken the Transvaal from the +Boer, she will find the seaport of Lorenço Marquez too necessary to +her interests to much longer leave it in the itching palms of the +Portuguese officials. Beira she also needs to feed Rhodesia, and the +Zambesi and Chinde Rivers to supply the British Central African +Company. Farther north, the Germans will find that if they mean to +make German Central Africa pay, they must control the seaboard. It +seems inevitable that, between the two great empires, the little +kingdom of Portugal will be crowded out, and having failed to +benefit either herself or anyone else on the East Coast, she will +withdraw from it, in favor of those who are fitter to survive her.</p> + +<p>There is no more interesting contrast along <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>the coast of East +Africa than that presented by the colonies of England, Germany, and +Portugal. Of these three, the colonies of the Englishmen are, as one +expects to find them, the healthiest, the busiest, and the most +prosperous. They thrive under your very eyes; you feel that they +were established where they are, not by accident, not to gratify a +national vanity or a ruler's ambition, but with foresight and with +knowledge, and with the determination to make money; and that they +will increase and flourish because they are situated where the +natives and settlers have something to sell, and where the men can +bring, in return, something the natives and colonials wish to buy. +Port Elizabeth, Durban, East London, and Zanzibar belong to this +prosperous class, which gives good reason for the faith of those who +founded them.</p> + +<p>On the other hand, as opposed to these, there are the settlements of +the Portuguese, rotten and corrupt, and the German settlements of +Dar Es Salaam and Tanga which have still to prove their right to +exist. Outwardly, to the eye, they are model settlements. Dar Es +Salaam, in particular, is a beautiful <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>and perfectly appointed +colonial town. In the care in which it is laid out, in the +excellence of its sanitary arrangements, in its cleanliness, and in +the magnificence of its innumerable official residences, and in +their sensible adaptability to the needs of the climate, one might +be deceived into believing that Dar Es Salaam is the beautiful +gateway of a thriving and busy colony. But there are no ramparts of +merchandise along her wharves, no bulwarks of strangely scented +bales blocking her water-front; no lighters push hurriedly from the +shore to meet the ship, although she is a German ship, or to receive +her cargo of articles "made in Germany." On the contrary, her +freight is unloaded at the English ports, and taken on at English +ports. And the German traders who send their merchandise to Hamburg +in her hold come over the side at Zanzibar, at Durban, and at Aden, +where the English merchants find in them fierce competitors. There +is nothing which goes so far to prove the falsity of the saying that +"trade follows the flag" as do these model German colonies with +their barracks, governor's palace, officers' clubs, public <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>pleasure +parks, and with no trade; and the English colonies, where the German +merchants remain, and where, under the English flag, they grow +steadily rich. The German Emperor, believing that colonies are a +source of strength to an empire, rather than the weakness that they +are, has raised the German flag in Central East Africa, but the +ships of the German East African Company, subsidized by him, carry +their merchandize to the English ports, and his German subjects +remain where they can make the most money. They do not move to those +ports where the flag of their country would wave over them.</p> + +<p>Dar Es Salaam, although it lacks the one thing needful to make it a +model settlement, possesses all the other things which are needful, +and many which are pure luxuries. Its residences, as I have said, +have been built after the most approved scientific principles of +ventilation and sanitation. In no tropical country have I seen +buildings so admirably adapted to the heat and climatic changes and +at the same time more in keeping with the surrounding scenery. They +are handsome, cool-looking, white and clean, with broad <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>verandas, +high walls, and false roofs under which currents of air are lured in +spite of themselves. The residences are set back along the high bank +which faces the bay. In front of them is a public promenade, newly +planted shade-trees arch over it, and royal palms reach up to it +from the very waters of the harbor. At one end of this semicircle +are the barracks of the Soudanese soldiers, and at the other is the +official palace of the governor. Everything in the settlement is +new, and everything is built on the scale of a city, and with the +idea of accommodating a great number of people. Hotels and cafés, +better than any one finds in the older settlements along the coast, +are arranged on the water-front, and there is a church capable of +seating the entire white population at one time. If the place is to +grow, it can do so only through trade, and when trade really comes +all these palaces and cafés and barracks which occupy the entire +water-front will have to be pushed back to make way for warehouses +and custom-house sheds. At present it is populated only by +officials, and, I believe, twelve white women.</p> + +<a name="img29" id="img29"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-29.jpg" width="500" height="349" alt="The Late Sultan of Zanzibar in His State Carriage." +title="The Late Sultan of Zanzibar in His State Carriage." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">The Late Sultan of Zanzibar in His State Carriage. </p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>You feel that it is an experiment, that it has been sent out like a +box of children's building blocks, and set up carefully on this +beautiful harbor. All that Dar Es Salaam needs now is trade and +emigrants. At present it is a show place, and might be exhibited at +a world's fair as an example of a model village.</p> + +<p>In writing of Zanzibar I am embarrassed by the knowledge that I am +not an unprejudiced witness. I fell in love with Zanzibar at first +sight, and the more I saw of it the more I wanted to take my luggage +out of the ship's hold and cable to my friends to try and have me +made Vice-Consul to Zanzibar through all succeeding administrations.</p> + +<p>Zanzibar runs back abruptly from a white beach in a succession of +high white walls. It glistens and glares, and dazzles you; the sand +at your feet is white, the city itself is white, the robes of the +people are white. It has no public landing-pier. Your rowboat is run +ashore on a white shelving beach, and you face an impenetrable mass +of white walls. The blue waters are behind you, the lofty +fortress-like façade before you, and a strip of white sand is at +your feet.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>And while you are wondering where this hidden city may be, a kind +resident takes you by the hand and pilots you through a narrow crack +in the rampart, along a twisting fissure between white-washed walls +where the sun cannot reach, past great black doorways of carved oak, +and out suddenly into the light and laughter and roar of Zanzibar.</p> + +<p>In the narrow streets are all the colors of the Orient, gorgeous, +unshaded, and violent; cobalt blue, greens, and reds on framework, +windows, and doorways; red and yellow in the awnings and curtains of +the bazaars, and orange and black, red and white, yellow, dark blue, +and purple, in the long shawls of the women. It is the busiest, and +the brightest and richest in color of all the ports along the East +African coast. Were it not for its narrow streets and its towering +walls it would be a place of perpetual sunshine. Everybody is either +actively busy, or contentedly idle. It is all movement, noise, and +glitter, everyone is telling everyone else to make way before him; +the Indian merchants beseech you from the open bazaars; their +children, swathed in gorgeous silks and hung with jewels and +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>bangles, stumble under your feet, the Sultan's troops assail you +with fife and drum, and the black women, wrapped below their bare +shoulders in the colors of the butterfly, and with teeth and brows +dyed purple, crowd you to the wall. Outside the city there are long +and wonderful roads between groves of the bulky mango-tree of +richest darkest green and the bending palm, shading deserted palaces +of former Sultans, temples of the Indian worshippers, native huts, +and the white-walled country residences and curtained verandas of +the white exiles. It is absurd to write them down as exiles, for it +is a Mohammedan Paradise to which they have been exiled.</p> + +<p>The exiles themselves will tell you that the reason you think +Zanzibar is a paradise, is because you have your steamer ticket in +your pocket. But that retort shows their lack of imagination, and a +vast ingratitude to those who have preceded them. For the charm of +Zanzibar lies in the fact that while the white men have made it +healthy and clean, have given it good roads, good laws, protection +for the slaves, quick punishment for the slave-dealers, and a firm +government under a benign <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span>and gentle Sultan, they have done all of +this without destroying one flash of its local color, or one throb +of its barbaric life, which is the showy, sunshiny, and sumptuous +life of the Far East. The good things of civilization are there, but +they are unobtrusive, and the evils of civilization appear not at +all, the native does not wear a derby hat with a kimona, as he does +in Japan, nor offer you souvenirs of Zanzibar manufactured in +Birmingham; Reuter's telegrams at the club and occasional steamers +alone connect his white masters with the outer world, and so +infrequent is the visiting stranger that the local phrase-book for +those who wish to converse in the native tongue is compiled chiefly +for the convenience of midshipmen when searching a slave-dhow.</p> + +<a name="img30" id="img30"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 330px;"> +<img src="images/img-30.jpg" width="330" height="450" alt="H.S.H. Hamud bin Muhamad bin Said, the Late Sultan of +Zanzibar." title="H.S.H. Hamud bin Muhamad bin Said, the Late Sultan of +Zanzibar." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">H.S.H. Hamud bin Muhamad bin Said, the Late Sultan of +Zanzibar. </p> + +<p>Zanzibar is an "Arabian Nights" city, a comic-opera capital, a most +difficult city to take seriously. There is not a street, or any +house in any street, that does not suggest in its architecture and +decoration the untrammelled fancy of the scenic artist. You feel +sure that the latticed balconies are canvas, that the white adobe +walls are supported from behind by braces, that the sunshine is a +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>carbon light, that the chorus of boatmen who hail you on landing +will reappear immediately costumed as the Sultan's body-guard, that +the women bearing water-jars on their shoulders will come on in the +next scene as slaves of the harem, and that the national anthem will +prove to be Sousa's Typical Tune of Zanzibar.</p> + +<p>Several hundred years ago the Sultans of Zanzibar grew powerful and +wealthy through exporting slaves and ivory from the mainland. These +were not two separate industries, but one was developed by the other +and was dependent upon it. The procedure was brutally simple. A +slave-trader, having first paid his tribute to the Sultan, crossed +to the mainland, and marching into the interior made his bargain +with one of the local chiefs for so much ivory, and for so many men +to carry it down to the coast. Without some such means of transport +there could have been no bargain, so the chief who was anxious to +sell would select a village which had not paid him the taxes due +him, and bid the trader help himself to what men he found there. +Then would follow a hideous night attack, a massacre of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>women and +children, and the taking prisoners of all able-bodied males. These +men, chained together in long lines, and each bearing a heavy tooth +of ivory upon his shoulder, would be whipped down to the coast. It +was only when they had carried the ivory there, and their work was +finished, that the idea presented itself of selling them as well as +the ivory. Later, these bearers became of equal value with the +ivory, and the raiding of native villages and the capture of men and +women to be sold into slavery developed into a great industry. The +industry continues fitfully to-day, but it is carried on under great +difficulties, and at a risk of heavy punishments. What is called +"domestic slavery" is recognized on the island of Zanzibar, the vast +clove plantations which lie back of the port employing many hundreds +of these domestic slaves. It is not to free these from their slight +bondage that the efforts of those who are trying to suppress the +slave-trade is to-day directed, but to prevent others from being +added to their number. What slave-trading there is at present is by +Arabs and Indians. They convey the slaves in dhows from the mainland +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>to Madagascar, Arabia, or southern Persia, and to the Island of +Pemba, which lies north of Zanzibar, and only fifteen miles from the +mainland. If a slave can be brought this short distance in safety he +can be sold for five hundred dollars; on the mainland he is not +worth more than fifteen dollars. The channels, and the mouths of +rivers, and the little bays opening from the Island of Pemba are +patrolled more or less regularly by British gunboats, and junior +officers in charge of a cutter and a crew of half a dozen men, are +detached from these for a few months at a time on "boat service." It +seems to be an unprofitable pursuit, for one officer told me that +during his month of boat service he had boarded and searched three +hundred dhows, which is an average of ten a day, and found slaves on +only one of them. But as, on this occasion, he rescued four slaves, +and the slavers, moreover, showed fight, and wounded him and two of +his boat's crew, he was more than satisfied.</p> + +<p>The trade in ivory, which has none of these restrictions upon it, +still flourishes, and the cool, dark warerooms of Zanzibar are +stored <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span>high with it. In a corner of one little cellar they showed +us twenty-five thousand dollars worth of these tusks piled up as +carelessly as though they were logs in a wood-shed. One of the most +curious sights in Zanzibar is a line of Zanzibari boys, each +balancing a great tusk on his shoulder, worth from five hundred to +two thousand dollars, and which is unprotected except for a piece of +coarse sacking.</p> + +<a name="img31" id="img31"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-31.jpg" width="500" height="327" alt="A German "Factory" at Tanga, the Store Below, the +Living Apartments Above." title="A German "Factory" at Tanga, the Store Below, the +Living Apartments Above." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">A German "Factory" at Tanga, the Store Below, the +Living Apartments Above. </p> + +<p>The largest exporters of ivory in the world are at Zanzibar, and +though probably few people know it, the firm which carries on this +business belongs to New York City, and has been in the ivory trade +with India and Africa from as far back as the fifties. In their +house at Zanzibar they have entertained every distinguished African +explorer, and the stories its walls have heard of native wars, +pirate dhows, slave-dealers, the English occupation, and terrible +marches through the jungles of the Congo, would make valuable and +picturesque history. The firm has always held a semi-official +position, for the reason that the United States Consul at Zanzibar, +who should speak at least Swahili and Portuguese, is invariably +chosen for the post from a drug-store <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>in Yankton, Dakota, or a +post-office in Canton, Ohio. Consequently, on arriving at Zanzibar +he becomes homesick, and his first official act is to cable his +resignation, and the State Department instructs whoever happens to +be general manager of the ivory house to perform the duties of +acting-consul. So, the ivory house has nearly always held the eagle +of the consulate over its doorway. The manager of the ivory house, +who at the time of our visit was also consul, is Harris Robbins +Childs. Mr. Childs is well known in New York City, is a member of +many clubs there, and speaks at least five languages. He understands +the native tongue of Zanzibar so well that when the Prime Minister +of the Sultan took us to the palace to pay our respects, Childs +talked the language so much better than did the Sultan's own Prime +Minister that there was in consequence much joking and laughing. The +Sultan then was a most dignified, intelligent, and charming old +gentleman. He was popular both with his own people, who loved him +with a religious fervor, and with the English, who unobtrusively +conducted his affairs.</p> + +<p>There have been sultans who have acted <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>less wisely than does Hamud +bin Muhamad bin Said. A few years ago one of these, Said Khaled, +defied the British Empire as represented by several gunboats, and +dared them to fire on his ship of war, a tramp steamer which he had +converted into a royal yacht. The gunboats were anchored about two +hundred yards from the palace, which stands at the water's edge, and +at the time agreed upon, they sank the Sultan's ship of war in the +short space of three minutes, and in a brief bombardment destroyed +the greater part of his palace. The ship of war still rests where +she sank, and her topmasts peer above the water only three hundred +yards distant from the windows of the new palace. They serve as a +constant warning to all future sultans.</p> + +<p>The new palace is of somewhat too modern architecture, and is not +nearly as dignified as are the massive white walls of the native +houses which surround it. But within it is a fairy palace, hung with +silk draperies, tapestries, and hand-painted curtains; the floors +are covered with magnificent rugs from Persia and India, and the +reception-room is <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>crowded with treasures of ebony, ivory, lacquer +work, and gold and silver. There were two thrones made of silver +dragons, with many scales, and studded with jewels. The Sultan did +not seem to mind our openly admiring his treasures, and his +attendants, who stood about him in gorgeous-colored silks heavy with +gold embroideries, were evidently pleased with the deep impression +they made upon the visitors. The Sultan was very gentle and +courteous and human, especially in the pleasure he took over his son +and heir, who then was at school in England, and who, on the death +of his father, succeeded him. He seemed very much gratified when we +suggested that there was no better training-place for a boy than an +English public school; as Americans, he thought our opinion must be +unprejudiced. Before he sent us away, he gave Childs, and each of +us, a photograph of himself, one of which is reproduced in this +book.</p> + +<p>Our next port was the German settlement of Tanga. We arrived there +just as a blood-red sun was setting behind great and gloomy +mountains. The place itself was bathed in <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>damp hot vapors, and +surrounded even to the water's edge by a steaming jungle. It was +more like what we expected Africa to be than was any other place we +had visited, and the proper touch of local color was supplied by a +trader, who gave as his reason for leaving us so early in the +evening that he needed sleep, as on the night before at his camp +three lions had kept him awake until morning.</p> + +<a name="img32" id="img32"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img-32.jpg" width="500" height="323" alt="Soudanese Soldiers Under a German Officer Outside of +Tanga." title="Soudanese Soldiers Under a German Officer Outside of +Tanga." /> +</div> + +<p class="cap">Soudanese Soldiers Under a German Officer Outside of +Tanga. </p> + +<p>The bubonic plague prevented our landing at other ports. We saw them +only through field-glasses from the ship's side, so that there is, +in consequence, much that I cannot write of the East Coast of +Africa. But the trip, which allows one merely to nibble at the +Coast, is worth taking again when the bubonic plague has passed +away. It was certainly worth taking once. If I have failed to make +that apparent, the fault lies with the writer. It is certainly not +the fault of the East Coast, not the fault of the Indian Ocean, that +"sets and smiles, so soft, so bright, so blooming blue," or of the +exiles and "remittance men," or of the engineers who are building +the railroad from Cape Town to Cairo, or of any lack of interest +which the East Coast <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>presents in its problem of trade, of conquest, +and of, among nations, the survival of the fittest.</p> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Congo and Coasts of Africa +by Richard Harding Davis + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA *** + +***** This file should be named 14297-h.htm or 14297-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/1/4/2/9/14297/ + +Produced by Janet Kegg and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed +Proofreading Team + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Congo and Coasts of Africa + +Author: Richard Harding Davis + +Release Date: December 8, 2004 [EBook #14297] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA *** + + + + +Produced by Janet Kegg and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed +Proofreading Team + + + + + + + + + +THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA + +By + +RICHARD HARDING DAVIS, F.R.G.S. + + +AUTHOR OF "SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE," "THE SCARLET CAR," + "WITH BOTH ARMIES IN SOUTH AFRICA," "FARCES," + "THE CUBAN AND PORTO RICAN CAMPAIGNS" + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + FROM PHOTOGRAPHS BY THE AUTHOR + AND OTHERS + + +CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS +NEW YORK +1907 + + + [Illustration (Frontispiece): Mr. Davis and "Wood Boys" of the + Congo.] + + + +TO + +CECIL CLARK DAVIS + +MY FELLOW VOYAGER ALONG +THE COASTS OF AFRICA + + + + + CONTENTS + + + I + THE COASTERS 3 + + II + MY BROTHER'S KEEPER 32 + + III + THE CAPITAL OF THE CONGO 55 + + IV + AMERICANS IN THE CONGO 93 + + V + HUNTING THE HIPPO 118 + + VI + OLD CALABAR 142 + + VII + ALONG THE EAST COAST 176 + + + + ILLUSTRATIONS + + + MR. DAVIS AND "WOOD BOYS" OF THE CONGO _Frontispiece_ + + MRS. DAVIS IN A BORROWED "HAMMOCK," THE LOCAL MEANS + OF TRANSPORT ON THE WEST COAST 10 + + A WHITE BUILDING, THAT BLAZED LIKE THE BASE OF A + WHITEWASHED STOVE AT WHITE HEAT 22 + + THE "MAMMY CHAIR" IS LIKE THOSE SWINGS YOU SEE + IN PUBLIC PLAYGROUNDS 28 + + A VILLAGE ON THE KASAI RIVER 42 + + "TENANTS" OF LEOPOLD, WHO CLAIMS THAT THE CONGO + BELONGS TO HIM, AND THAT THESE NATIVE PEOPLE + ARE THERE ONLY AS HIS TENANTS 52 + + THE FACILITIES FOR LANDING AT BANANA, THE PORT OF + ENTRY TO THE CONGO, ARE LIMITED 56 + + "PRISONERS" OF THE STATE IN CHAINS AT MATADI 60 + + BUSH BOYS IN THE PLAZA AT MATADI SEEKING SHADE 70 + + THE MONUMENT IN STANLEY PARK, ERECTED, NOT TO + STANLEY, BUT TO LEOPOLD 82 + + THE _Deliverance_. THE RIVER RACED OVER THE DECK + TO A DEPTH OF FOUR OR FIVE INCHES. BETWEEN + HER CABIN AND THE WOOD-PILE, WERE STORED FIFTY + HUMAN BEINGS 86 + + THE NATIVE WIFE OF A _Chef de Poste_ 90 + + ENGLISH MISSIONARIES, AND SOME OF THEIR CHARGES 98 + + THE LABORING MAN UPON WHOM THE AMERICAN CONCESSIONAIRES + MUST DEPEND 106 + + MR. DAVIS AND NATIVE "BOY," ON THE KASAI RIVER 128 + + THE HIPPOPOTAMUS THAT DID NOT KNOW HE WAS DEAD 134 + + THE JESUIT BROTHERS AT THE WOMBALI MISSION 138 + + THERE, IN THE SURF, WE FOUND THESE TONS OF MAHOGANY, + POUNDING AGAINST EACH OTHER 152 + + A LOG OF MAHOGANY JAMMED IN THE ANCHOR CHAINS 156 + + THE PALACE OF THE KING OF THE CAMEROONS 160 + + THE HOME OF THE THIRTY QUEENS OF KING MANGO BELL 164 + + THE MOTHER SUPERIOR AND SISTERS OF ST. JOSEPH AND + THEIR CONVERTS AT OLD CALABAR 168 + + THE KROO BOYS SIT, NOT ON THE THWARTS, BUT ON THE + GUNWALES, AS A WOMAN RIDES A SIDE SADDLE 172 + + GOING VISITING IN HER PRIVATE TRAM-CAR AT BEIRA 182 + + ONE-HALF OF THE STREET CLEANING DEPARTMENT OF + MOZAMBIQUE 190 + + CUSTOM HOUSE, ZANZIBAR 194 + + CHAIN-GANGS OF PETTY OFFENDERS OUTSIDE OF ZANZIBAR 198 + + THE IVORY ON THE RIGHT, COVERED ONLY WITH SACKING, + IS READY FOR SHIPMENT TO BOSTON, U.S.A. 202 + + THE LATE SULTAN OF ZANZIBAR IN HIS STATE CARRIAGE 206 + + H.S.H. HAMUD BIN MUHAMAD BIN SAID, THE LATE + SULTAN OF ZANZIBAR 210 + + A GERMAN "FACTORY" AT TANGA, THE STORE BELOW, THE + LIVING APARTMENTS ABOVE 214 + + SOUDANESE SOLDIERS UNDER A GERMAN OFFICER OUTSIDE + OF TANGA 218 + + + + +THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA + + +I + +THE COASTERS + + +No matter how often one sets out, "for to admire, and for to see, +for to behold this world so wide," he never quite gets over being +surprised at the erratic manner in which "civilization" distributes +itself; at the way it ignores one spot upon the earth's surface, and +upon another, several thousand miles away, heaps its blessings and +its tyrannies. Having settled in a place one might suppose the +"influences of civilization" would first be felt by the people +nearest that place. Instead of which, a number of men go forth in a +ship and carry civilization as far away from that spot as the winds +will bear them. + +When a stone falls in a pool each part of each ripple is equally +distant from the spot where the stone fell; but if the stone of +civilization were to have fallen, for instance, into New Orleans, +equally near to that spot we would find the people of New York City +and the naked Indians of Yucatan. Civilization does not radiate, or +diffuse. It leaps; and as to where it will next strike it is as +independent as forked lightning. During hundreds of years it passed +over the continent of Africa to settle only at its northern coast +line and its most southern cape; and, to-day, it has given Cuba all +of its benefits, and has left the equally beautiful island of Hayti, +only fourteen hours away, sunk in fetish worship and brutal +ignorance. + +One of the places it has chosen to ignore is the West Coast of +Africa. We are familiar with the Northern Coast and South Africa. We +know all about Morocco and the picturesque Raisuli, Lord Cromer, and +Shepheard's Hotel. The Kimberley Diamond Mines, the Boer War, +Jameson's Raid, and Cecil Rhodes have made us know South Africa, and +on the East Coast we supply Durban with buggies and farm wagons, +furniture from Grand Rapids, and, although we have nothing against +Durban, breakfast food and canned meats. We know Victoria Falls, +because they have eclipsed our own Niagara Falls, and Zanzibar, +farther up the Coast, is familiar through comic operas and rag-time. +Of itself, the Cape to Cairo Railroad would make the East Coast +known to us. But the West Coast still means that distant shore from +whence the "first families" of Boston, Bristol and New Orleans +exported slaves. Now, for our soap and our salad, the West Coast +supplies palm oil and kernel oil, and for automobile tires, rubber. +But still to it there cling the mystery, the hazard, the cruelty of +those earlier times. It is not of palm oil and rubber one thinks +when he reads on the ship's itinerary, "the Gold Coast, the Ivory +Coast, the Bight of Benin, and Old Calabar." + +One of the strange leaps made by civilization is from Southampton to +Cape Town, and one of its strangest ironies is in its ignoring all +the six thousand miles of coast line that lies between. Nowadays, in +winter time, the English, flying from the damp cold of London, go to +Cape Town as unconcernedly as to the Riviera. They travel in great +seagoing hotels, on which they play cricket, and dress for dinner. +Of the damp, fever-driven coast line past which, in splendid ease, +they are travelling, save for the tall peaks of Teneriffe and Cape +Verde, they know nothing. + +When last Mrs. Davis and I made that voyage from Southampton, the +decks were crowded chiefly with those English whose faces are +familiar at the Savoy and the Ritz, and who, within an hour, had +settled down to seventeen days of uninterrupted bridge, with, before +them, the prospect on landing of the luxury of the Mount Nelson and +the hospitalities of Government House. When, the other day, we again +left Southampton, that former departure came back in strange +contrast. It emphasized that this time we are not accompanying +civilization on one of her flying leaps. Instead, now, we are going +down to the sea in ships with the vortrekkers of civilization, those +who are making the ways straight; who, in a few weeks, will be +leaving us to lose themselves in great forests, who clear the paths +of noisome jungles where the sun seldom penetrates, who sit in +sun-baked "factories," as they call their trading houses, measuring +life by steamer days, who preach the Gospel to the cannibals of the +Congo, whose voices are the voices of those calling in the +wilderness. + +As our tender came alongside the _Bruxellesville_ at Southampton, we +saw at the winch Kroo boys of the Ivory Coast; leaning over the rail +the Soeurs Blanches of the Congo, robed, although the cold was +bitter and the decks black with soot-stained snow, all in white; +missionaries with long beards, a bishop in a purple biretta, and +innumerable Belgian officers shivering in their cloaks and wearing +the blue ribbon and silver star that tells of three years of service +along the Equator. This time our fellow passengers are no +pleasure-seekers, no Cook's tourists sailing south to avoid a +rigorous winter. They have squeezed the last minute out of their +leave, and they are going back to the station, to the factory, to +the mission, to the barracks. They call themselves "Coasters," and +they inhabit a world all to themselves. In square miles, it is a +very big world, but it is one of those places civilization has +skipped. + +Nearly every one of our passengers from Antwerp or Southampton knows +that if he keeps his contract, and does not die, it will be three +years before he again sees his home. So our departure was not +enlivening, and, in the smoking-room, the exiles prepared us for +lonely ports of call, for sickening heat, for swarming multitudes of +blacks. + +In consequence, when we passed Finisterre, Spain, which from New +York seems almost a foreign country, was a near neighbor, a dear +friend. And the Island of Teneriffe was an anticlimax. It was as +though by a trick of the compass we had been sailing southwest and +were entering the friendly harbor of Ponce or Havana. + +Santa Cruz, the port town of Teneriffe, like La Guayra, rises at the +base of great hills. It is a smiling, bright-colored, red-roofed, +typical Spanish town. The hills about it mount in innumerable +terraces planted with fruits and vegetables, and from many of these +houses on the hills, should the owner step hurriedly out of his +front door, he would land upon the roof of his nearest neighbor. +Back of this first chain of hills are broad farming lands and +plateaus from which Barcelona and London are fed with the earliest +and the most tender of potatoes that appear in England at the same +time Bermuda potatoes are being printed in big letters on the bills +of fare along Broadway. Santa Cruz itself supplies passing steamers +with coal, and passengers with lace work and post cards; and to the +English in search of sunshine, with a rival to Madeira. It should be +a successful rival, for it is a charming place, and on the day we +were there the thermometer was at 72 deg., and every one was complaining +of the cruel severity of the winter. In Santa Cruz one who knows +Spanish America has but to shut his eyes and imagine himself back in +Santiago de Cuba or Caracas. There are the same charming plazas, the +yellow churches and towered cathedral, the long iron-barred windows, +glimpses through marble-paved halls of cool patios, the same open +shops one finds in Obispo and O'Reilly Streets, the idle officers +with smart uniforms and swinging swords in front of cafes killing +time and digestion with sweet drinks, and over the garden walls +great bunches of purple and scarlet flowers and sheltering palms. +The show place in Santa Cruz is the church in which are stored the +relics of the sea-fight in which, as a young man, Nelson lost his +arm and England also lost two battleflags. As she is not often +careless in that respect, it is a surprise to find, in this tiny +tucked-away little island, what you will not see in any of the show +places of the world. They tell in Santa Cruz that one night an +English middy, single-handed, recaptured the captured flags and +carried them triumphantly to his battleship. He expected at the +least a K.C.B., and when the flags, with a squad of British marines +as a guard of honor, were solemnly replaced in the church, and the +middy himself was sent upon a tour of apology to the bishop, the +governor, the commandant of the fortress, the alcalde, the collector +of customs, and the captain of the port, he declared that monarchies +were ungrateful. The other objects of interest in Teneriffe are +camels, which in the interior of the island are common beasts of +burden, and which appearing suddenly around a turn would frighten +any automobile; and the fact that in Teneriffe the fashion in +women's hats never changes. They are very funny, flat straw hats; +like children's sailor hats. They need only "_U.S.S. Iowa_" on the +band to be quite familiar. Their secret is that they are built to +support baskets and buckets of water, and that concealed in each is +a heavy pad. + + [Illustration: Mrs. Davis in a Borrowed "Hammock," the Local Means + of Transport on the West Coast.] + +After Teneriffe the destination of every one on board is as +irrevocably fixed as though the ship were a government transport. We +are all going to the West Coast or to the Congo. Should you wish to +continue on to Cape Town along the South Coast, as they call the +vast territory from Lagos to Cape Town, although there is an +irregular, a very irregular, service to the Cape, you could as +quickly reach it by going on to the Congo, returning all the way to +Southampton, and again starting on the direct line south. + +It is as though a line of steamers running down our coast to Florida +would not continue on along the South Coast to New Orleans and +Galveston, and as though no line of steamers came from New Orleans +and Galveston to meet the steamers of the East Coast. + +In consequence, the West Coast of Africa, cut off by lack of +communication from the south, divorced from the north by the Desert +of Sahara, lies in the steaming heat of the Equator to-day as it +did a thousand years ago, in inaccessible, inhospitable isolation. + +Two elements have helped to preserve this isolation: the fever that +rises from its swamps and lagoons, and the surf that thunders upon +the shore. In considering the stunted development of the West Coast, +these two elements must be kept in mind--the sickness that strikes +at sunset and by sunrise leaves the victim dead, and the monster +waves that rush booming like cannon at the beach, churning the sandy +bottom beneath, and hurling aside the great canoes as a man tosses a +cigarette. The clerk who signs the three-year contract to work on +the West Coast enlists against a greater chance of death than the +soldier who enlists to fight only bullets; and every box, puncheon, +or barrel that the trader sends in a canoe through the surf is +insured against its never reaching, as the case may be, the shore or +the ship's side. + +The surf and the fever are the Minotaurs of the West Coast, and in +the year there is not a day passes that they do not claim and +receive their tribute in merchandise and human life. Said an old +Coaster to me, pointing at the harbor of Grand Bassam: "I've seen +just as much cargo lost overboard in that surf as I've seen shipped +to Europe." One constantly wonders how the Coasters find it good +enough. How, since 1550, when the Portuguese began trading, it has +been possible to find men willing to fill the places of those who +died. But, in spite of the early massacres by the natives, in spite +of attacks by wild beasts, in spite of pirate raids, of desolating +plagues and epidemics, of wars with other white men, of damp heat +and sudden sickness, there were men who patiently rebuilt the forts +and factories, fought the surf with great breakwaters, cleared +breathing spaces in the jungle, and with the aid of quinine for +themselves, and bad gin for the natives, have held their own. Except +for the trade goods it never would be held. It is a country where +the pay is cruelly inadequate, where but few horses, sheep, or +cattle can exist, where the natives are unbelievably lazy and +insolent, and where, while there is no society of congenial spirits, +there is a superabundance of animal and insect pests. Still, so +great are gold, ivory, and rubber, and so many are the men who will +take big chances for little pay, that every foot of the West Coast +is preempted. As the ship rolls along, for hours from the rail you +see miles and miles of steaming yellow sand and misty swamp where as +yet no white man has set his foot. But in the real estate office of +Europe some Power claims the right to "protect" that swamp; some +treaty is filed as a title-deed. + +As the Powers finally arranged it, the map of the West Coast is like +a mosaic, like the edge of a badly constructed patchwork quilt. In +trading along the West Coast a man can find use for five European +languages, and he can use a new one at each port of call. + +To the north, the West Coast begins with Cape Verde, which is +Spanish. It is followed by Senegal, which is French; but into +Senegal is tucked "a thin red line" of British territory called +Gambia. Senegal closes in again around Gambia, and is at once +blocked to the south by the three-cornered patch which belongs to +Portugal. This is followed by French Guinea down to another British +red spot, Sierra Leone, which meets Liberia, the republic of negro +emigrants from the United States. South of Liberia is the French +Ivory Coast, then the English Gold Coast; Togo, which is German; +Dahomey, which is French; Lagos and Southern Nigeria, which again +are English; Fernando Po, which is Spanish, and the German +Cameroons. + +The coast line of these protectorates and colonies gives no idea of +the extent of their hinterland, which spreads back into the Sahara, +the Niger basin, and the Soudan. Sierra Leone, one of the smallest +of them, is as large as Maine; Liberia, where the emigrants still +keep up the tradition of the United States by talking like end men, +is as large as the State of New York; two other colonies, Senegal +and Nigeria, together are 135,000 square miles larger than the +combined square miles of all of our Atlantic States from Maine to +Florida and including both. To partition finally among the Powers +this strip of death and disease, of uncountable wealth, of unnamed +horrors and cruelties, has taken many hundreds of years, has brought +to the black man every misery that can be inflicted upon a human +being, and to thousands of white men, death and degradation, or +great wealth. + +The raids made upon the West Coast to obtain slaves began in the +fifteenth century with the discovery of the West Indies, and it was +to spare the natives of these islands, who were unused and unfitted +for manual labor and who in consequence were cruelly treated by the +Spaniards, that Las Casas, the Bishop of Chiapa, first imported +slaves from West Africa. He lived to see them suffer so much more +terribly than had the Indians who first obtained his sympathy, that +even to his eightieth year he pleaded with the Pope and the King of +Spain to undo the wrong he had begun. But the tide had set west, and +Las Casas might as well have tried to stop the Trades. In 1800 +Wilberforce stated in the House of Commons that at that time British +vessels were carrying each year to the Indies and the American +colonies 38,000 slaves, and when he spoke the traffic had been going +on for two hundred and fifty years. After the Treaty of Utrecht, +Queen Anne congratulated her Peers on the terms of the treaty which +gave to England "the fortress of Gibraltar, the Island of Minorca, +and the monopoly in the slave trade for thirty years," or, as it was +called, the _asiento_ (contract). This was considered so good an +investment that Philip V of Spain took up one-quarter of the common +stock, and good Queen Anne reserved another quarter, which later she +divided among her ladies. But for a time she and her cousin of Spain +were the two largest slave merchants in the world. The point of view +of those then engaged in the slave trade is very interesting. When +Queen Elizabeth sent Admiral Hawkins slave-hunting, she presented +him with a ship, named, with startling lack of moral perception, +after the Man of Sorrows. In a book on the slave trade I picked up +at Sierra Leone there is the diary of an officer who accompanied +Hawkins. "After," he writes, "going every day on shore to take the +inhabitants by burning and despoiling of their towns," the ship was +becalmed. "But," he adds gratefully, "the Almighty God, who never +suffereth his elect to perish, sent us the breeze." + +The slave book shows that as late as 1780 others of the "elect" of +our own South were publishing advertisements like this, which is one +of the shortest and mildest. It is from a Virginia newspaper: "The +said fellow is outlawed, and I will give ten pounds reward for his +head severed from his body, or forty shillings if brought alive." + +At about this same time an English captain threw overboard, chained +together, one hundred and thirty sick slaves. He claimed that had he +not done so the ship's company would have also sickened and died, +and the ship would have been lost, and that, therefore, the +insurance companies should pay for the slaves. The jury agreed with +him, and the Solicitor-General said: "What is all this declamation +about human beings! This is a case of chattels or goods. It is +really so--it is the case of throwing over goods. For the +purpose--the purpose of the insurance, they are goods and property; +whether right or wrong, we have nothing to do with it." In 1807 +England declared the slave trade illegal. A year later the United +States followed suit, but although on the seas her frigates chased +the slavers, on shore a part of our people continued to hold slaves, +until the Civil War rescued both them and the slaves. + +As early as 1718 Raynal and Diderot estimated that up to that time +there had been exported from Africa to the North and South Americas +nine million slaves. Our own historian, Bancroft, calculated that in +the eighteenth century the English alone imported to the Americas +three million slaves, while another 2,500,000 purchased or kidnapped +on the West Coast were lost in the surf, or on the voyage thrown +into the sea. For that number Bancroft places the gross returns as +not far from four hundred millions of dollars. + +All this is history, and to the reader familiar, but I do not +apologize for reviewing it here, as without the background of the +slave trade, the West Coast, as it is to-day, is difficult to +understand. As we have seen, to kings, to chartered "Merchant +Adventurers," to the cotton planters of the West Indies and of our +South, and to the men of the North who traded in black ivory, the +West Coast gave vast fortunes. The price was the lives of millions +of slaves. And to-day it almost seems as though the sins of the +fathers were being visited upon the children; as though the juju of +the African, under the spell of which his enemies languish and die, +has been cast upon the white man. We have to look only at home. In +the millions of dead, and in the misery of the Civil War, and +to-day in race hatred, in race riots, in monstrous crimes and as +monstrous lynchings, we seem to see the fetish of the West Coast, +the curse, falling upon the children to the third and fourth +generation of the million slaves that were thrown, shackled, into +the sea. + +The first mention in history of Sierra Leone is when in 480 B.C., +Hanno, the Carthaginian, anchored at night in its harbor, and then +owing to "fires in the forests, the beating of drums, and strange +cries that issued from the bushes," before daylight hastened away. +We now skip nineteen hundred years. This is something of a gap, but +except for the sketchy description given us by Hanno of the place, +and his one gaudy night there, Sierra Leone until the fifteenth +century utterly disappears from the knowledge of man. Happy is the +country without a history! + +Nineteen hundred years having now supposed to elapse, the second act +begins with De Cintra, who came in search of slaves, and instead +gave the place its name. Because of the roaring of the wind around +the peak that rises over the harbor he called it the Lion Mountain. + +After the fifteenth century, in a succession of failures, five +different companies of "Royal Adventurers" were chartered to trade +with her people, and, when convenient, to kidnap them; pirates in +turn kidnapped the British governor, the French and Dutch were +always at war with the settlement, and native raids, epidemics, and +fevers were continuous. The history of Sierra Leone is the history +of every other colony along the West Coast, with the difference that +it became a colony by purchase, and was not, as were the others, a +trading station gradually converted into a colony. During the war in +America, Great Britain offered freedom to all slaves that would +fight for her, and, after the war, these freed slaves were conveyed +on ships of war to London, where they were soon destitute. They +appealed to the great friend of the slave in those days, Granville +Sharp, and he with others shipped them to Sierra Leone, to +establish, with the aid of some white emigrants, an independent +colony, which was to be a refuge and sanctuary for others like +themselves. Liberia, which was the gift of philanthropists of +Baltimore to American freed slaves, was, no doubt, inspired by this +earlier effort. The colony became a refuge for slaves from every +part of the Coast, the West Indies and Nova Scotia, and to-day in +that one colony there are spoken sixty different coast dialects and +those of the hinterland. + +Sierra Leone, as originally purchased in 1786, consisted of twenty +square miles, for which among other articles of equal value King +Naimbanna received a "crimson satin embroidered waistcoat, one +puncheon of rum, ten pounds of beads, two cheeses, one box of +smoking pipes, a mock diamond ring, and a tierce of pork." + +What first impressed me about Sierra Leone was the heat. It does not +permit one to give his attention wholly to anything else. I always +have maintained that the hottest place on earth is New York, and I +have been in other places with more than a local reputation for +heat; some along the Equator, Lourenco Marquez, which is only +prevented from being an earthen oven because it is a swamp; the Red +Sea, with a following breeze, and from both shores the baked heat of +the desert, and Nagasaki, on a rainy day in midsummer. + +But New York in August radiating stored-up heat from iron-framed +buildings, with the foul, dead air shut in by the skyscrapers, with +a humidity that makes you think you are breathing through a +steam-heated sponge, is as near the lower regions as I hope any of +us will go. And yet Sierra Leone is no mean competitor. + +We climbed the moss-covered steps to the quay to face a great white +building that blazed like the base of a whitewashed stove at white +heat. Before it were some rusty cannon and a canoe cut out of a +single tree, and, seated upon it selling fruit and sun-dried fish, +some native women, naked to the waist, their bodies streaming with +palm oil and sweat. At the same moment something struck me a blow on +the top of the head, at the base of the spine and between the +shoulder blades, and the ebony ladies and the white "factory" were +burnt up in a scroll of flame. + + [Illustration: A White Building, that Blazed Like the Base of a + Whitewashed Stove at White Heat.] + +I heard myself in a far-away voice asking where one could buy a sun +helmet and a white umbrella, and until I was under their protection, +Sierra Leone interested me no more. + +One sees more different kinds of black people in Sierra Leone than +in any other port along the Coast; Senegalese and Senegambians, +Kroo boys, Liberians, naked bush boys bearing great burdens from the +forests, domestic slaves in fez and colored linen livery, carrying +hammocks swung from under a canopy, the local electric hansom, +soldiers of the W.A.F.F., the West African Frontier Force, in Zouave +uniform of scarlet and khaki, with bare legs; Arabs from as far in +the interior as Timbuctu, yellow in face and in long silken robes; +big fat "mammies" in well-washed linen like the washerwomen of +Jamaica, each balancing on her head her tightly rolled umbrella, and +in the gardens slim young girls, with only a strip of blue and white +linen from the waist to the knees, lithe, erect, with glistening +teeth and eyes, and their sisters, after two years in the mission +schools, demurely and correctly dressed like British school marms. +Sierra Leone has all the hall marks of the crown colony of the +tropics; good wharfs, clean streets, innumerable churches, public +schools operated by the government as well as many others run by +American and English missions, a club where the white "mammies," as +all women are called, and the white officers--for Sierra Leone is a +coaling station on the Cape route to India, and is garrisoned +accordingly--play croquet, and bowl into a net. + +When the officers are not bowling they are tramping into the +hinterland after tribes on the warpath from Liberia, and coming +back, perhaps wounded or racked with fever, or perhaps they do not +come back. On the day we landed they had just buried one of the +officers. On Saturday afternoon he had been playing tennis, during +the night the fever claimed him, and Sunday night he was dead. + +That night as we pulled out to the steamer there came toward us in +black silhouette against the sun, setting blood-red into the lagoon, +two great canoes. They were coming from up the river piled high with +fruit and bark, with the women and children lying huddled in the +high bow and stern, while amidships the twelve men at the oars +strained and struggled until we saw every muscle rise under the +black skin. + +As their stroke slackened, the man in the bow with the tom-tom beat +more savagely upon it, and shouted to them in shrill sharp cries. +Their eyes shone, their teeth clenched, the sweat streamed from +their naked bodies. They might have been slaves chained to the +thwarts of a trireme. + +Just ahead of them lay at anchor the only other ship beside our own +in port, a two-masted schooner, the _Gladys E. Wilden_, out of +Boston. Her captain leaned upon the rail smoking his cigar, his +shirt-sleeves held up with pink elastics, on the back of his head a +derby hat. As the rowers passed under his bows he looked critically +at the streaming black bodies and spat meditatively into the water. +His own father could have had them between decks as cargo. Now for +the petroleum and lumber he brings from Massachusetts to Sierra +Leone he returns in ballast. + +Because her lines were so home-like and her captain came from Cape +Cod, we wanted to call on the _Gladys E. Wilden_, but our own +captain had different views, and the two ships passed in the night, +and the man from Boston never will know that two folks from home +were burning signals to him. + +Because our next port of call, Grand Bassam, is the chief port of +the French Ivory Coast, which is 125,000 square miles in extent, we +expected quite a flourishing seaport. Instead, Grand Bassam was a +bank of yellow sand, a dozen bungalows in a line, a few wind-blown +cocoanut palms, an iron pier, and a French flag. Beyond the cocoanut +palms we could see a great lagoon, and each minute a wave leaped +roaring upon the yellow sand-bank and tried to hurl itself across +it, eating up the bungalows on its way, into the quiet waters of the +lake. Each time we were sure it would succeed, but the yellow bank +stood like rock, and, beaten back, the wave would rise in white +spray to the height of a three-story house, hang glistening in the +sun and then, with the crash of a falling wall, tumble at the feet +of the bungalows. + +We stopped at Grand Bassam to put ashore a young English girl who +had come out to join her husband. His factory is a two days' launch +ride up the lagoon, and the only other white woman near it does not +speak English. Her husband had wished her, for her health's sake, to +stay in his home near London, but her first baby had just died, and +against his unselfish wishes, and the advice of his partner, she had +at once set out to join him. She was a very pretty, sad, unsmiling +young wife, and she spoke only to ask her husband's partner +questions about the new home. His answers, while they did not seem +to daunt her, made every one else at the table wish she had remained +safely in her London suburb. + +Through our glasses we all watched her husband lowered from the iron +pier into a canoe and come riding the great waves to meet her. + +The Kroo boys flashed their trident-shaped paddles and sang and +shouted wildly, but he sat with his sun helmet pulled over his eyes +staring down into the bottom of the boat; while at his elbow, +another sun helmet told him yes, that now he could make out the +partner, and that, judging by the photograph, that must be She in +white under the bridge. + +The husband and the young wife were swung together over the side to +the lifting waves in a two-seated "mammy chair," like one of those +_vis-a-vis_ swings you see in public playgrounds and picnic groves, +and they carried with them, as a gift from Captain Burton, a fast +melting lump of ice, the last piece of fresh meat they will taste in +many a day, and the blessings of all the ship's company. And then, +with inhospitable haste there was a rattle of anchor chains, a quick +jangle of bells from the bridge to the engine-room, and the +_Bruxellesville_ swept out to sea, leaving the girl from the London +suburb to find her way into the heart of Africa. Next morning we +anchored in a dripping fog off Sekondi on the Gold Coast, to allow +an English doctor to find his way to a fever camp. For nine years he +had been a Coaster, and he had just gone home to fit himself, by a +winter's vacation in London, for more work along the Gold Coast. It +is said of him that he has "never lost a life." On arriving in +London he received a cable telling him three doctors had died, the +miners along the railroad to Ashanti were rotten with fever, and +that he was needed. + + [Illustration: The "Mammy Chair" is Like Those Swings You See in + Public Playgrounds.] + +So he and his wife, as cheery and bright as though she were setting +forth on her honeymoon, were going back to take up the white man's +burden. We swung them over the side as we had the other two, and +that night in the smoking-room the Coasters drank "Luck to him," +which, in the vernacular of this unhealthy shore, means "Life to +him," and to the plucky, jolly woman who was going back to fight +death with the man who had never lost a life. + +As the ship was getting under way, a young man in "whites" and a sun +helmet, an agent of a trading company, went down the sea ladder by +which I was leaning. He was smart, alert; his sleeves, rolled +recklessly to his shoulders, showed sinewy, sunburnt arms; his +helmet, I noted, was a military one. Perhaps I looked as I felt; +that it was a pity to see so good a man go back to such a land, for +he looked up at me from the swinging ladder and smiled understanding +as though we had been old acquaintances. + +"You going far?" he asked. He spoke in the soft, detached voice of +the public-school Englishman. + +"To the Congo," I answered. + +He stood swaying with the ship, looking as though there were +something he wished to say, and then laughed, and added gravely, +giving me the greeting of the Coast: "Luck to you." + +"Luck to YOU," I said. + +That is the worst of these gaddings about, these meetings with men +you wish you could know, who pass like a face in the crowded street, +who hold out a hand, or give the password of the brotherhood, and +then drop down the sea ladder and out of your life forever. + + + + +II + +MY BROTHER'S KEEPER + + +To me, the fact of greatest interest about the Congo is that it is +owned, and the twenty millions of people who inhabit it are owned by +one man. The land and its people are his private property. I am not +trying to say that he governs the Congo. He does govern it, but that +in itself would not be of interest. His claim is that he owns it. +Though backed by all the mailed fists in the German Empire, and all +the _Dreadnoughts_ of the seas, no other modern monarch would make +such a claim. It does not sound like anything we have heard since +the days and the ways of Pharaoh. And the most remarkable feature of +it is, that the man who makes this claim is the man who was placed +over the Congo as a guardian, to keep it open to the trade of the +world, to suppress slavery. That, in the Congo, he has killed trade +and made the products of the land his own, that of the natives he +did not kill he has made slaves, is what to-day gives the Congo its +chief interest. It is well to emphasize how this one man stole a +march on fourteen Powers, including the United States, and stole +also an empire of one million square miles. + +Twenty-five years ago all of Africa was divided into many parts. The +part which still remained to be distributed among the Powers was +that which was watered by the Congo River and its tributaries. + +Along the north bank of the Congo River ran the French Congo; the +Portuguese owned the lands to the south, and on the east it was shut +in by protectorates and colonies of Germany and England. It was, and +is, a territory as large, were Spain and Russia omitted, as Europe. +Were a map of the Congo laid upon a map of Europe, with the mouth of +the Congo River where France and Spain meet at Biarritz, the +boundaries of the Congo would reach south to the heel of Italy, to +Greece, to Smyrna; east to Constantinople and Odessa; northeast to +St. Petersburg and Finland, and northwest to the extreme limits of +Scotland. Distances in this country are so enormous, the means of +progress so primitive, that many of the Belgian officers with whom I +came south and who already had travelled nineteen days from Antwerp, +had still, before they reached their posts, to steam, paddle, and +walk for three months. + +In 1844 to dispose amicably of this great territory, which was much +desired by several of the Powers, a conference was held at Berlin. +There it was decided to make of the Congo Basin an Independent +State, a "free-for-all" country, where every flag could trade with +equal right, and with no special tariff or restriction. + +The General Act of this conference agreed: "The trade of ALL nations +shall enjoy complete freedom." "No Power which exercises or shall +exercise Sovereign rights in the above-mentioned regions shall be +allowed to _grant therein a monopoly or favor of any kind in matters +of trade_." "ALL the Powers exercising Sovereign rights or influence +in the afore-said territories bind themselves to watch over the +preservation of the native tribes, and to care for the improvement +of _the condition of their moral and material welfare_, and _to +help in suppressing slavery_." The italics are mine. These +quotations from the act are still binding upon the fourteen Powers, +including the United States. + +For several years previous to the Conference of Berlin, Leopold of +Belgium, as a private individual, had shown much interest in the +development of the Congo. The opening up of that territory was +apparently his hobby. Out of his own pocket he paid for expeditions +into the Congo Basin, employed German and English explorers, and +protested against the then existing iniquities of the Arabs, who for +ivory and slaves raided the Upper Congo. Finally, assisted by many +geographical societies, he founded the International Association, to +promote "civilization and trade" in Central Africa; and enlisted +Henry M. Stanley in this service. + +That, in the early years, Leopold's interest in the Congo was +unselfish may or may not be granted, but, knowing him, as we now +know him, as one of the shrewdest and, of speculators, the most +unscrupulous, at the time of the Berlin Conference, his self-seeking +may safely be accepted. Quietly, unostentatiously, he presented +himself to its individual members as a candidate for the post of +administrator of this new territory. + +On the face of it he seemed an admirable choice. He was a sovereign +of a kingdom too unimportant to be feared; of the newly created +State he undoubtedly possessed an intimate knowledge. He promised to +give to the Dutch, English, and Portuguese traders, already for many +years established on the Congo, his heartiest aid, and, for those +traders still to come, to maintain the "open door." His professions +of a desire to help the natives were profuse. He became the +unanimous choice of the conference. + +Later he announced to the Powers signing the act, that from Belgium +he had received the right to assume the title of King of the +Independent State of the Congo. The Powers recognized his new title. + +The fact that Leopold, King of Belgium, was king also of the Etat +Independant du Congo confused many into thinking that the Free State +was a colony, or under the protection, of Belgium. As we have seen, +it is not. A Belgian may serve in the army of the Free State, or in +a civil capacity, as may a man of any nation, but, although with few +exceptions only Belgians are employed in the Free State, and +although to help the King in the Congo, the Belgian Government has +loaned him great sums of money, politically and constitutionally the +two governments are as independent of each other as France and +Spain. + +And so, in 1885, Leopold, by the grace of fourteen governments, was +appointed their steward over a great estate in which each of the +governments still holds an equal right; a trustee and keeper over +twenty millions of "black brothers" whose "moral and material +welfare" each government had promised to protect. + +There is only one thing more remarkable than the fact that Leopold +was able to turn this public market into a private park, and that +is, that he has been permitted to do so. It is true he is a man of +wonderful ability. For his own ends he is a magnificent organizer. +But in the fourteen governments that created him there have been, +and to-day there are, men, if less unscrupulous, of quite as great +ability; statesmen, jealous and quick to guard the rights of the +people they represent, people who since the twelfth century have +been traders, who since 1808 have declared slavery abolished. + +And yet, for twenty-five years these statesmen have watched Leopold +disobey every provision in the act of the conference. Were they to +visit the Congo, they could see for themselves the jungle creeping +in and burying their trading posts, their great factories turned +into barracks. They know that the blacks they mutually agreed to +protect have been reduced to slavery worse than that they suffered +from the Arabs, that hundreds of thousands of them have fled from +the Congo, and that those that remain have been mutilated, maimed, +or, what was more merciful, murdered. And yet the fourteen +governments, including the United States, have done nothing. + +Some tell you they do not interfere because they are jealous one of +the other; others say that it is because they believe the Congo will +soon be taken over by Belgium, and with Belgium in control, they +argue, they would be dealing with a responsible government, instead +of with a pirate. But so long as Leopold is King of Belgium one +doubts if Belgians in the Congo would rise above the level of their +King. The English, when asked why they do not assert their rights, +granted not only to them, but to thirteen other governments, reply +that if they did they would be accused of "ulterior motives." What +ulterior motives? If you pursue a pickpocket and recover your watch +from him, are your motives in doing so open to suspicion? + +Personally, although this is looking some way ahead, I would like to +see the English take over and administrate the Congo. Wherever I +visit a colony governed by Englishmen I find under their +administration, in spite of opium in China and gin on the West +Coast, that three people are benefited: the Englishman, the native, +and the foreign trader from any other part of the world. Of the +colonies of what other country can one say the same? + +As a rule our present governments are not loath to protect their +rights. But toward asserting them in the Congo they have been moved +neither by the protests of traders, chambers of commerce, +missionaries, the public press, nor by the cry of the black man to +"let my people go." By only those in high places can it be +explained. We will leave it as a curious fact, and return to the +"Unjust Steward." + +His first act was to wage wars upon the Arabs. From the Soudan and +from the East Coast they were raiding the Congo for slaves and +ivory, and he drove them from it. By these wars he accomplished two +things. As the defender of the slave, he gained much public credit, +and he kept the ivory. But war is expensive, and soon he pointed out +to the Powers that to ask him out of his own pocket to maintain +armies in the field and to administer a great estate was unfair. He +humbly sought their permission to levy a few taxes. It seemed a +reasonable request. To clear roads, to keep boats upon the great +rivers, to mark it with buoys, to maintain wood stations for the +steamers, to improve the "moral and material welfare of the +natives," would cost money, and to allow Leopold to bring about +these improvements, which would be for the good of all, he was +permitted to levy the few taxes. That was twenty years ago; to-day I +saw none of these improvements, and the taxes have increased. + +From the first they were so heavy that the great trade houses, which +for one hundred years in peace and mutual goodwill bartered with the +natives, found themselves ruined. It was not alone the export taxes, +lighterage dues, port dues, and personal taxes that drove them out +of the Congo; it was the King appearing against them as a rival +trader, the man appointed to maintain the "open door." And a trader +with methods they could not or would not imitate. Leopold, or the +"State," saw for the existence of the Congo only two reasons: Rubber +and Ivory. And the collecting of this rubber and ivory was, as he +saw it, the sole duty of the State and its officers. When he threw +over the part of trustee and became the Arab raider he could not +waste his time, which, he had good reason to fear, might be short, +upon products that, if fostered, would be of value only in later +years. Still less time had he to give to improvements that cost +money and that would be of benefit to his successors. He wanted only +rubber; he wanted it at once, and he cared not at all how he +obtained it. So he spun, and still spins, the greatest of all +"get-rich-quick" schemes; one of gigantic proportions, full of +tragic, monstrous, nauseous details. + +The only possible way to obtain rubber is through the native; as +yet, in teeming forests, the white man can not work and live. Of +even Chinese coolies imported here to build a railroad ninety per +cent. died. So, with a stroke of the pen, Leopold declared all the +rubber in the country the property of the "State," and then, to make +sure that the natives would work it, ordered that taxes be paid in +rubber. If, once a month (in order to keep the natives steadily at +work the taxes were ordered to be paid each month instead of once a +year), each village did not bring in so many baskets of rubber the +King's cannibal soldiers raided it, carried off the women as +hostages, and made prisoners of the men, or killed and ate them. For +every kilo of rubber brought in in excess of the quota the King's +agent, who received the collected rubber and forwarded it down the +river, was paid a commission. Or was "paid by results." Another +bonus was given him based on the price at which he obtained the +rubber. If he paid the native only six cents for every two pounds, +he received a bonus of three cents, the cost to the State being but +nine cents per kilo, but, if he paid the natives twelve cents for +every two pounds, he received as a bonus less than one cent. In a +word, the more rubber the agent collected the more he personally +benefited, and if he obtained it "cheaply" or for nothing--that is, +by taking hostages, making prisoners, by the whip of hippopotamus +hide, by torture--so much greater his fortune, so much richer +Leopold. + + [Illustration: A Village on the Kasai River.] + +Few schemes devised have been more cynical, more devilish, more +cunningly designed to incite a man to cruelty and abuse. To +dishonesty it was an invitation and a reward. It was this system of +"payment by results," evolved by Leopold sooner than allow his +agents a fixed and sufficient wage, that led to the atrocities. + +One result of this system was that in seven years the natives +condemned to slavery in the rubber forests brought in rubber to the +amount of fifty-five millions of dollars. But its chief results were +the destruction of entire villages, the flight from their homes in +the Congo of hundreds of thousands of natives, and for those that +remained misery, death, the most brutal tortures and degradations, +unprintable, unthinkable. + +I am not going to enter into the question of the atrocities. In the +Congo the tip has been given out from those higher up at Brussels to +"close up" the atrocities; and for the present the evil places in +the Tenderloin and along the Broadway of the Congo are tightly shut. +But at those lonely posts, distant a month to three months' march +from the capital, the cruelties still continue. I did not see them. +Neither, last year, did a great many people in the United States see +the massacre of blacks in Atlanta. But they have reason to believe +it occurred. And after one has talked with the men and women who +have seen the atrocities, has seen in the official reports that +those accused of the atrocities do not deny having committed them, +but point out that they were merely obeying orders, and after one +has seen that even at the capital of Boma all the conditions of +slavery exist, one is assured that in the jungle, away from the +sight of men, all things are possible. Merchants, missionaries, and +officials even in Leopold's service told me that if one could spare +a year and a half, or a year, to the work in the hinterland he would +be an eye-witness of as cruel treatment of the natives as any that +has gone before, and if I can trust myself to weigh testimony and +can believe my eyes and ears I have reason to know that what they +say is true. I am convinced that to-day a man, who feels that a year +and a half is little enough to give to the aid of twenty millions of +human beings, can accomplish in the Congo as great and good work as +that of the Abolitionists. + +Three years ago atrocities here were open and above-board. For +instance. In the opinion of the State the soldiers, in killing game +for food, wasted the State cartridges, and in consequence the +soldiers, to show their officers that they did not expend the +cartridges extravagantly on antelope and wild boar, for each empty +cartridge brought in a human hand, the hand of a man, woman, or +child. These hands, drying in the sun, could be seen at the posts +along the river. They are no longer in evidence. Neither is the +flower-bed of Lieutenant Dom, which was bordered with human skulls. +A quaint conceit. + +The man to blame for the atrocities, for each separate atrocity, is +Leopold. Had he shaken his head they would have ceased. When the hue +and cry in Europe grew too hot for him and he held up his hand they +did cease. At least along the main waterways. Years before he could +have stopped them. But these were the seven fallow years, when +millions of tons of red rubber were being dumped upon the wharf at +Antwerp; little, roughly rolled red balls, like pellets of +coagulated blood, which had cost their weight in blood, which would +pay Leopold their weight in gold. + +He can not plead ignorance. Of all that goes on in his big +plantation no man has a better knowledge. Without their personal +honesty, he follows every detail of the "business" of his rubber +farm with the same diligence that made rich men of George Boldt and +Marshall Field. Leopold's knowledge is gained through many spies, by +voluminous reports, by following up the expenditure of each centime, +of each arm's-length of blue cloth. Of every Belgian employed on +his farm, and ninety-five per cent. are Belgians, he holds the +_dossier_; he knows how many kilos a month the agent whips out of +his villages, how many bottles of absinthe he smuggles from the +French side, whether he lives with one black woman or five, why his +white wife in Belgium left him, why he left Belgium, why he dare not +return. The agent knows that Leopold, King of the Belgians, knows, +and that he has shared that knowledge with the agent's employer, the +man who by bribes of rich bonuses incites him to crime, the man who +could throw him into a Belgian jail, Leopold, King of the Congo. + +The agent decides for him it is best to please both Leopolds, and +Leopold makes no secret of what best pleases him. For not only is he +responsible for the atrocities, in that he does not try to suppress +them, but he is doubly guilty in that he has encouraged them. This +he has done with cynical, callous publicity, without effort at +concealment, without shame. Men who, in obtaining rubber, committed +unspeakable crimes, the memory of which makes other men +uncomfortable in their presence, Leopold rewarded with rich +bonuses, pensions, higher office, gilt badges of shame, and rapid +advancement. To those whom even his own judges sentenced to many +years' imprisonment he promptly granted the royal pardon, promoted, +and sent back to work in the vineyard. + +"That is the sort of man for _me_," his action seemed to say. "See +how I value that good and faithful servant. That man collected much +rubber. You observe I do not ask how he got it. I will not ask you. +All you need do is to collect rubber. Use our improved methods. Gum +copal rubbed in the kinky hair of the chief and then set on fire +burns, so my agents tell me, like vitriol. For collecting rubber the +chief is no longer valuable, but to his successor it is an +object-lesson. Let me recommend also the _chicotte_, the torture +tower, the 'hostage' house, and the crucifix. Many other stimulants +to labor will no doubt suggest themselves to you and to your +cannibal 'sentries.' Help to make me rich, and don't fear the +'State.' '_L'Etat, c'est moi!_' Go as far as you like!" + +I said the degradations and tortures practised by the men "working +on commission" for Leopold are unprintable, but they have been +printed, and those who wish to read a calmly compiled, careful, and +correct record of their deeds will find it in the "Red Rubber" of +Mr. E.R. Morel. An even better book by the same authority, on the +whole history of the State, is his "King Leopold's Rule in the +Congo." Mr. Morel has many enemies. So, early in the nineteenth +century, had the English Abolitionists, Wilberforce and Granville +Sharp. After they were dead they were buried in the Abbey, and their +portraits were placed in the National Gallery. People who wish to +assist in freeing twenty millions of human beings should to-day +support Mr. Morel. It will be of more service to the blacks than, +after he is dead, burying him in Westminster Abbey. + +Mr. Morel, the American and English missionaries, and the English +Consul, Roger Casement, and other men, in Belgium, have made a +magnificent fight against Leopold; but the Powers to whom they have +appealed have been silent. Taking courage of this silence, Leopold +has divided the Congo into several great territories in which the +sole right to work rubber is conceded to certain persons. To those +who protested that no one in the Congo "Free" State but the King +could trade in rubber, Leopold, as an answer, pointed with pride at +the preserves of these foreigners. And he may well point at them +with pride, for in some of those companies he owns a third, and in +most of them he holds a half, or a controlling interest. The +directors of the foreign companies are his cronies, members of his +royal household, his brokers, bankers. You have only to read the +names published in the lists of the Brussels Stock Exchange to see +that these "trading companies," under different aliases, are +Leopold. Having, then, "conceded" the greater part of the Congo to +himself, Leopold set aside the best part of it, so far as rubber is +concerned, as a _Domaine Prive_. Officially the receipts of this pay +for running the government, and for schools, roads and wharfs, for +which taxes were levied, but for which, after twenty years, one +looks in vain. Leopold claims that through the Congo he is out of +pocket; that this carrying the banner of civilization in Africa +does not pay. Through his press bureaus he tells that his sympathy +for his black brother, his desire to see the commerce of the world +busy along the Congo, alone prevents him giving up what is for him a +losing business. There are several answers to this. One is that in +the Kasai Company alone Leopold owns 2,010 shares of stock. Worth +originally $50 a share, the value of each share rose to $3,100, +making at one time his total shares worth $5,421,000. In the +A.B.I.R. Concession he owns 1,000 shares, originally worth $100 +each, later worth $940. In the "vintage year" of 1900 each of these +shares was worth $5,050, and the 1,000 shares thus rose to the value +of $5,050,000. + +These are only two companies. In most of the others half the shares +are owned by the King. + +As published in the "State Bulletin," the money received in eight +years for rubber and ivory gathered in the _Domaine Prive_ differs +from the amount given for it in the market at Antwerp. The official +estimates show a loss to the government. The actual sales show that +the government, over and above its own estimate of its expenses, +instead of losing, made from the _Domaine Prive_ alone $10,000,000. +We are left wondering to whom went that unaccounted-for $10,000,000. +Certainly the King would not take it, for, to reimburse himself for +his efforts, he early in the game reserved for himself another tract +of territory known as the _Domaine de la Couronne_. For years he +denied that this existed. He knew nothing of Crown Lands. But, at +last, in the Belgian Chamber, it was publicly charged that for years +from this private source, which he had said did not exist, Leopold +had been drawing an income of $15,000,000. Since then the truth of +this statement has been denied, but at the time in the Chamber it +was not contradicted. + +To-day, grown insolent by the apathy of the Powers, Leopold finds +disguising himself as a company, as a laborer worthy of his hire, +irksome. He now decrees that as "Sovereign" over the Congo all of +the Congo belongs to him. It is as much his property as is a +pheasant drive, as is a staked-out mining claim, as your hat is your +property. And the twenty millions of people who inhabit it are there +only on his sufferance. They are his "tenants." He permits each +the hut in which he lives, and the garden adjoining that hut, but +his work must be for Leopold, and everything else, animal, mineral, +or vegetable, belongs to Leopold. The natives not only may not sell +ivory or rubber to independent traders, but if it is found in their +possession it is seized; and if you and I bought a tusk of ivory +here it would be taken from us and we could be prosecuted. This is +the law. Other men rule over territories more vast even than the +Congo. The King of England rules an empire upon which the sun never +sets. But he makes no claim to own it. Against the wishes of even +the humblest crofter, the King would not, because he knows he could +not, enter his cottage. Nor can we imagine even Kaiser William going +into the palm-leaf hut of a charcoal-burner in German East Africa +and saying: "This is my palm-leaf hut. This is my charcoal. You must +not sell it to the English, or the French, or the American. If they +buy from you they are 'receivers of stolen goods.' To feed my +soldiers you must drag my river for my fish. For me, in my swamp and +in my jungle, you must toil twenty-four days of each month to +gather my rubber. You must not hunt the elephants, for they are my +elephants. Those tusks that fifty years ago your grandfather, with +his naked spear, cut from an elephant, and which you have tried to +hide from me under the floor of this hut, are my ivory. Because that +elephant, running wild through the jungle fifty years ago, belonged +to me. And you yourself are mine, your time is mine, your labor is +mine, your wife, your children, all are mine. They belong to me." + + [Illustration: "Tenants" of Leopold, Who Claims that the Congo + Belongs to Him, and that These Native People Are There Only as His + Tenants.] + +This, then, is the "open door" as I find it to-day in the Congo. It +is an incredible state of affairs, so insolent, so magnificent in +its impertinence, that it would be humorous, were it not for its +background of misery and suffering, for its hostage houses, its +chain gangs, its _chicottes_, its nameless crimes against the human +body, its baskets of dried hands held up in tribute to the Belgian +blackguard. + + + + +III + +THE CAPITAL OF THE CONGO + + +Leopold's "shop" has its front door at Banana. Its house flag is a +golden star on a blue background. Banana is the port of entry to the +Congo. You have, no doubt, seen many ports of Europe--Antwerp, +Hamburg, Boulogne, Lisbon, Genoa, Marseilles. Banana is the port of +entry to a country as large as Western Europe, and while the imports +and exports of Europe trickle through all these cities, the commerce +of the Congo enters and departs entirely at Banana. You can then +picture the busy harbor, the jungle of masts, the white bridges and +awnings of the steamers. By the fat funnels and the flags you can +distinguish the English tramps, the German merchantmen, the French, +Dutch, Italian, Portuguese traders, the smart "liners" from +Liverpool, even the Arab dhows with bird-wing sails, even the steel, +four-masted schooners out of Boston, U.S.A. You can imagine the +toiling lighters, the slap-dash tenders, the launches with shrieking +whistles. + +Of course, you suspect it is not a bit like that. But were it for +fourteen countries the "open door" to twenty millions of people, +that is how it might look. + +Instead, it is the private entrance to the preserves of a private +individual. So what you really see is, on the one hand, islands of +mangrove bushes, with their roots in the muddy water; on the other, +Banana, a strip of sand and palm trees without a wharf, quay, +landing stage, without a pier to which you could make fast anything +larger than a rowboat. + +In a canoe naked natives paddle alongside to sell fish; a peevish +little man in a sun hat, who, in order to save Leopold three +salaries, holds four port offices, is being rowed to the gangway; on +shore the only other visible inhabitant of Banana, a man with no +nerves, is disturbing the brooding, sweating silence by knocking the +rust off the plates of a stranded mud-scow. Welcome to our city! +Welcome to busy, bustling Banana, the port of entry of the Congo +Free State. + + [Illustration: The Facilities for Landing at Banana, the Port of + Entry to the Congo, Are Limited.] + +In a canoe we were paddled to the back yard of the cafe of Madame +Samuel, and from that bower of warm beer and sardine tins trudged +through the sun up one side of Banana and down the other. In between +the two paths were the bungalows and gardens of forty white men and +two white women. Many of the gardens, as was most of Banana, were +neglected, untidy, littered with condensed-milk tins. Others, more +carefully tended, were laid out in rigid lines. With all tropical +nature to draw upon, nothing had been imagined. The most ambitious +efforts were designs in whitewashed shells and protruding beer +bottles. We could not help remembering the gardens in Japan, of the +poorest and the most ignorant coolies. Do I seem to find fault with +Banana out of all proportion to its importance? It is because +Banana, the Congo's most advanced post of civilization, is typical +of all that lies beyond. + +From what I had read of the Congo I expected a broad sweep of muddy, +malaria-breeding water, lined by low-lying swamp lands, gloomy, +monotonous, depressing. + +But on the way to Boma and, later, when I travelled on the Upper +Congo, I thought the river more beautiful than any great river I had +ever seen. It was full of wonderful surprises. Sometimes it ran +between palm-covered banks of yellow sand as low as those of the +Mississippi or the Nile; and again, in half an hour, the banks were +rock and as heavily wooded as the mountains of Montana, or as white +and bold as the cliffs of Dover, or we passed between great hills, +covered with what looked like giant oaks, and with their peaks +hidden in the clouds. I found it like no other river, because in +some one particular it was like them all. Between Banana and Boma +the banks first screened us in with the tangled jungle of the +tropics, and then opened up great wind-swept plateaux, leading to +hills that suggested--of all places--England, and, at that, +cultivated England. The contour of the hills, the shape of the +trees, the shade of their green contrasted with the green of the +grass, were like only the cliffs above Plymouth. One did not look +for native kraals and the wild antelope, but for the square, +ivy-topped tower of the village church, the loaf-shaped hayricks, +slow-moving masses of sheep. But this that looks like a pasture +land is only coarse limestone covered with bitter, unnutritious +grass, which benefits neither beast nor man. + +At sunset we anchored in the current three miles from Boma, and at +daybreak we tied up to the iron wharf. As the capital of the +government Boma contains the residence and gardens of the governor, +who is the personal representative of Leopold, both as a shopkeeper +and as a king by divine right. He is a figurehead. The real +administrator is M. Vandamme, the Secretaire-General, the +ubiquitous, the mysterious, whose name before you leave Southampton +is in the air, of whom all men, whether they speak in French or +English, speak well. It is from Boma that M. Vandamme sends +collectors of rubber, politely labeled inspecteurs, directeurs, +judges, capitaines, and sous-lieutenants to their posts, and +distributes them over one million square miles. + +Boma is the capital of a country which is as large as six nations of +the European continent. For twenty-five years it has been the +capital. Therefore, the reader already guesses that Boma has only +one wharf, and at that wharf there is no custom-house, no warehouse, +not even a canvas awning under which, during the six months of rainy +season, one might seek shelter for himself and his baggage. + +Our debarkation reminded me of a landing of filibusters. A wharf +forty yards long led from the steamer to the bank. Down this marched +the officers of the army, the clerks, the bookkeepers, and on the +bank and in the street each dumped his boxes, his sword, his +camp-bed, his full-dress helmet. It looked as though a huge eviction +had taken place, as though a retreating army, having gained the +river's edge, were waiting for a transport. It was not as though to +the government the coming of these gentlemen was a complete +surprise; regularly every three weeks at that exact spot a like +number disembark. But in years the State has not found it worth +while to erect for them even an open zinc shed. The cargo invoiced +to the State is given equal consideration. + +"Prisoners of the State," each wearing round his neck a steel ring +from which a chain stretches to the ring of another "prisoner," +carried the cargo to the open street, where lay the luggage of the +officers, and there dropped it. Mingled with steamer chairs, tin +bathtubs, gun-cases, were great crates of sheet iron, green boxes of +gin, bags of Teneriffe potatoes, boilers of an engine. Upon the +scene the sun beat with vicious, cruel persistence. Those officers +who had already served in the Congo dropped their belongings under +the shadow of a solitary tree. Those who for the first time were +seeing the capital of the country they had sworn to serve sank upon +their boxes and, with dismay in their eyes, mopped their red and +dripping brows. + + [Illustration: "Prisoners" of the State in Chains at Matadi.] + +Boma is built at the foot of a hill of red soil. It is a town of +scattered buildings made of wood and sheet-iron plates, sent out in +crates, and held together with screws. To Boma nature has been +considerate. She has contributed many trees, two or three long +avenues of palms, and in the many gardens caused flowers to blossom +and flourish. In the report of the "Commission of Enquiry" which +Leopold was forced to send out in 1904 to investigate the +atrocities, and each member of which, for his four months' work, +received $20,000, Boma is described as possessing "the daintiness +and _chic_ of a European watering-place." + +Boma really is like a seaport of one of the Central American republics. +It has a temporary sufficient-to-the-day-for-to-morrow-we-die air. +It looks like a military post that at any moment might be abandoned. +To remove this impression the State has certain exhibits which seem +to point to a stable and good government. There is a well-conducted +hospital and clean, well-built barracks; for the amusement of the +black soldiers even a theatre, and for the higher officials +attractive bungalows, a bandstand, where twice a week a negro band +plays by ear, and plays exceedingly well. There is even a +lawn-tennis court, where the infrequent visitor to the Congo is +welcomed, and, by the courteous Mr. Vandamme, who plays tennis as +well as he does every thing else, entertained. Boma is the shop +window of Leopold's big store. The good features of Boma are like +those attractive articles one sometimes sees in a shop window, but +which in the shop one fails to find--at least, I did not find them +in the shop. Outside of Boma I looked in vain for a school +conducted by the State, like the one at Boma, such as those the +United States Government gave by the hundred to the Philippines. I +found not one. And I looked for such a hospital as the one I saw at +Boma, such as our government has placed for its employes along, and +at both ends of, the Isthmus of Panama, and, except for the one at +Leopoldville, I saw none. + +In spite of the fact that Boma is a "European watering-place," all +the servants of the State with whom I talked wanted to get away from +it, especially those who already had served in the interior. To +appreciate what Boma lacks one has only to visit the neighboring +seaports on the same coast; the English towns of Sierra Leone and +Calabar, the French town of Libreville in the French Congo, the +German seaport Duala in the Cameroons, but especially Calabar in +Southern Nigeria. In actual existence the new Calabar is eight years +younger than Boma, and in its municipal government, its +street-making, cleaning, and lighting, wharfs, barracks, prisons, +hospitals, it is a hundred years in advance. Boma is not a capital; +it is the distributing factory for a huge trading concern, and a +particularly selfish one. There is, as I have said, only one wharf, +and at that wharf, without paying the State, only State boats may +discharge cargo, so the English, Dutch, and German boats are forced +to "tie up" along the river front. There the grass is eight feet +high and breeds mosquitoes and malaria, and conceals the wary +crocodile. At night, from the deck of the steamer, all one can see +of this capital is a fringe of this high grass in the light from the +air ports, and on shore three gas-lamps. No cafes are open, no +sailors carouse, no lighted window suggests that some one is giving +a dinner, that some one is playing bridge. Darkness, gloom, silence +mark this "European watering-place." + +"You ask me," demanded a Belgian lieutenant one night as we stood +together by the rail, "whether I like better the bush, where there +is no white man in a hundred miles, or to be stationed at Boma?" + +He threw out his hands at the gas-lamps, rapidly he pointed at each +of them in turn. + +"Voila, Boma!" he said. + +From Boma we steamed six hours farther up the river to Matadi. On +the way we stopped at Noqui, the home of Portuguese traders on the +Portuguese bank, which, as one goes up-stream, lies to starboard. +Here the current runs at from four to five miles an hour, and has so +sharply cut away the bank that we are able to run as near to it with +the stern of our big ship as though she were a canoe. To one used +more to ocean than to Congo traffic it was somewhat bewildering to +see the five-thousand-ton steamer make fast to a tree, a sand-bank +looming up three fathoms off her quarter, and the blades of her +propeller, as though they were the knives of a lawn-mower, cutting +the eel-grass. + +At Matadi the Congo makes one of her lightning changes. Her banks, +which have been low and woody, with, on the Portuguese side, +glimpses of boundless plateaux, become towering hills of rock. At +Matadi the cataracts and rapids begin, and for two hundred miles +continue to Stanley Pool, which is the beginning of the Upper Congo. +Leopoldville is situated on Stanley Pool, just to the right of where +the rapids start their race to the south. With Leopoldville above +and Boma below, still nearer the mouth of the river, Matadi makes a +centre link in the chain of the three important towns of the Lower +Congo. + +When Henry M. Stanley was halted by the cataracts and forced to +leave the river he disembarked his expedition on the bank opposite +Matadi, and a mile farther up-stream. It was from this point he +dragged and hauled his boats, until he again reached smooth water at +Stanley Pool. The wagons on which he carried the boats still can be +seen lying on the bank, broken and rusty. Like the sight of old gun +carriages and dismantled cannon, they give one a distinct thrill. +Now, on the bank opposite from where they lie, the railroad runs +from Matadi to Leopoldville. + +The Congo forces upon one a great admiration for Stanley. Unless +civilization utterly alters it, it must always be a monument to his +courage, and as you travel farther and see the difficulties placed +in his way, your admiration increases. There are men here who make +little of what Stanley accomplished; but they are men who seldom +leave their own compound, and, who, when they do go up the river, +travel at ease, not in a canoe, or on foot through the jungle, but +in the smoking-room of the steamer and in a first-class railroad +carriage. That they are able so to travel is due to the man they +would belittle. The nickname given to Stanley by the natives is +to-day the nickname of the government. Matadi means rock. When +Stanley reached the town of Matadi, which is surrounded entirely by +rock, he began with dynamite to blast roads for his caravan. The +natives called him Bula Matadi, the Breaker of Rocks, and, as in +those days he was the Government, the Law, and the Prophets, Bula +Matadi, who then was the white man who governed, now signifies the +white man's government. But it is a very different government, and a +very different white man. With the natives the word is universal. +They say "Bula Matadi wood post." "Not traders' chop, Bula Matadi's +chop." "Him no missionary steamer, him Bula Matadi steamer." + +The town of Matadi is of importance as the place where, owing to the +rapids, passengers and cargoes are reshipped on the railroad to the +_haut Congo_. It is a railroad terminus only, and it looks it. The +railroad station and store-houses are close to the river bank, and, +spread over several acres of cinders, are the railroad yard and +machine shops. Above those buildings of hot corrugated zinc and the +black soil rises a great rock. It is not so large as Gibraltar, or +so high as the Flatiron Building, but it is a little more steep than +either. Three narrow streets lead to its top. They are of flat +stones, with cement gutters. The stones radiate the heat of stove +lids. They are worn to a mirror-like smoothness, and from their +surface the sun strikes between your eyes, at the pit of your +stomach, and the soles of your mosquito boots. The three streets +lead to a parade ground no larger than and as bare as a brickyard. +It is surrounded by the buildings of Bula Matadi, the post-office, +the custom-house, the barracks, and the Cafe Franco-Belge. It has a +tableland fifty yards wide of yellow clay so beaten by thousands of +naked feet, so baked by the heat, that it is as hard as a brass +shield. Other tablelands may be higher, but this is the one nearest +the sun. You cross it wearily, in short rushes, with your heart in +your throat, and seeking shade, as a man crossing the zone of fire +seeks cover from the bullets. When you reach the cool, dirty +custom-house, with walls two feet thick, you congratulate yourself +on your escape; you look back into the blaze of the flaming plaza +and wonder if you have the courage to return. + + [Illustration: Bush Boys in the Plaza at Matadi Seeking Shade.] + +At the custom-house I paid duty on articles I could not possibly +have bought anywhere in the Congo, as, for instance, a tent and a +folding-bed, and for a license to carry arms. A young man with a +hammer and tiny branding irons beat little stars and the number of +my license to _porter d'armes_ on the stock of each weapon. Without +permission of Bula Matadi on leaving the Congo, one can not sell his +guns, or give them away. This is a precaution to prevent weapons +falling into the hands of the native. For some reason a native with +a gun alarms Bula Matadi. Just on the other bank of the river the +French, who do not seem to fear the black brother, sell him +flint-lock rifles, as many as his heart desires. + +On the steamer there was a mild young missionary coming out, for the +first time, to whom some unobserving friend had given a fox-terrier. +The young man did not care for the dog. He had never owned a dog, +and did not know what to do with this one. Her name was "Fanny," +and only by the efforts of all on board did she reach the Congo +alive. There was no one, from the butcher to the captain, including +the passengers, who had not shielded Fanny from the cold, and later +from the sun, fed her, bathed her, forced medicine down her throat, +and raced her up and down the spar deck. Consequently we all knew +Fanny, and it was a great shock when from the custom-house I saw her +running around the blazing parade ground, her eyes filled with fear +and "lost dog" written all over her, from her drooping tongue to her +drooping tail. Captain Burton and I called "Fanny," and, not seeking +suicide for ourselves, sent half a dozen black boys to catch her. +But Fanny never liked her black uncles; on the steamer the Kroo boys +learned to give her the length of her chain, and so we were forced +to plunge to her rescue into the valley of heat. Perhaps she thought +we were again going to lock her up on the steamer, or perhaps that +it was a friendly game, for she ran from us as fast as from the +black boys. In Matadi no one ever had crossed the parade ground +except at a funeral march, and the spectacle of two large white +men playing tag with a small fox-terrier attracted an immense +audience. The officials and clerks left work and peered between the +iron-barred windows, the "prisoners" in chains ceased breaking rock +and stared dumbly from the barracks, the black "sentries" shrieked +and gesticulated, the naked bush boys, in from a long caravan +journey, rose from the side of their burdens and commented upon our +manoeuvres in gloomy, guttural tones. I suspect they thought we +wanted Fanny for "chop." Finally Fanny ran into the legs of a German +trader, who grabbed her by the neck and held her up to us. + +"You want him? Hey?" he shouted. + +"Ay, man," gasped Burton, now quite purple, "did you think we were +trying to amuse the dog?" + +I made a leash of my belt, and the captain returned to the ship +dragging his prisoner after him. An hour later I met the youthful +missionary leading Fanny by a rope. + +"I must tell you about Fanny," he cried. "After I took her to the +Mission I forgot to tie her up--as I suppose I should have done--and +she ran away. But, would you believe it, she found her way straight +back to the ship. Was it not intelligent of her?" + +I was too far gone with apoplexy, heat prostration, and sunstroke to +make any answer, at least one that I could make to a missionary. + +The next morning Fanny, the young missionary, and I left for +Leopoldville on the railroad. It is a narrow-gauge railroad built +near Matadi through the solid rock and later twisting and turning so +often that at many places one can see the track on three different +levels. It is not a State road, but was built and is owned by a +Dutch company, and, except that it charges exorbitant rates and does +not keep its carriages clean, it is well run, and the road-bed is +excellent. But it runs a passenger train only three times a week, +and though the distance is so short, and though the train starts at +6:30 in the morning, it does not get you to Leopoldville the same +day. Instead, you must rest over night at Thysville and start at +seven the next morning. That afternoon at three you reach +Leopoldville. For the two hundred and fifty miles the fare is two +hundred francs, and one is limited to sixty pounds of luggage. That +was the weight allowed by the Japanese to each war correspondent, +and as they gave us six months in Tokio in which to do nothing else +but weigh our equipment, I left Matadi without a penalty. Had my +luggage exceeded the limit, for each extra pound I would have had to +pay the company ten cents. To the Belgian officers and agents who go +for three years to serve the State in the bush the regulation is +especially harsh, and in a company so rich, particularly mean. To +many a poor officer, and on the pay they receive there are no rich +ones, the tax is prohibitive. It forces them to leave behind +medicines, clothing, photographic supplies, all ammunition, which +means no chance of helping out with duck and pigeon the daily menu +of goat and tinned sausages, and, what is the greatest hardship, all +books. This regulation, which the State permitted to the +concessionaires of the railroad, sends the agents of the State into +the wilderness physically and mentally unequipped, and it is no +wonder the weaker brothers go mad, and act accordingly. + +My black boys travelled second-class, which means an open car with +narrow seats very close together and a wooden roof. On these cars +passengers are allowed twenty pounds of luggage and permitted to +collect two hundred and fifty miles of heat and dust. To a black boy +twenty pounds is little enough, for he travels with much more +baggage than an average "blanc." I am not speaking of the Congo boy. +All the possessions the State leaves him he could carry in his +pockets, and he has no pockets. But wherever he goes the Kroo boy, +Mendi boy, or Sierra Leone boy carries all his belongings with him +in a tin trunk painted pink, green, or yellow. He is never separated +from his "box," and the recognized uniform of a Kroo boy at work, is +his breechcloth, and hanging from a ribbon around his knee, the key +to his box. If a boy has no box he generally carries three keys. + +In the first-class car were three French officers en route to +Brazzaville, the capital of the French Congo, and a dog, a sad +mongrel, very dirty, very hungry. On each side of the tiny toy car +were six revolving-chairs, so the four men, not to speak of the dog, +quite filled it. And to our own bulk each added hand-bags, cases of +beer, helmets, gun-cases, cameras, water-bottles, and, as the road +does not supply food of any kind, his chop-box. A chop-box is +anything that holds food, and for food of every kind, for the hours +of feeding, and the verb "to feed," on the West Coast, the only +word, the "lazy" word, is "chop." + +The absent-minded young missionary, with Fanny jammed between his +ankles, and looking out miserably upon the world, and two other +young missionaries, travelled second-class. + +They were even more crowded together than were we, but not so much +with luggage as with humanity. But as a protest against the high +charges of the railroad the missionaries always travel in the open +car. These three young men were for the first time out of England, +and in any fashion were glad to start on their long journey up the +Congo to Bolobo. To them whatever happened was a joke. It was a joke +even when the colored "wife" of one of the French officers used the +broad shoulders of one of them as a pillow and slept sweetly. She +was a large, good-natured, good-looking mulatto, and at the frequent +stations the French officer ran back to her with "white man's chop," +a tin of sausages, a pineapple, a bottle of beer. She drank the +beer from the bottle, and with religious tolerance offered it to the +Baptists. They assured her without the least regret that they were +teetotalers. To the other blacks in the open car the sight of a +white man waiting on one of their own people was a thrilling +spectacle. They regarded the woman who could command such services +with respect. It would be interesting to know what they thought of +the white man. At each station the open car disgorged its occupants +to fill with water the beer bottle each carried, and to buy from the +natives kwango, the black man's bread, a flaky, sticky flour that +tastes like boiled chestnuts; and pineapples at a franc for ten. And +such pineapples! Not hard and rubber-like, as we know them at home, +but delicious, juicy, melting in the mouth like hothouse grapes, +and, also, after each mouthful, making a complete bath necessary. +One of the French officers had a lump of ice which he broke into +pieces and divided with the others. They saluted magnificently many +times, and as each drowned the morsel in his tin cup of beer, one of +them cried with perfect simplicity: "C'est Paris!" This reminded me +that the ship's steward had placed much ice in my chop basket, and I +carried some of it to another car in which were five of the White +Sisters. For nineteen days I had been with them on the steamer, but +they had spoken to no one, and I was doubtful how they would accept +my offering. But the Mother Superior gave permission, and they took +the ice through the car window, their white hoods bristling with the +excitement of the adventure. They were on their way to a post still +two months' journey up the river, nearly to Lake Tanganyika, and for +three years or, possibly, until they died, that was the last ice +they would see. + +At Bongolo station the division superintendent came in the car and +everybody offered him refreshment, and in return he told us, in the +hope of interesting us, of a washout, and then casually mentioned +that an hour before an elephant had blocked the track. It seemed so +much too good to be true that I may have expressed some doubt, for +he said: "Why, of course and certainly. Already this morning one was +at Sariski Station and another at Sipeto." And instead of looking +out of the window I had been reading an American magazine, filched +from the smoking-room, which was one year old! + +At Thysville the railroad may have opened a hotel, but when I was +there to hunt for a night's shelter it turned you out bag and +baggage. The French officers decided to risk a Portuguese trading +store known as the "Ideal Hotel," and the missionaries very kindly +gave me the freedom of their Rest House. It is kept open for +those of the Mission who pass between the Upper and Lower Congo. +At the station the young missionaries were met by two older +missionaries--Mr. Weekes, who furnished the "Commission of Enquiry" +with much evidence, which they would not, or were not allowed to, +print, and Mr. Jennings. With them were twenty "boys" from the +Mission and, with each of them carrying a piece of our baggage on +his head, we climbed the hill, and I was given a clean, comfortable, +completely appointed bedroom. Our combined chop we turned over to a +black brother. He is the custodian of the Rest House and an +excellent cook. While he was preparing it my boys spread out my +folding rubber tub. Had I closed the door I should have smothered, +so, in the presence of twenty interested black Baptists, I took an +embarrassing but one of the most necessary baths I can remember. + +There still was a piece of the ice remaining, and as the interest in +the bathtub had begun to drag I handed it to one of my audience. He +yelled as though I had thrust into his hand a drop of vitriol, and, +leaping in the air, threw the ice on the floor and dared any one to +touch it. From the "personal" boys who had travelled to Matadi the +Mission boys had heard of ice. But none had ever seen it. They +approached it as we would a rattlesnake. Each touched it and then +sprang away. Finally one, his eyes starting from his head, +cautiously stroked the inoffensive brick and then licked his +fingers. The effect was instantaneous. He assured the others it was +"good chop," and each of them sat hunched about it on his heels, +stroking it, and licking his fingers, and then with delighted +thrills rubbing them over his naked body. The little block of ice +that at Liverpool was only a "quart of water" had assumed the value +of a diamond. + +Dinner was enlivened by an incident. Mr. Weekes, with orders simply +to "fry these," had given to the assistant of the cook two tins of +sausages. The small _chef_ presented them to us in the pan in which +he had cooked them, but he had obeyed instructions to the letter and +had fried the tins unopened. + +After dinner we sat until late, while the older men told the young +missionaries of atrocities of which, in the twenty years and within +the last three years, they had been witnesses. Already in Mr. +Morel's books I had read their testimony, but hearing from the men +themselves the tales of outrage and cruelty gave them a fresh and +more intimate value, and sent me to bed hot and sick with +indignation. But, nevertheless, the night I slept at Thysville was +the only cool one I knew in the Congo. It was as cool as is a night +in autumn at home. Thysville, between the Upper and the Lower Congo, +with its fresh mountain air, is an obvious site for a hospital for +the servants of the State. To the Congo it should be what Simla is +to the sick men of India; but the State is not running hospitals. It +is in the rubber business. + +All steamers for the Upper Congo and her great tributaries, whether +they belong to the State or the Missions, start from Leopoldville. +There they fit out for voyages, some of which last three and four +months. So it is a place of importance, but, like Boma, it looks as +though the people who yesterday built it meant to-morrow to move +out. The river-front is one long dump-heap. It is a grave-yard for +rusty boilers, deck-plates, chains, fire-bars. The interior of the +principal storehouse for ships' supplies, directly in front of the +office of the captain of the port, looks like a junk-shop for old +iron and newspapers. I should have enjoyed taking the captain of the +port by the neck and showing him the water-front and marine shops at +Calabar; the wharfs and quays of stone, the open places spread with +gravel, the whitewashed cement gutters, the spare parts of +machinery, greased and labeled in their proper shelves, even the +condemned scrap-iron in orderly piles; the whole yard as trim as a +battleship. + +On the river-front at Leopoldville a grossly fat man, collarless, +coatless, purple-faced, perspiring, was rushing up and down. He was +the captain of the port. Black women had assembled to greet +returning black soldiers, and the captain was calling upon the black +sentries to drive them away. The sentries, yelling, fell upon the +women with their six-foot staves and beat them over the head and +bare shoulders, and as they fled, screaming, the captain of the port +danced in the sun shaking his fists after them and raging violently. +Next morning I was told he had tried to calm his nerves with +absinthe, which is not particularly good for nerves, and was +exceedingly unwell. I was sorry for him. The picture of discipline +afforded by the glazed-eyed official, reeling and cursing in the +open street, had been illuminating. + +Although at Leopoldville the State has failed to build wharfs, the +esthetic features of the town have not been neglected, and there is +a pretty plaza called Stanley Park. In the centre of this plaza is a +pillar with, at its base, a bust of Leopold, and on the top of the +pillar a plaster-of-Paris lady, nude, and, not unlike the +Bacchante of MacMonnies. Not so much from the likeness as from +history, I deduced that the lady must be Cleo de Merode. But whether +the monument is erected to her or to Leopold, or to both of them, I +do not know. + + [Illustration: The Monument in Stanley Park, Erected, not to + Stanley, but to Leopold.] + +I left Leopoldville in the _Deliverance_. Some of the State boats +that make the long trip to Stanleyville are very large ships. They +have plenty of deck room and many cabins. With their flat, raft-like +hull, their paddle-wheel astern, and the covered sun deck, they +resemble gigantic house-boats. Of one of these boats the +_Deliverance_ was only one-third the size, but I took passage on her +because she would give me a chance to see not only something of the +Congo, but also one of its great tributaries, the less travelled +Kasai. The _Deliverance_ was about sixty-five feet over all and drew +three feet of water. She was built like a mud-scow, with a deck of +iron plates. Amidships, on this deck, was a tiny cabin with berths +for two passengers and standing room for one. The furnaces and +boiler were forward, banked by piles of wood. All the river boats +burn only wood. Her engines were in the stern. These engines and the +driving-rod to the paddle-wheel were uncovered. This gives the +_Deliverance_ the look of a large automobile without a tonneau. You +were constantly wondering what had gone wrong with the carbureter, +and if it rained what would happen to her engines. Supported on iron +posts was an upper deck, on which, forward, stood the captain's box +of a cabin and directly in front of it the steering-wheel. The +telegraph, which signalled to the openwork engine below, and a +dining table as small as a chess-board, completely filled the +"bridge." When we sat at table the captain's boy could only just +squeeze himself between us and the rail. It was like dining in a +private box. And certainly no theatre ever offered such scenery, nor +did any menagerie ever present so many strange animals. + +We were four white men: Captain Jensen, his engineer, and the other +passenger, Captain Anfossi, a young Italian. Before he reached his +post he had to travel one month on the _Deliverance_ and for another +month walk through the jungle. He was the most cheerful and amusing +companion, and had he been returning after three years of exile to +his home he could not have been more brimful of spirits. Captain +Jensen was a Dane (almost every river captain is a Swede or a Dane) +and talked a little English, a little French, and a little Bangala. +The mechanician was a Finn and talked the native Bangala, and +Anfossi spoke French. After chop, when we were all assembled on the +upper deck, there would be the most extraordinary talks in four +languages, or we would appoint one man to act as a clearing-house, +and he would translate for the others. + +On the lower deck we carried twenty "wood boys," whose duty was to +cut wood for the furnace, and about thirty black passengers. They +were chiefly soldiers, who had finished their period of service for +the State, with their wives and children. They were crowded on the +top of the hatches into a space fifteen by fifteen feet between our +cabin door and the furnace. Around the combings of the hatches, and +where the scuppers would have been had the _Deliverance_ had +scuppers, the river raced over the deck to a depth of four or five +inches. When the passengers wanted to wash their few clothes or +themselves they carried on their ablutions and laundry work where +they happened to be sitting. But for Anfossi and myself to go from +our cabin to the iron ladder of the bridge it was necessary to wade +both in the water and to make stepping stones of the passengers. I +do not mean that we merely stepped over an occasional arm or leg. I +mean we walked on them. You have seen a football player, in a hurry +to make a touchdown, hurdle without prejudice both friends and foes. +Our progress was like this. But by practice we became so expert that +without even awakening them we could spring lightly from the plump +stomach of a black baby to its mother's shoulder, from there leap to +the father's ribs, and rebound upon the rungs of the ladder. + + [Illustration: The _Deliverance_.] + +The river marched to the sea at the rate of four to five miles an +hour. The _Deliverance_ could make about nine knots an hour, so we +travelled at the average rate of five miles; but for the greater +part of each day we were tied to a bank while the boys went ashore +and cut enough wood to carry us farther. And we never travelled at +night. Owing to the changing currents, before the sun set we ran +into shore and made fast to a tree. I explained how in America the +river boats used search-lights, and was told that on one boat the +State had experimented with a searchlight, but that particular +searchlight having got out of order the idea of night travelling was +condemned. + +Ours was a most lazy progress, but one with the most beautiful +surroundings and filled with entertainment. From our private box we +looked out upon the most wonderful of panoramas. Sometimes we were +closely hemmed in by mountains of light-green grass, except where, +in the hollows, streams tumbled in tiny waterfalls between gigantic +trees hung with strange flowering vines and orchids. Or we would +push into great lakes of swirling brown water, dotted with flat +islands overgrown with reed grass higher than the head of a man. +Again the water turned blue and the trees on the banks grew into +forests with the look of cultivated, well-cared-for parks, but with +no sign of man, not even a mud hut or a canoe; only the strangest of +birds and the great river beasts. Sometimes the sky was overcast and +gray, the warm rain shut us in like a fog, and the clouds hid the +peaks of the hills, or there would come a swift black tornado and +the rain beat into our private box, and each would sit crouched in +his rain coat, while the engineer smothered his driving-rods in palm +oil, and the great drops drummed down upon the awning and drowned +the fire in our pipes. After these storms, as though it were being +pushed up from below, the river seemed to rise in the centre, to +become convex. By some optical illusion, it seemed to fall away on +either hand to the depth of three or four feet. + +But as a rule we had a brilliant, gorgeous sunshine that made the +eddying waters flash and sparkle, and caused the banks of sand to +glare like whitewashed walls, and turn the sharp, hard fronds of the +palms into glittering sword-blades. The movement of the boat +tempered the heat, and in lazy content we sat in our lookout box and +smiled upon the world. Except for the throb of the engine and the +slow splash, splash, splash of the wheel there was no sound. We +might have been adrift in the heart of a great ocean. So complete +was the silence, so few were the sounds of man's presence, that at +times one almost thought that ours was the first boat to disturb the +Congo. + +Although we were travelling by boat, we spent as much time on land +as on the water. Because the _Deliverance_ burnt wood and, like an +invading army, "lived on the country," she was always stopping to +lay in a supply. That gave Anfossi and myself a chance to visit the +native villages or to hunt in the forest. + +To feed her steamers the State has established along the river-bank +posts for wood, and in theory at these places there always is a +sufficient supply of wood to carry a steamer to the next post. But +our experience was either that another steamer had just taken all +the wood or that the boys had decided to work no more and had hidden +themselves in the bush. The State posts were "clearings," less than +one hundred yards square, cut out of the jungle. Sometimes only +black men were in charge, but as a rule the _chef de poste_ was a +lonely, fever-ridden white, whose only interest in our arrival was +his hope that we might spare him quinine. I think we gave away as +many grains of quinine as we received logs of wood. Empty-handed we +would turn from the wood post and steam a mile or so farther up the +river, where we would run into a bank, and a boy with a steel hawser +would leap overboard and tie up the boat to the roots of a tree. +Then all the boys would disappear into the jungle and attack the +primeval forest. Each was supplied with a machete and was expected +to furnish a _bras_ of wood. A _bras_ is a number of sticks about as +long and as thick as your arm, placed in a pile about three feet +high and about three feet wide. To fix this measure the head boy +drove poles into the bank three feet apart, and from pole to pole at +the same distance from the ground stretched a strip of bark. When +each boy had filled one of these openings all the wood was carried +on board, and we would unhitch the _Deliverance_, and she would +proceed to burn up the fuel we had just collected. It took the +twenty boys about four hours to cut the wood, and the _Deliverance_ +the same amount of time to burn it. It was distinctly a +hand-to-mouth existence. As I have pointed out, when it is too dark +to see the currents, the Congo captains never attempt to travel. So +each night at sunset Captain Jensen ran into the bank, and as soon +as the plank was out all the black passengers and the crew passed +down it and spent the night on shore. In five minutes the women +would have the fires lighted and the men would be cutting grass +for bedding and running up little shelters of palm boughs and +hanging up linen strips that were both tents and mosquito nets. + + [Illustration: The Native Wife of a _Chef de Poste_.] + +In the moonlight the natives with their camp-fires and torches made +most wonderful pictures. Sometimes for their sleeping place the +captain would select a glade in the jungle, or where a stream had +cut a little opening in the forest, or a sandy island, with tall +rushes on either side and the hot African moon shining on the white +sand and turning the palms to silver, or they would pitch camp in a +buffalo wallow, where the grass and mud had been trampled into a +clay floor by the hoofs of hundreds of wild animals. But the fact +that they were to sleep where at sunrise and at sunset came +buffaloes, elephants, and panthers, disturbed the women not at all, +and as they bent, laughing, over the iron pots, the firelight shone +on their bare shoulders and was reflected from their white teeth and +rolling eyes and brazen bangles. + +Until late in the night the goats would bleat, babies cry, and the +"boys" and "mammies" talked, sang, quarrelled, beat tom-toms, and +squeezed mournful groans out of the accordion of civilization. One +would have thought we had anchored off a busy village rather than at +a place where, before that night, the inhabitants had been only the +beasts of the jungle and the river. + + + + +IV + +AMERICANS IN THE CONGO + + +In trying to sum up what I found in the Congo Free State, I think +what one fails to find there is of the greatest significance. To +tell what the place is like, you must tell what it lacks. One must +write of the Congo always in the negative. It is as though you +asked: "What sort of a house is this one Jones has built?" and were +answered: "Well, it hasn't any roof, and it hasn't any cellar, and +it has no windows, floors, or chimneys. It's that kind of a house." + +When first I arrived in the Congo the time I could spend there +seemed hopelessly inadequate. After I'd been there a month, it +seemed to me that in a very few days any one could obtain a +painfully correct idea of the place, and of the way it is +administered. If an orchestra starts on an piece of music with all +the instruments out of tune, it need not play through the entire +number for you to know that the instruments are out of tune. + +The charges brought against Leopold II, as King of the Congo, are +three: + +(_a_) That he has made slaves of the twenty million blacks he +promised to protect. + +(_b_) That, in spite of his promise to keep the Congo open to trade, +he has closed it to all nations. + +(_c_) That the revenues of the country and all of its trade he has +retained for himself. + +Any one who visits the Congo and remains only two weeks will be +convinced that of these charges Leopold is guilty. In that time he +will not see atrocities, but he will see that the natives are +slaves, that no foreigner can trade with them, that in the interest +of Leopold alone the country is milked. + +He will see that the government of Leopold is not a government. It +preserves the perquisites and outward signs of government. It coins +money, issues stamps, collects taxes. But it assumes none of the +responsibilities of government. The Congo Free State is only a great +trading house. And in it Leopold is the only wholesale and retail +trader. He gives a bar of soap for rubber, and makes a "turn-over" +of a cup of salt for ivory. He is not a monarch. He is a shopkeeper. + +And were the country not so rich in rubber and ivory, were the +natives not sweated so severely, he also would be a bankrupt +shopkeeper. For the Congo is not only one vast trading post, but +also it is a trading post badly managed. Even in the republics of +Central America where the government changes so frequently, and +where each new president is trying to make hay while he can, there +is better administration, more is done for the people, the rights of +other nations are better respected. + +Were the Congo properly managed, it would be one of the richest +territories on the surface of the earth. As it is, through ignorance +and cupidity, it is being despoiled and its people are the most +wretched of human beings. In the White Book containing the reports +of British vice-consuls on conditions in the Congo from April of +last year to January of this year, Mr. Mitchell tells how the +enslavement of the people still continues, how "they" (the +conscripts, as they are called) "are hunted in the forest by +soldiers, and brought in chained by the neck like criminals." They +then, though conscripted to serve in the army, are set to manual +labor. They are slaves. The difference between the slavery under +Leopold and the slavery under the Arab raiders is that the Arab was +the better and kinder master. He took "prisoners" just as Leopold +seizes "conscripts," but he had too much foresight to destroy whole +villages, to carry off all the black man's live stock, and to uproot +his vegetable gardens. He purposed to return. And he did not wish to +so terrify the blacks that to escape from him they would penetrate +farther into the jungle. His motive was purely selfish, but his +methods, compared with those of Leopold, were almost considerate. +The work the State to-day requires of the blacks is so oppressive +that they have no time, no heart, to labor for themselves. + +In every other colony--French, English, German--in the native +villages I saw vegetable gardens, goats, and chickens, large, +comfortable, three-room huts, fences, and, especially in the German +settlement of the Cameroons at Duala, many flower gardens. In Bell +Town at Duala I walked for miles through streets lined with such +huts and gardens, and saw whole families, the very old as well as +the very young, sitting contentedly in the shade of their trees, or +at work in their gardens. In the Congo native villages I saw but one +old person, of chickens or goats that were not to be given to the +government as taxes I saw none, and the vegetable gardens, when +there were any such, were cultivated for the benefit of the _chef de +poste_, and the huts were small, temporary, and filthy. The dogs in +the kennels on my farm are better housed, better fed, and much +better cared for, whether ill or well, than are the twenty millions +of blacks along the Congo River. And that these human beings are so +ill-treated is due absolutely to the cupidity of one man, and to the +apathy of the rest of the world. And it is due as much to the apathy +and indifference of whoever may read this as to the silence of Elihu +Root or Sir Edward Grey. No one can shirk his responsibility by +sneering, "Am I my brother's keeper?" The Government of the United +States and the thirteen other countries have promised to protect +these people, to care for their "material and moral welfare," and +that promise is morally binding upon the people of those countries. +How much Leopold cares for the material welfare of the natives is +illustrated by the prices he pays the "boys" who worked on the +government steamer in which I went up the Kasai. They were bound on +a three months' voyage, and for each month's work on this trip they +were given in payment their rice and eighty cents. That is, at the +end of the trip they received what in our money would be equivalent +to two dollars and forty cents. And that they did not receive in +money, but in "trade goods," which are worth about ten per cent less +than their money value. So that of the two dollars and eighty cents +that is due them, these black boys, who for three months sweated in +the dark jungle cutting wood, are robbed by this King of twenty-four +cents. One would dislike to grow rich at that price. + + [Illustration: English Missionaries, and Some of Their Charges.] + +In the French Congo I asked the traders at Libreville what they paid +their boys for cutting mahogany. I found the price was four francs a +day without "chop," or three and a half francs with "chop." That +is, on one side of the river the French pay in cash for one day's +work what Leopold pays in trade goods for the work of a month. As a +result the natives run away to the French side, and often, I might +almost say invariably, when at the _poste de bois_ on the Congo side +we would find two cords of wood, on the other bank at the post for +the French boats we would count two hundred and fifty cords of wood. +I took photographs of the native villages in all the colonies, in +order to show how they compared--of the French and Belgian wood +posts, the one well stocked and with the boys lying about asleep or +playing musical instruments, or alert to trade and barter, and on +the Belgian side no wood, and the unhappy white man alone, and +generally shivering with fever. Had the photographs only developed +properly they would have shown much more convincingly than one can +write how utterly miserable is the condition of the Congo negro. And +the condition of the white man at the wood posts is only a little +better. We found one man absolutely without supplies. He was only +twenty-four hours distant from Leopoldville, but no supplies had +been sent him. He was ill with fever, and he could eat nothing but +milk. Captain Jensen had six cans of condensed milk, which the State +calculated should suffice for him and his passengers for three +months. He turned the lot over to the sick man. + +We found another white man at the first wood post on the Kasai just +above where it meets the Congo. He was in bed and dangerously ill +with enteric fever. He had telegraphed the State at Leopoldville and +a box of medicines had been sent to him; but the State doctors had +forgotten to enclose any directions for their use. We were as +ignorant of medicines as the man himself, and, as it was impossible +to move him, we were forced to leave him lying in his cot with the +row of bottles and tiny boxes, that might have given him life, +unopened at his elbow. It was ten days before the next boat would +touch at his post. I do not know that it reached him in time. One +could tell dozens of such stories of cruelty to natives and of +injustice and neglect to the white agents. + +The fact that Leopold has granted to American syndicates control +over two great territories in the Congo may bring about a better +state of affairs, and, in any event, it may arouse public interest +in this country. It certainly should be of interest to Americans +that some of the most prominent of their countrymen have gone into +close partnership with a speculator as unscrupulous and as notorious +as is Leopold, and that they are to exploit a country which as yet +has been developed only by the help of slavery, with all its +attendant evils of cruelty and torture. + +That Leopold has no right to give these concessions is a matter +which chiefly concerns the men who are to pay for them, but it is an +interesting fact. + +The Act of Berlin expressly states: _"No Power which exercises, or +shall exercise, sovereign rights in the above-mentioned regions, +shall be allowed to grant therein a monopoly or favor of any kind in +matters of trade."_ + +Leopold is only a steward placed by the Powers over the Congo. He is +a janitor. And he has no more authority to give even a foot of +territory to Belgians, Americans, or Chinamen than the janitor of an +apartment house has authority to fill the rooms with his wife's +relations or sell the coal in the basement. + +The charge that the present concessionaires have no title that any +independent trader or miner need respect is one that is sure to be +brought up when the Powers throw Leopold out, and begin to clean +house. The concessionaires take a sporting chance that Leopold will +not be thrown out. It should be remembered that it is to his and to +their advantage to see that he is not. + +In November of 1906, Leopold gave the International Forestry and +Mining Company of the Congo mining rights in territories adjoining +his private park, the _Domaine de la Couronne_, and to the American +Congo Company he granted the right to work rubber along the Congo +River to where it joins the Kasai. This latter is a territory of +four thousand square miles. The company also has the option within +the next eleven years of buying land in any part of a district which +is nearly one-half of the entire Congo. Of the Forestry and Mining +Company one-half of the profits go to Leopold, one-fourth to +Belgians, and the remaining fourth to the Americans. Of the profits +of the American Congo Company, Leopold is entitled to one-half and +the Americans to the other half. This company was one originally +organized to exploit a new method of manufacturing crude rubber from +the plant. The company was taken over by Thomas F. Ryan and his +associates. Back of both companies are the Guggenheims, who are to +perform the actual work in the mines and in the rubber plantation. +Early in March a large number of miners and engineers were selected +by John Hays Hammond, the chief engineer of the Guggenheim +Exploration Companies, and A. Chester Beatty, and were sent to +explore the territory granted in the mining concession. Another +force of experts are soon to follow. The legal representative of the +syndicates has stated that in the Congo they intend to move "on +commercial lines." By that we take it they mean they will give the +native a proper price for his labor; and instead of offering +"bonuses" and "commissions" to their white employees will pay them +living wages. The exact terms of the concessions are wrapped in +mystery. Some say the territories ceded to the concessionaires are +to be governed by them, policed by them, and that within the +boundaries of these concessions the Americans are to have absolute +control. If this be so the syndicates are entering upon an +experiment which for Americans is almost without precedent. They +will be virtually what in England is called a chartered company, +with the difference that the Englishmen receive their charter from +their own government, while the charter under which the Americans +will act will be granted by a foreign Power, and for what they may +do in the Congo their own government could not hold them +responsible. They are answerable only to the Power that issued the +charter; and that Power is the just, the humane, the merciful +Leopold. + +The history of the early days of chartered companies in Africa, +notoriously those of the Congo, Northern Nigeria, Rhodesia, and +German Central Africa does not make pleasant reading. But until the +Americans in the Congo have made this experiment, it would be most +unfair (except that the company they choose to keep leaves them open +to suspicion) not to give them the benefit of the doubt. One can at +least say for them that they seem to be absolutely ignorant of the +difficulties that lie before them. At least that is true of all of +them to whom I have talked. + +The attorney of the Rubber Company when interviewed by a +representative of a New York paper is reported to have said: "We +have purchased a privilege from a Sovereign State and propose to +operate it along purely commercial lines. With King Leopold's +management of Congo affairs in the past, or, with _what he may do in +an administrative way in the future, we have absolutely nothing to +do_." The italics are mine. + +When asked: "Under your concessions are you given similar powers +over the native blacks as are enjoyed by other concessionaires?" the +answer of the attorney, as reported, was: "The problem of labor is +not mentioned in the concession agreement, neither is the question +of local administration. We are left to solve the labor problem in +our own way, on a purely commercial basis, and with the question of +government we have absolutely nothing whatever to do. The labor +problem will not be formidable. Our mills are simple affairs. One +man can manage them, and the question of the labor on the rubber +concession is reduced to the minimum." This answer of the learned +attorney shows an ignorance of "labor" conditions in the Congo which +is, unless assumed, absolutely abject. + +If the American syndicates are not to police and govern the +territories ceded them, but if these territories are to continue to +be administered by Leopold, it is not possible for the Americans to +have "absolutely nothing to do" with that administration. Leopold's +sole idea of administration is that every black man is his slave, in +other words, the only men the Americans can depend upon for labor +are slaves. Of the profits of these American companies Leopold is to +receive one-half. He will work his rubber with slaves. + +Are the Americans going to use slaves also, or do they intend "on +commercial lines" to pay those who work for them living wages? And +if they do, at the end of the fiscal year, having paid a fair price +for labor, are they prepared to accept a smaller profit than will +their partner Leopold, who obtains his labor with the aid of a chain +and a whip? + + [Illustration: The Laboring Man Upon Whom the American + Concessionaires Must Depend.] + +The attorney for the company airily says: "The labor problem will +not be formidable." + +If the man knows what he is talking about, he can mean but one +thing. + +The motives that led Leopold to grant these concessions are possibly +various. The motives that induced the Americans to take his offer +were probably less complicated. With them it was no question of +politics. They wanted the money; they did not need it, for they all +are rich--they merely wanted it. But Leopold wants more than the +half profits he will obtain from the Americans. If the Powers should +wake from their apathy and try to cast him out of the Congo, he +wants, through his American partners, the help of the United States. +Should he be "dethroned," by granting these concessions now on a +share and share alike basis with Belgians, French, and Americans, he +still, through them, hopes to draw from the Congo a fair income. And +in the meanwhile he looks to these Americans to kill any action +against him that may be taken in our Senate and House of +Representatives, even in the White House and Department of State. + +For the last two years Chester A. Beatty has been visiting Leopold +at Belgium, and has obtained the two concessions, and Leopold has +obtained, or hopes he has obtained, the influence of many American +shareholders. The fact that the people of the United States +possessed no "vested interest" in the Congo was the important fact +that placed any action on our part in behalf of that distressed +country above suspicion. If we acted, we did so because the United +States, as one of the signatory Powers of the Berlin Act, had +promised to protect the natives of the Congo; and we could truly +claim that we acted only in the name of humanity. Leopold has now +robbed us of that claim. He hopes that the enormous power wielded by +the Americans with whom he is associated, will prevent any action +against him in this country. + +But the deal has already been made public, and the motives of those +who now oppose improvement of conditions in the Congo, and who +support Leopold, will be at once suspected. + +To me the most interesting thing about the tract of land ceded to +Mr. Ryan, apart from the number of hippopotamuses I saw on it, was +that the people living along the Congo say that it is of no value. +They told me that two years ago, after working it for some time, +Leopold abandoned it as unprofitable, and they added that, when +Leopold cannot whip rubber out of the forest, it is hard to believe +that it can be obtained there legitimately by any one else. On the +bank I saw the "factories" to which the unprofitable rubber had been +carried from the interior. They had formerly belonged to Leopold, +now they are the property of Mr. Ryan and of the American Congo +Company. In only two years they already are in ruins, and the jungle +has engulfed them. + +I was on the land owned by the company a dozen times or more, but I +did not go into the interior. Even had I done so, I am not an expert +on rubber, and would have understood nothing of Para trees, Lagos +silk, and liane. I am speaking not of my own knowledge, only of what +was told me by people who live on the spot. I found that this +particular concession was well known, because, unlike the land given +to the Forestry and Mines Company, it is not an inaccessible tract, +but is situated only eight miles from Leopoldville. In our language, +that is about as far as is the Battery to 160th Street. Leopoldville +is the chief place on the Congo River, and every one there who spoke +to me of the concession knew where it was situated, and repeated +that it had been given up by Leopold as unprofitable, and that he +had unloaded it on Mr. Ryan. They seem to think it very clever of +the King to have got rid of it to the American millionaire. To one +knowing Mr. Ryan only from what he reads of him in the public press, +he does not seem to be the sort of man to whom Leopold could sell a +worthless rubber plantation. However, it is a matter which concerns +only Mr. Ryan and those who may think of purchasing shares in the +company. The Guggenheims, who are to operate this rubber, say that +Leopold did not know how to get out the full value of the land, and +that they, by using the machinery they will install, will be able to +make a profit, where Leopold, using only native labor, suffered a +loss. + +To the poor the ways of the truly rich are past finding out. After a +man has attained a fortune sufficient to keep him in yachts and +automobiles, one would think he could afford to indulge himself in +the luxury of being squeamish; that as to where he obtained any +further increase of wealth, he would prefer to pick and choose. + +On the contrary, these Americans go as far out of their way as +Belgium to make a partner of the man who has wrung his money from +wretched slaves, who were beaten, starved, and driven in chains. +This concession cannot make them rich. It can only make them richer. +And not richer in fact, for all the money they may whip out of the +Congo could not give them one thing that they cannot now command, +not an extra taste to the lips, not a fresh sensation, not one added +power for good. To them it can mean only a figure in ink on a page +of a bank-book. But what suffering, what misery it may mean to the +slaves who put it there! Why should men as rich as these elect to go +into partnership with one who sweats his dollars out of the naked +black? How really fine, how really wonderful it would be if these +same men, working together, decided to set free these twenty million +people--if, instead of joining hands with Leopold, they would +overthrow him and march into the Congo free men, without his chain +around their ankles, and open it to the trade of the world, and give +justice and a right to live and to work and to sell and buy to +millions of miserable human beings. These Americans working together +could do it. They could do it from Washington. Or five hundred men +with two Maxim guns could do it. The "kingdom" of the Congo is only +a house of cards. Five hundred filibusters could take Boma, proclaim +the Congo open to the traders of the world, as the Act of Berlin +declares it to be, and in a day make of Leopold the jest of Europe. +They would only be taking possession of what has always belonged to +them. + +Down in the Congo I talked to many young officers of Leopold's army. +They had been driven to serve him by the whips of failure, poverty, +or crime. I do not know that the American concessionaires are driven +by any such scourge. These younger men, who saw the depths of their +degradation, who tasted the dirty work they were doing, were daily +risking life by fever, through lack of food, by poisoned arrows, +and for three hundred dollars a year. Their necessity was great. +They had the courage of their failure. They were men one could pity. +One of them picked at the band of blue and gold braid around the +wrist of his tunic, and said: "Look, it is our badge of shame." + +To me those foreign soldiers of fortune, who, sooner than starve at +home or go to jail, serve Leopold in the jungle, seem more like men +and brothers than these truly rich, who, of their own free will, +safe in their downtown offices, become partners with this blackguard +King. + +What will be the outcome of the American advance into the Congo? +Will it prove the salvation of the Congo? Will it be, if that were +possible, a greater evil? + +E.R. Morel, who is the leader in England of the movement for the +improvement of the Congo, has written: "It is a little difficult to +imagine that the trust magnates are moulded upon the unique model of +Leopold II, and are prepared for the asking to become associates in +slave-driving. The trouble is that they probably know nothing about +African conditions, that they have been primed by the King with his +detestable theories, and are starting their enterprises on the basis +that the natives of Central Africa must be regarded as mere +'laborers' for the white man's benefit, possessing no rights in land +nor in the produce of the soil. If Mr. Ryan and his colleagues are +going to acquire their rubber over four thousand square miles, by +'commercial methods,' we welcome their advent. But we would point +out to them that, in such a case, they had better at once abandon +all idea of three or four hundred per cent dividends with which the +wily autocrat at Brussels has doubtless primed them. No such +monstrous profits are to be acquired in tropical Africa under a +trade system. If, on the other hand, the methods they are prepared +to adopt are the methods King Leopold and his other concessionaires +have adopted for the past thirteen years, devastation and +destruction, and the raising of more large bodies of soldiers, are +their essential accompaniments; and the widening of the area of the +Congo hell is assured." + +The two things in the American invasion of the Congo that promise +good to that unhappy country are that our country is represented at +Boma by a most intelligent, honest, and fearless young man in the +person of James A. Smith, our Consul-General, and that the actual +work of operating the mines and rubber is in the hands of the +Guggenheims. They are well known as men upright in affairs, and as +philanthropists and humanitarians of the common-sense type. Like +other rich men of their race, they have given largely to charity and +to assist those less fortunate than themselves. + +For thirteen years in mines in Mexico, in China, and Alaska, they +have had to deal with the problem of labor, and they have met it +successfully. Workmen of three nationalities they have treated with +fairness. + +"Why should you suppose," Mr. Daniel Guggenheim asked me, "that in +the Congo we will treat the negroes harshly? In Mexico we found the +natives ill-paid and ill-fed. We fed them and paid them well. Not +from any humanitarian idea, but because it was good business. It is +not good business to cut off a workman's hands or head. We are not +ashamed of the way we have always treated our workmen, and in the +Congo we are not going to spoil our record." + +I suggested that in Mexico he did not have as his partner Leopold, +tempting him with slave labor, and that the distance from Broadway +to his concessions in the Congo was so great that as to what his +agents might do there he could not possibly know. To this Mr. +Guggenheim answered that "Neither Leopold nor anyone else can +dictate how we shall treat the native labor," that if his agents +were cruel they would be instantly dismissed, and that for what +occurred in the Congo on the land occupied by the American Congo +Company his brothers and himself alone were responsible, and that +they accepted that responsibility. + +But already on his salary list he has men who are sure to get him +into trouble, men of whose _dossiers_ he is quite ignorant. + +From Belgium, Leopold has unloaded on the American companies several +of his "valets du roi," press agents, and tools, men who for years +have been defenders of his dirty work in the Congo; and of the +Americans, one, who is prominently exploited by the Belgians, had +to leave Africa for theft. + +That Mr. Guggenheim wishes and intends to give to the black in the +Congo fair treatment there is no possible doubt. But that on +Broadway, removed from the scene of operations in time some four to +six months, and in actual distance eight thousand miles, he can +control the acts of his agents and his partners, remains to be +proved. He is attacking a problem much more momentous than the +handling of Mexican _peons_ or Chinese coolies, and every step of +the working out of this problem will be watched by the people of +this country. + +And should they find that the example of the Belgian concessionaires +in their treatment of the natives is being imitated by even one of +the American Congo Company the people of this country will know it, +and may the Lord have mercy on his soul! + + + + +V + +HUNTING THE HIPPO + + +Except once or twice in the Zoo, I never had seen a hippopotamus, +and I was most anxious, before I left the Congo, to meet one. I +wanted to look at him when he was free, and his own master, without +iron bars or keepers; when he believed he was quite alone, and was +enjoying his bath in peace and confidence. I also wanted to shoot +him, and to hang in my ancestral halls his enormous head with the +great jaws open and the inside of them painted pink and the small +tusks hungrily protruding. I had this desire, in spite of the fact +that for every hippo except the particular one whose head I coveted, +I entertained the utmost good feeling. + +As a lad, among other beasts the hippopotamus had appealed to my +imagination. Collectively, I had always looked upon them as most +charming people. They come of an ancient family. Two thousand four +hundred years ago they were mentioned by Herodotus. And Herodotus to +the animal kingdom is what Domesday Book is to the landed gentry. To +exist beautifully for twenty-four hundred years without a single +mesalliance, without having once stooped to trade, is certainly a +strong title to nobility. Other animals by contact with man have +become degraded. The lion, the "King of Beasts," now rides a +bicycle, and growls, as previously rehearsed, at the young woman in +spangles, of whom he is secretly afraid. And the elephant, the +monarch of the jungle, and of a family as ancient and noble as that +of the hippopotamus, the monarch of the river, has become a beast of +burden and works for his living. You can see him in Phoenix Park +dragging a road-roller, in Siam and India carrying logs, and at +Coney Island he bends the knee to little girls from Brooklyn. The +royal proboscis, that once uprooted trees, now begs for peanuts. + +But, you never see a hippopotamus chained to a road-roller, or +riding a bicycle. He is still the gentleman, the man of elegant +leisure, the aristocrat of aristocrats, harming no one, and, in his +ancestral river, living the simple life. + +And yet, I sought to kill him. At least, one of him, but only one. +And, that I did not kill even one, while a bitter disappointment, is +still a source of satisfaction. + +In the Congo River we saw only two hippos, and both of them were +dead. They had been shot from a steamer. If the hippo is killed in +the water, it is impossible to recover the body at once. It sinks +and does not rise, some say, for an hour, others say for seven +hours. As in an hour the current may have carried the body four +miles below where it sank, the steamer does not wait, and the +destruction of the big beast is simple murder. There should be a law +in the Congo to prevent their destruction, and, no doubt, if the +State thought it could make a few francs out of protecting the +hippo, as it makes many million francs by preserving the elephant, +which it does for the ivory, such a law would exist. We soon saw +many hippos, but although we could not persuade the only other +passenger not to fire at them, there are a few hippos still alive in +the Congo. For, the only time the Captain and I were positive he +hit anything, was when he fired over our heads and blew off the roof +of the bridge. + +When first we saw the two dead hippos, one of them was turning and +twisting so violently that we thought he was alive. But, as we drew +near, we saw the strange convulsions were due to two enormous and +ugly crocodiles, who were fiercely pulling at the body. Crocodiles +being man-eaters, we had no feelings about shooting them, either in +the water or up a tree; and I hope we hit them. In any event, after +we fired the body drifted on in peace. + +On my return trip, going with the stream, when the boat covers about +four times the distance she makes when steaming against it, I saw +many hippos. In one day I counted sixty-nine. But on our way up the +Congo, until we turned into the Kasai River, we saw none. + +So, on the first night we camped in the Kasai I had begun to think I +never would see one, and I went ashore both skeptical and +discouraged. We had stopped, not at a wood post, but at a place on +the river's bank previously untouched by man, where there was a +stretch of beach, and then a higher level with trees and tall +grasses. Driven deep in this beach were the footprints of a large +elephant. They looked as though some one had amused himself by +sinking a bucket in the mud, and then pulling it out. For sixty +yards I followed the holes and finally lost them in a confusion of +other tracks. The place had been so trampled upon that it was beaten +into a basin. It looked as though every animal in the Kasai had met +there to hold a dance. There were the deep imprints of the hippos +and the round foot of the elephant, with the marks of the big toes +showing as clearly as though they had been scooped out of the mud +with a trowel, the hoofs of buffalo as large as the shoe of a cart +horse, and the arrow-like marks of the antelope, some in dainty +little Vs, others measuring three inches across, and three inches +from the base to the point. They came from every direction, down the +bank and out of the river; and crossed and recrossed, and beneath +the fresh prints that had been made that morning at sunrise, were +those of days before rising up sharply out of the sun-dried clay, +like bas-reliefs in stucco. I had gone ashore in a state of mind so +skeptical that I was as surprised as Crusoe at the sight of +footprints. It was as though the boy who did not believe in fairies +suddenly stumbled upon them sliding down the moonbeams. One felt +distinctly apologetic--as though uninvited he had pushed himself +into a family gathering. At the same time there was the excitement +of meeting in their own homes the strange peoples I had seen only in +the springtime, when the circus comes to New York, in the basement +of Madison Square Garden, where they are our pitiful prisoners, +bruising their shoulders against bars. Here they were monarchs of +all they surveyed. I was the intruder; and, looking down at the +marks of the great paws and delicate hoofs, I felt as much out of +place as would a grizzly bear in a Fifth Avenue club. And I behaved +much as would the grizzly bear. I rushed back for my rifle intent on +killing something. + +The sun had just set; the moon was shining faintly: it was the +moment the beasts of the jungle came to the river to drink. Anfossi, +although he had spent three years in the Congo and had three years' +contract still to work out, was as determined to kill something as +was the tenderfoot from New York. + +Sixty yards from the stern of the _Deliverance_ was the basin I had +discovered; at an equal distance from her bow, a stream plunged into +the river. Anfossi argued the hippos would prefer to drink the clear +water of the stream, to the muddy water of the basin, and elected to +watch at the stream. I carried a deck chair to the edge of my basin +and placed it in the shadow of the trees. Anfossi went into our +cabin for his rifle. At that exact moment a hippopotamus climbed +leisurely out of the river and plunged into the stream. One of the +soldiers on shore saw him and rushed for the boat. Anfossi sent my +boy on the jump for me and, like a gentleman, waited until I had +raced the sixty yards. But when we reached the stream there was +nothing visible but the trampled grass and great holes in the mud +and near us in the misty moonlight river something that puffed and +blew slowly and luxuriously, as would any fat gentleman who had been +forced to run for it. Had I followed Anfossi's judgment and gone +along the bank sixty yards ahead, instead of sixty yards astern of +the _Deliverance_, at the exact moment at which I sank into my deck +chair, the hippo would have emerged at my feet. It is even betting +as to which of us would have been the more scared. + +The next day, and for days after, we saw nothing but hippos. We saw +them floating singly and in family groups, with generally four or +five cows to one bull, and sometimes in front a baby hippo no larger +than a calf, which the mother with her great bulk would push against +the swift current, as you see a tugboat in the lee of a great liner. +Once, what I thought was a spit of rocks suddenly tumbled apart and +became twenty hippos, piled more or less on top of each other. +During that one day, as they floated with the current, enjoying +their afternoon's nap, we saw thirty-four. They impressed me as the +most idle, and, therefore, the most aristocratic of animals. They +toil not, neither do they spin; they had nothing to do but float in +the warm water and the bright sunshine; their only effort was to +open their enormous jaws and yawn luxuriously, in the pure content +of living, in absolute boredom. They reminded you only of fat gouty +old gentlemen, puffing and blowing in the pool at the Warm Springs. + +The next chance we had at one of them on shore came on our first +evening in the Kasai just before sunset. Captain Jensen was steering +for a flat island of sand and grass where he meant to tie up for the +night. About fifty yards from the spot for which we were making, was +the only tree on the island, and under it with his back to us, and +leisurely eating the leaves of the lower branches, exactly as though +he were waiting for us by appointment, was a big gray hippo. His +back being toward us, we could not aim at his head, and he could not +see us. But the _Deliverance_ is not noiseless, and, hearing the +paddle-wheel, the hippo turned, saw us, and bolted for the river. +The hippopotamus is as much at home in the water as the seal. To get +to the water, if he is surprised out of it, and to get under it, if +he is alarmed while in it, is instinct. If he does venture ashore, +he goes only a few rods from the bank and then only to forage. His +home is the river, and he rushes to bury himself in it as naturally +as the squirrel makes for a tree. This particular hippo ran for the +river as fast as a horse coming at a slow trot. He was a very badly +scared hippo. His head was high in the air, his fat sides were +shaking, and the one little eye turned toward us was filled with +concern. Behind him the yellow sun was setting into the lagoons. On +the flat stretch of sand he was the only object, and against the +horizon loomed as large as a freight car. That must be why we both +missed him. I tried to explain that the reason I missed him was +that, never before having seen so large an animal running for his +life, I could not watch him do it and look at the gun sights. No one +believed that was why I missed him. I did not believe it myself. In +any event neither of us hit his head, and he plunged down the bank +to freedom, carrying most of the bank with him. But, while we still +were violently blaming each other, at about two hundred yards below +the boat, he again waddled out of the river and waded knee deep up +the little stream. Keeping the bunches of grass between us, I ran up +the beach, aimed at his eye and this time hit him fairly enough. +With a snort he rose high in the air, and so, for an instant, +balanced his enormous bulk. The action was like that of a horse +that rears on his hind legs, when he is whipped over the nose. And +apparently my bullet hurt him no more than the whip the horse, for +he dropped heavily to all fours, and again disappeared into the +muddy river. Our disappointment and chagrin were intense, and at +once Anfossi and I organized a hunt for that evening. To encourage +us, while we were sitting on the bridge making a hasty dinner, +another hippopotamus had the impertinence to rise, blowing like a +whale, not ten feet from where we sat. We could have thrown our tin +cups and hit him; but he was in the water, and now we were seeking +only those on land. + + [Illustration: Mr. Davis and Native "Boy," on the Kasai River.] + +Two years ago when the atrocities along the Kasai made the natives +fear the white man and the white man fear the natives, each of the +river boats was furnished with a stand of Albini rifles. Three of +the black soldiers, who were keen sportsmen, were served with these +muskets, and as soon as the moon rose, the soldiers and Anfossi, my +black boy, with an extra gun, and I set forth to clear the island of +hippos. To the stranger it was a most curious hunt. The island was +perfectly flat and bare, and the river had eaten into it and +overflowed it with tiny rivulets and deep, swift-running streams. +Into these rivulets and streams the soldiers plunged, one in front, +feeling the depth of the water with a sounding rod, and as he led we +followed. The black men made a splendid picture. They were naked but +for breech-cloths, and the moonlight flashed on their wet skins and +upon the polished barrels of the muskets. But, as a sporting +proposition, as far as I could see, we had taken on the hippopotamus +at his own game. We were supposed to be on an island, but the water +was up to our belts and running at five miles an hour. I could not +understand why we had not openly and aboveboard walked into the +river. Wading waist high in the water with a salmon rod I could +understand, but not swimming around in a river with a gun. The force +of the shallowest stream was the force of the great river behind it, +and wherever you put your foot, the current, on its race to the sea, +annoyed at the impediment, washed the sand from under the sole of +your foot and tugged at your knees and ankles. To add to the +interest the three soldiers held their muskets at full cock, and as +they staggered for a footing each pointed his gun at me. There also +was a strange fish about the size of an English sole that sprang out +of the water and hurled himself through space. Each had a white +belly, and as they skimmed past us in the moonlight it was as though +some one was throwing dinner plates. After we had swum the length of +the English Channel, we returned to the boat. As to that midnight +hunt I am still uncertain as to whether we were hunting the hippos +or the hippos were hunting us. + +The next morning we had our third and last chance at a hippo. + +It is distinctly a hard-luck story. We had just gone on the bridge +for breakfast when we saw him walking slowly from us along an island +of white sand as flat as your hand, and on which he loomed large as +a haystack. Captain Jensen was a true sportsman. He jerked the bell +to the engine-room, and at full speed the _Deliverance_ raced for +the shore. The hippo heard us, and, like a baseball player caught +off base, tried to get back to the river. Captain Jensen danced on +the deck plates: + +"Schoot it! schoot it!" he yelled, "Gotfurdamn! schoot it!" When +Anfossi and I fired, the _Deliverance_ was a hundred yards from the +hippo, and the hippo was not five feet from the bank. In another +instant, he would have been over it and safe. But when we fired, he +went down as suddenly as though a safe had dropped on him. Except +that he raised his head, and rolled it from side to side, he +remained perfectly still. From his actions, or lack of actions, it +looked as though one of the bullets had broken his back; and when +the blacks saw he could not move they leaped and danced and +shrieked. To them the death of the big beast promised much chop. + +But Captain Jensen was not so confident. "Schoot it," he continued +to shout, "we lose him yet! Gotfurdamn! schoot it!" + +My gun was an American magazine rifle, holding five cartridges. We +now were very near the hippo, and I shot him in the head twice, and, +once, when he opened them, in the jaws. At each shot his head would +jerk with a quick toss of pain, and at the sight the blacks screamed +with delight that was primitively savage. After the last shot, when +Captain Jensen had brought the _Deliverance_ broadside to the bank, +the hippo ceased to move. The boat had not reached the shore before +the boys with the steel hawser were in the water; the gangplank was +run out, and the black soldiers and wood boys, with their knives, +were dancing about the hippo and hacking at his tail. Their idea was +to make him the more quickly bleed to death. I ran to the cabin for +more cartridges. It seemed an absurd precaution. I was as sure I had +the head of that hippo as I was sure that my own was still on my +neck. My only difficulty was whether to hang the head in the front +hall or in the dining-room. It might be rather too large for the +dining-room. That was all that troubled me. After three minutes, +when I was back on deck, the hippo still lay immovable. Certainly +twenty men were standing about him; three were sawing off his tail, +and the women were chanting triumphantly a song they used to sing in +the days when the men were allowed to hunt, and had returned +successful with food. + +On the bridge was Anfossi with his camera. Before the men had +surrounded the hippo he had had time to snap one picture of it. I +had just started after my camera, when from the blacks there was a +yell of alarm, of rage, and amazement. The hippo had opened his +eyes and raised his head. I shoved the boys out of the way, and, +putting the gun close to his head, fired pointblank. I wanted to put +him out of pain. I need not have distressed myself. The bullet +affected him no more than a quinine pill. What seemed chiefly to +concern him, what apparently had brought him back to life, was the +hacking at his tail. That was an indignity he could not brook. + +His expression, and he had a perfectly human expression, was one of +extreme annoyance and of some slight alarm, as though he were +muttering: "This is no place for _me_," and, without more ado, he +began to roll toward the river. Without killing some one, I could +not again use the rifle. The boys were close upon him, prying him +back with the gangplank, beating him with sticks of firewood, trying +to rope him with the steel hawser. On the bridge Captain Jensen and +Anfossi were giving orders in Danish and Italian, and on the bank I +swore in American. Everybody shoved and pushed and beat at the great +bulk, and the great bulk rolled steadily on. We might as well have +tried to budge the Fifth Avenue Hotel. He reached the bank, he +crushed it beneath him, and, like a suspension bridge, splashed into +the water. Even then, we who watched him thought he would stick fast +between the boat and the bank, that the hawser would hold him. But +he sank like a submarine, and we stood gaping at the muddy water and +saw him no more. When I recovered from my first rage I was glad he +was still alive to float in the sun and puff and blow and open his +great jaws in a luxurious yawn. I could imagine his joining his +friends after his meeting with us, and remarking in reference to our +bullets: "I find the mosquitoes are quite bad this morning." + +With this chapter is published the photograph Anfossi took, from the +deck of the steamer, of our hippo--the hippo that was too stupid to +know when he was dead. It is not a good photograph, but of our hippo +it is all we have to show. I am still undecided whether to hang it +in the hall or the dining-room. + + [Illustration: The Hippopotamus that Did Not Know He Was Dead.] + +The days I spent on my trip up the river were of delightful +sameness, sunshine by day, with the great panorama drifting past, +and quiet nights of moonlight. For diversion, there were many +hippos, crocodiles, and monkeys, and, though we saw only their +tracks and heard them only in the jungle, great elephants. And +innumerable strange birds--egrets, eagles, gray parrots, crimson +cranes, and giant flamingoes--as tall as a man and from tip to tip +measuring eight feet. + +Each day the programme was the same. The arrival at the wood post, +where we were given only excuses and no wood, and where once or +twice we unloaded blue cloth and bags of salt, which is the currency +of the Upper Congo, and the halt for hours to cut wood in the +forest. + +Once we stopped at a mission and noted the contrast it made with the +bare, unkempt posts of the State. It was the Catholic mission at +Wombali, and it was a beauty spot of flowers, thatched houses, +grass, and vegetables. There was a brickyard, and schools, and +sewing-machines, and the blacks, instead of scowling at us, nodded +and smiled and looked happy and contented. The Father was a great +red-bearded giant, who seemed to have still stored up in him all the +energy of the North. While the steamer was unloaded he raced me +over the vegetable garden and showed me his farm. I had seen other +of the Catholic Missions, and I spoke of how well they looked, of +the signs they gave of hard work, and of consideration for the +blacks. + +"I am not of that Order," the Father said gravely. He was speaking +in English, and added, as though he expected some one to resent it: +"We are Jesuits." No one resented it, and he added: "We have our +Order in your country. Do you know Fordham College?" + +Did I know it? If you are trying to find our farm, the automobile +book tells you to leave Fordham College on your left after Jerome +Avenue. + +"Of course, I know it," I said. "They have one of the best baseball +nines near New York; they play the Giants every spring." + +The Reverend Father started. + +"They play with Giants!" he gasped. + +I did not know how to say "baseball nines" in French, but at least +he was assured that whatever it was, it was one of the best near New +York. + +Then Captain Jensen's little black boy ran up to tell me the +steamer was waiting, and began in Bangalese to beg something of the +Father. The priest smiled and left us, returning with a rosary and +crucifix, which the boy hung round his neck, and then knelt, and the +red-bearded Father laid his fingers on the boy's kinky head. He was +a very happy boy over his new possession, and it was much coveted by +all the others. One of the black mammies, to ward off evil from the +little naked baby at her breast, offered an arm's length of blue +cloth for "the White Man's fetish." + + [Illustration: The Jesuit Brothers at the Wombali Mission.] + +My voyage up the Kasai ended at Dima, the headquarters of the Kasai +Concession. I had been told that at Dima I would find a rubber +plantation, and I had gone there to see it. I found that the +plantation was four days distant, and that the boat for the +plantation did not start for six days. I also had been told by the +English missionaries at Dima, that I would find an American mission. +When I reached Dima I learned that the American mission was at a +station further up the river, which could not be reached sooner than +a month. That is the sort of information upon which in the Congo +one is forced to regulate his movements. As there was at Dima +neither mission nor plantation, and as the only boat that would +leave it in ten days was departing the next morning, I remained +there only one night. It was a place cut out of the jungle, two +hundred yards square, and of all stations I saw in the Congo, the +best managed. It is the repair shop for the steamers belonging to +the Kasai Concession, as well as the headquarters of the company and +the residence of the director, M. Dryepoint. He and Van Damme seemed +to be the most popular officials in the Congo. M. Dryepoint was up +the river, so I did not meet him, but I was most courteously and +hospitably entertained by M. Fumiere. He gave me a whole house to +myself, and personally showed me over his small kingdom. All the +houses were of brick, and the paths and roads were covered with +gravel and lined with flowers. Nothing in the Congo is more curious +than this pretty town of suburban villas and orderly machine shops; +with the muddy river for a street and the impenetrable jungle for a +back yard. The home of the director at Dima is the proud boast of +the entire Congo. And all they say of it is true. It did have a +billiard table and ice, and a piano, and M. Fumiere invited me to +join his friends at an excellent dinner. In furnishing this +celebrated house, the idea had apparently been to place in it the +things one would least expect to find in the jungle, or, without +wishing to be ungracious, anywhere. So, although there are no women +at Dima, there are great mirrors in brass frames, chandeliers of +glass with festoons and pendants of glass, metal lamps with shades +of every color, painted plaster statuettes and carved silk-covered +chairs. In the red glow of the lamps, surrounded by these Belgian +atrocities, M. Fumiere sat down to the pianola. The heat of Africa +filled the room; on one side we could have touched the jungle, on +the other in the river the hippopotamus puffed and snorted. M. +Fumiere pulled out the stops, and upon the heat and silence of the +night, floated the "Evening Star," Mascagni's "Intermezzo," and +"Chin-chin Chinaman." + +Next morning I left for Leopoldville in a boat much larger than the +_Deliverance_, but with none of her cheer or good-fellowship. This +boat was run by the black wife of the captain. Trailing her velvet +gown, and cleaning her teeth with a stick of wood, she penetrated to +every part of the steamer, making discipline impossible and driving +the crew out of control. + +I was glad to escape at Kinchassa to the clean and homelike bungalow +and beautiful gardens of the only Englishman still in the employ of +the State, Mr. Cuthbert Malet, who gave me hospitably of his scanty +store of "Scotch," and, what was even more of a sacrifice, of his +precious handful of eggs. A week later I was again in Boma, waiting +for the _Nigeria_ to take me back to Liverpool. + +Before returning to the West Coast and leaving the subject of the +Congo, I wish to testify to what seemed to me the enormously +important work that is being done by the missionaries. I am not +always an admirer of the missionary. Some of those one meets in +China and Japan seem to be taking much more interest in their own +bodies than in the souls of others. But, in the Congo, almost the +only people who are working in behalf of the natives are those +attached to the missions. Because they bear witness against Leopold, +much is said by his hired men and press agents against them. But +they are deserving of great praise. Some of them are narrow and +bigoted, and one could wish they were much more tolerant of their +white brothers in exile, but compared with the good they do, these +faults count for nothing. It is due to them that Europe and the +United States know the truth about the Congo. They were the first to +bear witness, and the hazardous work they still are doing for their +fellow men is honest, practical Christianity. + + + + +VI + +OLD CALABAR + + +While I was up the Congo and the Kasai rivers, Mrs. Davis had +remained at Boma, and when I rejoined her, we booked passage home on +the _Nigeria_. We chose the _Nigeria_, which is an Elder-Dempster +freight and passenger steamer, in preference to the fast mail +steamer because of the ports of the West Coast we wished to see as +many as possible. And, on her six weeks' voyage to Liverpool, the +_Nigeria_ promised to spend as much time at anchor as at sea. On the +Coast it is a more serious matter to reserve a cabin than in New +York. You do not stop at an uptown office, and on a diagram of the +ship's insides, as though you were playing roulette, point at a +number. Instead, as you are to occupy your cabin, not for one, but +for six, weeks, you search, as vigilantly as a navy officer looking +for contraband, the ship herself and each cabin. + +But going aboard was a simple ceremony. The Hotel Splendide stands +on the bank of the Congo River. After saying "Good-by" to her +proprietor, I walked to the edge of the water and waved my helmet. +In the Congo, a white man standing in the sun without a hat is a +spectacle sufficiently thrilling to excite the attention of all, and +at once Captain Hughes of the _Nigeria_ sent a cargo boat to the +rescue, and on the shoulders of naked Kroo boys Mrs. Davis and the +maid, and the trunks, spears, tents, bathtubs, carved idols, native +mats, and a live mongoos were dropped into it, and we were paddled +to the gangway. + +"If that's all, we might as well get under way," said Captain +Hughes. The anchor chains creaked, from the bank the proprietor of +the Splendide waved his hand, and the long voyage to Liverpool had +begun. It was as casual as halting and starting a cable-car. + +According to schedule, after leaving the Congo, we should have gone +south and touched at Loanda. But on this voyage, outward bound, the +_Nigeria_ had carried, to help build the railroad at Lobito Bay, a +deckload of camels. They had proved trying passengers, and instead +of first touching at the Congo, Captain Hughes had continued on +south and put them ashore. So we were robbed of seeing both Loanda +and the camels. + +This line, until Calabar is reached, carries but few passengers, +and, except to receive cargo, the ship is not fully in commission. +During this first week she is painted, and holystoned, her carpets +are beaten, her cabins scrubbed and aired, and the passengers mess +with the officers. So, of the ship's life, we acquired an intimate +knowledge, her interests became our own, and the necessity of +feeding her gaping holds with cargo was personal and acute. On a +transatlantic steamer, when once the hatches are down, the captain +need think only of navigation; on these coasters, the hatches never +are down, and the captain, that sort of captain dear to the heart of +the owners, is the man who fills the holds. + +A skipper going ashore to drum up trade was a novel spectacle. +Imagine the captain of one of the Atlantic greyhounds prying among +the warehouses on West Street, demanding of the merchants: +"Anything going my way, this trip?" He would scorn to do it. Before +his passengers have passed the custom officers, he is in mufti, and +on his way to his villa on Brooklyn Heights, or to the Lambs Club, +and until the Blue Peter is again at the fore, little he cares for +passengers, mails, or cargo. But the captain of a "coaster" must be +sailor and trader, too. He is expected to navigate a coast, the +latest chart of which is dated somewhere near 1830, and at which the +waves rush in walls of spray, sometimes as high as a three-story +house. He must speak all the known languages of Europe, and all the +unknown tongues of innumerable black brothers. At each port he must +entertain out of his own pocket the agents of all the trading +houses, and, in his head, he must keep the market price, "when laid +down in Liverpool," of mahogany, copra, copal, rubber, palm oil, and +ivory. To see that the agent has not overlooked a few bags of ground +nuts, or a dozen puncheons of oil, he must go on shore and peer into +the compound of each factory, and on board he must keep peace +between the Kroo boys and the black deck passengers, and see that +the white passengers with a temperature of 105, do not drink more +than is good for them. At least, those are a few of the duties the +captains on the ships controlled by Sir Alfred Jones, who is Elder +and Dempster, are expected to perform. No wonder Sir Alfred is +popular. + +Our first port of call was Landana, in Portuguese territory, but two +ships of the Woermann Line were there ahead of us and had gobbled up +all the freight. So we could but up anchor and proceed to +Libreville, formerly the capital of the French Congo. At five in the +morning by the light of a ship's lantern, we were paddled ashore to +drum up trade. We found two traders, Ives and Thomas, who had +waiting for the _Nigeria_ at the mouth of the Gabun River six +hundred logs of mahogany, and, in consequence, there was general +rejoicing, and Scotch and "sparklets," and even music from a German +music-box that would burst into song only after it had been fed with +a copper. One of the clerks said that Ives had forgotten how to +extract the coppers and in consequence was using the music-box as a +savings bank. + +In the French Congo the natives are permitted to trade; in the +Congo Free State they are not, or, rather, they have nothing with +which to trade, and the contrast between the empty "factories" of +the Congo and those of Libreville, crowded with natives buying and +selling, was remarkable. There also was a conspicuous difference in +the quality and variety of the goods. In Leopold's Congo "trade" +goods is a term of contempt. It describes articles manufactured only +for those who have no choice and must accept whatever is offered. +When your customers must take what you please to give them the +quality of your goods is likely to deteriorate. Salt of the poorest +grade, gaudy fabrics that neither "wear" nor "wash," bars of coarse +soap (the native is continually washing his single strip of cloth), +and axe-heads made of iron, are what Leopold thinks are a fair +exchange for the forced labor of the black. + +But the articles I found in the factories in Libreville were what, +in the Congo, are called "white man's goods" and were of excellent +quality and in great variety. There were even French novels and +cigars. Some of the latter, called the Young American on account of +the name and the flag on the lid, tempted me, until I saw they were +manufactured by Dusseldorffer and Vanderswassen, and one suspected +Rotterdam. + +In Ives's factory I saw for the first time a "trade" rifle, or Tower +musket. In the vernacular of the Coast, they are "gas-pipe" guns. +They are put together in England, and to a white man are a most +terrifying weapon. The original Tower muskets, such as, in the days +of '76, were hung over the fireplace of the forefathers of the Sons +of the Revolution, were manufactured in England, and stamped with +the word "Tower," and for the reigning king G.R. I suppose at that +date at the Tower of London there was an arsenal; but I am ready to +be corrected. To-day the guns are manufactured at Birmingham, but +they still have the flint lock, and still are stamped with the word +"Tower" and the royal crown over the letters G.R., and with the +arrow which is supposed to mark the property of the government. The +barrel is three feet four inches long, and the bore is that of an +artesian well. The native fills four inches of this cavity with +powder and the remaining three feet with rusty nails, barbed wire, +leaden slugs, and the legs and broken parts of iron pots. An officer +of the W.A.F.F.'s, in a fight in the bush in South Nigeria, had one +of these things fired at him from a distance of fifteen feet. He +told me all that saved him was that when the native pulled the +trigger the recoil of the gun "kicked" the muzzle two feet in the +air and the native ten feet into the bush. I bought a Tower rifle at +the trade price, a pound, and brought it home. But although my +friends have offered to back either end of the gun as being the more +destructive, we have found no one with a sufficient sporting spirit +to determine the point. + +Libreville is a very pretty town, but when it was laid out the +surveyors just missed placing the Equator in its main street. It is +easy to understand why with such a live wire in the vicinity +Libreville is warm. From the same cause it also is rich in flowers, +vines, and trees growing in generous, undisciplined abundance, +making of Libreville one vast botanical garden, and burying the town +and its bungalows under screens of green and branches of scarlet +and purple flowers. Close to the surf runs an avenue bordered by +giant cocoanut palms and, after the sun is down, this is the +fashionable promenade. Here every evening may be seen in their +freshest linen the six married white men of Libreville, and, in the +latest Paris frocks, the six married ladies, while from the verandas +of the factories that line the sea front and from under the paper +lanterns of the Cafe Guion the clerks and traders sip their absinthe +and play dominoes, and cast envious glances at the six fortunate +fellow exiles. + +For several days we lay a few miles south of Libreville, off the +mouth of the Gabun River, taking in the logs of mahogany. It was a +continuous performance of the greatest interest. I still do not +understand why all those engaged in it were not drowned, or pounded +to a pulp. Just before we touched at the Gabun River, two tramp +steamers, chartered by Americans, carried off a full cargo of this +mahogany to the States. It was an experiment the result of which the +traders of Libreville are awaiting with interest. The mahogany that +the reader sees in America probably comes from Hayti, Cuba, or +Belize, and is of much finer quality than that of the Gabun River, +which latter is used for making what the trade calls "fancy" +cigar-boxes and cheap furniture. But before it becomes a cigar-box +it passes through many adventures. Weeks before the steamer arrives +the trader, followed by his black boys, explores the jungle and +blazes the trees. Then the boys cut trails through the forest, and, +using logs for rollers, drag and push the tree trunks to the bank of +the river. There the tree is cut into huge cubes, weighing about a +ton, and measuring twelve to fifteen feet in length and three feet +across each face. A boy can "shape" one of these logs in a day. + +Although his pay varies according to whether the tributaries of the +river are full or low, so making the moving of the logs easy or +difficult, he can earn about three pounds ten shillings a month, +paid in cash. Compared with the eighty cents a month paid only a few +miles away in the Congo Free State, and in "trade" goods, these are +good wages. When the log is shaped the mark of the trader is branded +on it with an iron, just as we brand cattle, and it is turned loose +on the river. At the mouth of the river there is little danger of +the log escaping, for the waves are stronger than the tide, and +drive the logs upon the shore. There, in the surf, we found these +tons of mahogany pounding against each other. In the ship's +steam-launch were iron chains, a hundred yards long, to which, at +intervals, were fastened "dogs," or spikes. These spikes were driven +into the end of a log, the brand upon the log was noted by the +captain and trader, and the logs, chained together like the vertebrae +of a great sea serpent, were towed to the ship's side. There they +were made fast, and three Kroo boys knocked the spike out of each +log, warped a chain around it, and made fast that chain to the steel +hawser of the winch. As it was drawn to the deck a Senegalese +soldier, acting for the Customs, gave it a second blow with a +branding hammer, and, thundering and smashing, it swung into the +hold. + + [Illustration: There, in the Surf, We Found These Tons of Mahogany, + Pounding Against Each Other.] + +In the "round up" of the logs the star performers were the three +Kroo boys at the ship's side. For days, in fascinated horror, the +six passengers watched them, prayed for them, and made bets as to +which would be the first to die. One understands that a Kroo boy is +as much at home in the sea as on shore, but these boys were neither +in the sea nor on shore. They were balancing themselves on blocks of +slippery wood that weighed a ton, but which were hurled about by the +great waves as though they were life-belts. All night the hammering +of the logs made the ship echo like a monster drum, and all day +without an instant's pause each log reared and pitched, spun like a +barrel, dived like a porpoise, or, broadside, battered itself +against the iron plates. But, no matter what tricks it played, a +Kroo boy rode it as easily as though it were a horse in a +merry-go-round. + +It was a wonderful exhibition. It furnished all the thrills that one +gets when watching a cowboy on a bucking bronco, or a trained seal. +Again and again a log, in wicked conspiracy with another log, would +plan to entice a Kroo boy between them, and smash him. At the sight +the passengers would shriek a warning, the boy would dive between +the logs, and a mass of twelve hundred pounds of mahogany would +crash against a mass weighing fifteen hundred with a report like +colliding freight cars. + +And then, as, breathless, we waited to see what once was a Kroo boy +float to the surface, he would appear sputtering and grinning, and +saying to us as clearly as a Kroo smile can say it: "He never +touched me!" + + [Illustration: A Log of Mahogany Jammed in the Anchor Chains.] + +Two days after we had stored away the mahogany we anchored off +Duala, the capital of the German Cameroons. Duala is built upon a +high cliff, and from the water the white and yellow buildings with +many pillars gave it the appearance of a city. Instead, it is a +clean, pretty town. With the German habit of order, it has been laid +out like barracks, but with many gardens, well-kept, shaded streets, +and high, cool houses, scientifically planned to meet the +necessities of the tropics. At Duala the white traders and officials +were plump and cheerful looking, and in the air there was more of +prosperity than fever. The black and white sentry boxes and the +native soldiers practising the stork march of the Kaiser's army were +signs of a rigid military rule, but the signs of Germany's efforts +in trade were more conspicuous. Nowhere on the coast did we see as +at Duala such gorgeous offices as those of the great trading house +of Woermann, the hated rivals of "Sir Alfred," such carved +furniture, such shining brass railings, and nowhere else did we see +plate-glass windows, in which, with unceasing wonder, the natives +stared at reflections of their own persons. In the river there was a +private dry dock of the Woermanns, and along the wharfs for acres +was lumber for the Woermanns, boxes of trade goods, puncheons and +casks for the Woermanns, private cooper shops and private machine +shops and private banks for the Woermanns. The house flag of the +Woermanns became as significant as that of a reigning sovereign. One +felt inclined to salute it. + +The success of the German merchant on the East Coast and over all +the world appears to be a question of character. He is patient, +methodical, painstaking; it is his habit of industry that is helping +him to close port after port to English, French, and American goods. +The German clerks do not go to the East Coast or to China and South +America to drink absinthe or whiskey, or to play dominoes or +cricket. They work twice as long as do the other white men, and +during those longer office hours they toil twice as hard. One of our +passengers was a German agent returning for his vacation. I used to +work in the smoking-room and he always was at the next table, also +at work, on his ledgers and account books. He was so industrious +that he bored me, and one day I asked him why, instead of spoiling +his vacation with work, he had not balanced his books before he left +the Coast. + +"It is an error," he said; "I can not find him." And he explained +that in the record of his three years' stewardship, which he was to +turn over to the directors in Berlin, there was somewhere a mistake +of a sixpence. + +"But," I protested, "what's sixpence to you? You drink champagne all +day. You begin at nine in the morning!" + +"I drink champagne," said the clerk, "because for three years I have +myself alone in the bush lived, but, can I to my directors go with a +book not balanced?" He laid his hand upon his heart and shook his +head. "It is my heart that tells me 'No!'" + +After three weeks he gave a shout, his face blushed with pleasure, +and actual tears were in his eyes. He had dug out the error, and at +once he celebrated the recovery of the single sixpence by giving me +twenty-four shillings' worth of champagne. It is a true story, and +illustrates, I think, the training and method of the German mind, of +the industry of the merchants who are trading over all the seas. As +a rule the "trade" goods "made in Germany" are "shoddy." They do not +compare in quality with those of England or the States; in every +foreign port you will find that the English linen is the best, that +the American agricultural implements, American hardware, saws, axes, +machetes, are superior to those manufactured in any other country. +But the German, though his goods are poorer, cuts the coat to please +the customer. He studies the wishes of the man who is to pay. He is +not the one who says: "Take it, or leave it." + +The agent of one of the largest English firms on the Ivory Coast, +one that started by trading in slaves, said to me: "Our largest +shipment to this coast is gin. This is a French colony, and if the +French traders and I were patriots instead of merchants we would +buy from our own people, but we buy from the Germans, because trade +follows no flag. They make a gin out of potatoes colored with rum or +gin, and label it 'Demerara' and 'Jamaica.' They sell it to us on +the wharf at Antwerp for ninepence a gallon, and we sell it at nine +francs per dozen bottles. Germany is taking our trade from us +because she undersells us, and because her merchants don't wait for +trade to come to them, but go after it. Before the Woermann boat is +due their agent here will come to my factory and spy out all I have +in my compound. 'Why don't you ship those logs with us?' he'll ask. + +"'Can't spare the boys to carry them to the beach,' I'll say. + +"'I'll furnish the boys,' he'll answer. That's the German way. + +"The Elder-Dempster boats lie three miles out at sea and blow a +whistle at us. They act as though by carrying our freight they were +doing us a favor. These German ships, to save you the long pull, +anchor close to the beach and lend you their own shore boats and +their own boys to work your cargo. And if you give them a few tons +to carry, like as not they'll 'dash' you to a case of 'fizz.' And +meanwhile the English captain is lying outside the bar tooting his +whistle and wanting to know if you think he's going to run his ship +aground for a few bags of rotten kernels. And he can't see, and the +people at home can't see, why the Germans are crowding us off the +Coast." + +Just outside of Duala, in the native village of Bell Town, is the +palace and the harem of the ruler of the tribe that gave its name to +the country, Mango Bell, King of the Cameroons. His brother, Prince +William, sells photographs and "souvenirs." We bought photographs, +and on the strength of that hinted at a presentation at court. +Brother William seemed doubtful, so we bought enough postal cards to +establish us as _etrangers de distinction_, and he sent up our +names. With Pivani, Hatton & Cookson's chief clerk we were escorted +to the royal presence. The palace is a fantastic, pagoda-like +building of three stories; and furnished with many mirrors, carved +oak sideboards, and lamp-shades of colored glass. Mango Bell, King +of the Cameroons, sounds like a character in a comic opera, but the +king was an extremely serious, tall, handsome, and self-respecting +negro. Having been educated in England, he spoke much more correct +English than any of us. Of the few "Kings I Have Met," both tame and +wild, his manners were the most charming. Back of the palace is an +enormously long building under one roof. Here live his thirty-five +queens. To them we were not presented. + + [Illustration: The Palace of the King of the Cameroons.] + +Prince William asked me if I knew where in America there was a +street called Fifth Avenue. I suggested New York. He referred to a +large Bible, and finding, much to his surprise, that my guess was +correct, commissioned me to buy him, from a firm on that street, +just such another Bible as the one in his hand. He forgot to give me +the money to pay for it, but loaned us a half-dozen little princes +to bear our purchases to the wharf. For this service their royal +highnesses graciously condescended to receive a small "dash," and +with the chief clerk were especially delighted. He, being a +sleight-of-hand artist, apparently took five-franc pieces out of +their Sunday clothes and from their kinky hair. When we left they +were rapidly disrobing to find if any more five-franc pieces were +concealed about their persons. + +The morning after we sailed from Duala we anchored in the river in +front of Calabar, the capital of Southern Nigeria. Of all the ports +at which we touched on the Coast, Calabar was the hottest, the best +looking, and the best administered. It is a model colony, but to +bring it to the state it now enjoys has cost sums of money entirely +out of proportion to those the colony has earned. The money has been +spent in cutting down the jungle, filling in swamps that breed +mosquitoes and fever, and in laying out gravel walks, water mains, +and open cement gutters, and in erecting model hospitals, barracks, +and administrative offices. Even grass has been made to grow, and +the high bluff upon which are situated the homes of the white +officials and Government House has been trimmed and cultivated and +tamed until it looks like an English park. It is a complete +imitation, even to golf links and tennis courts. But the fight that +has been made against the jungle has not stopped with golf links. In +1896 the death rate was ten men out of every hundred. That +corresponds to what in warfare is a decimating fire, upon which an +officer, without danger of reproof, may withdraw his men. But at +Calabar the English doctors did not withdraw, and now the death rate +is as low as three out of every hundred. That Calabar, or any part +of the West Coast, will ever be made entirely healthy is doubtful. +Man can cut down a forest and fill in a swamp, but he can not reach +up, as to a gas jet, and turn off the sun. And at Calabar, even at +night when the sun has turned itself off, the humidity and the heat +leave one sweating, tossing, and gasping for air. In Calabar the +first thing a white man learns is not to take any liberties with the +sun. When he dresses, eats, drinks, and moves about the sun is as +constantly on his mind, as it is on the face of the sun-dial. The +chief ascent to the top of the bluff where the white people live is +up a steep cement walk about eighty yards long. At the foot of this +a white man will be met by four hammock-bearers, and you will see +him get into the hammock and be carried in it the eighty yards. + +For even that short distance he is taking no chances. But while he +nurses his vitality and cares for his health he does not use the sun +as an excuse for laziness or for slipshod work. I have never seen a +place in the tropics where, in spite of the handicap of damp, fierce +heat, the officers and civil officials are so keenly and constantly +employed, where the bright work was so bright, and the whitewash so +white. + +Out at the barracks of the West African Frontier Force, the +W.A.F.F.'s, the officers, instead of from the shade of the veranda +watching the non-coms. teach a native the manual, were themselves at +work, and each was howling orders at the black recruits and smashing +a gun against his hip and shoulder as smartly as a drill sergeant. I +found the standard maintained at Calabar the more interesting +because the men were almost entirely their own audience. If they +make the place healthy, and attractive-looking, and dress for +dinner, and shy at cocktails, and insist that their tan shoes shall +glow like meershaum pipes, it is not because of the refining +presence of lovely women, but because the men themselves like things +that way. The men of Calabar have learned that when the sun is at +110, morals, like material things, disintegrate, and that, though +the temptation is to go about in bath-room slippers and pajamas, one +is wiser to bolster up his drenched and drooping spirit with a stiff +shirt front and a mess jacket. They tell that in a bush station in +upper Nigeria, one officer got his D.S.O. because with an audience +of only a white sergeant he persisted in a habit of shaving twice a +day. + + [Illustration: The Home of the Thirty Queens of King Mango Bell.] + +There are very few women in Calabar. There are three or four who are +wives of officials, two nurses employed by the government, and the +Mother Superior and Sisters of the Order of St. Joseph, and, of +course, all of them are great belles. For the Sisters, especially +the officers, the government people, the traders, the natives, even +the rival missionaries, have the most tremendous respect and +admiration. The sacrifice of the woman who, to be near her husband +on the Coast, consents to sicken and fade and grow old before her +time, and of the nurse who, to preserve the health of others, risks +her own, is very great; but the sacrifice of the Sisters, who have +renounced all thought of home and husband, and who have exiled +themselves to this steaming swamp-land, seems the most unselfish. In +order to support the 150 little black boys and girls who are at +school at the mission, the Sisters rob themselves of everything +except the little that will keep them alive. Two, in addition to +their work at the mission, act as nurses in the English hospital, +and for that they receive together $600. This forms the sole regular +income of the five women; for each $120 a year. With anything else +that is given them in charity, they buy supplies for the little +converts. They live in a house of sandstone and zinc that holds the +heat like a flat-iron, they are obliged to wear a uniform that is of +material and fashion so unsuited to the tropics that Dr. Chichester, +in charge of the hospital, has written in protest against it to +Rome, and on many days they fast, not because the Church bids them +so to do, but because they have no food. And with it all, these five +gentlewomen are always eager, cheerful, sweet of temper, and a +living blessing to all who meet them. What now troubles them is that +they have no room to accommodate the many young heathen who come to +them to be taught to wear clothes, and to be good little boys and +girls. This is causing the Sisters great distress. Any one who does +not believe in that selfish theory, that charity begins at home, but +who would like to help to spread Christianity in darkest Africa and +give happiness to five noble women, who are giving their lives for +others, should send a postal money order to Marie T. Martin, the +Reverend Mother Superior of the Catholic Mission of Old Calabar, +Southern Nigeria. + +And if you are going to do it, as they say in the advertising pages, +"Do it now!" + + [Illustration: The Mother Superior and Sisters of St. Joseph and + Their Converts at Old Calabar.] + +At Calabar there is a royal prisoner, the King of Benin. He is not +an agreeable king like His Majesty of the Cameroons, but a grossly +fat, sensual-looking young man, who, a few years ago, when he was at +war with the English, made "ju ju" against them by sacrificing three +hundred maidens, his idea being that the ju ju would drive the +English out of Benin. It was poor ju ju, for it drove the young man +himself out of Benin, and now he is a king in exile. As far as I +could see, the social position of the king is insecure, and +certainly in Calabar he does not move in the first circles. One +afternoon, when the four or five ladies of Calabar and Mr. Bedwell, +the Acting Commissioner, and the officers of the W.A.F.F.'s were at +the clubhouse having ice-drinks, the king at the head of a retinue +of cabinet officers, high priests, and wives bore down upon the +club-house with the evident intention of inviting himself to tea. +Personally, I should like to have met a young man who could murder +three hundred girls and worry over it so little that he had not lost +one of his three hundred pounds, but the others were considerably +annoyed and sent an A.D.C. to tell him to "Move on!" as though he +were an organ-grinder, or a performing bear. + +"These kings," exclaimed a subaltern of the W.A.F.F.'s, indignantly, +"are trying to push in everywhere!" + +When we departed from Calabar, the only thing that reconciled me to +leaving it and its charming people, was the fact that when the ship +moved there was a breeze. While at anchor in the river I had found +that not being able to breathe by day or to sleep by night in time +is trying, even to the stoutest constitution. + +One of the married ladies of Calabar, her husband, an officer of +the W.A.F.F.'s, and the captain of the police sailed on the +_Nigeria_ "on leave," and all Calabar came down to do them honor. +There was the commissioner's gig, and the marine captain's gig, and +the police captain's gig, and the gig from "Matilda's," the English +trading house, and one from the Dutch house and the French house, +and each gig was manned by black boys in beautiful uniforms and +fezzes, and each crew fought to tie up to the foot of the +accommodation ladder. It was as gay as a regatta. On the +quarter-deck the officers drank champagne, in the captain's cabin +Hughes treated the traders to beer, in the "square" the non-coms. of +the W.A.F.F.'s drank ale. The men who were going away on leave tried +not to look too happy, and those who were going back to the shore +drank deep and tried not to appear too carelessly gay. A billet on +the West Coast is regarded by the man who accepts it as a sort of +sporting proposition, as a game of three innings of nine months +each, during which he matches his health against the Coast. If he +lives he wins; if he dies the Coast wins. + +After Calabar, at each port off which we anchored, at Ponny, +Focardos, Lagos, Accra, Cape Coast Castle, and Sekonni, it was +always the same. Always there came over the side the man going +"Home," the man who had fought with the Coast and won. He was as +excited, as jubilant as a prisoner sentenced to death who had +escaped his executioners. And always the heartiest in their +congratulations were the men who were left behind, his brother +officers, or his fellow traders, the men of the Sun Hat Brigade, in +their unofficial uniforms, in shirtwaists, broad belts from which +dangled keys and a whistle, beautifully polished tan boots, and with +a wand-like whip or stick of elephant hide. They swarmed the decks +and overwhelmed the escaping refugee with good wishes. He had +cheated their common enemy. By merely keeping alive he had achieved +a glorious victory. In their eyes he had performed a feat of +endurance like swimming the English Channel. They crowded to +congratulate him as people at the pit-mouth congratulate the +entombed miner, who, after many days of breathing noisome gases, +drinks the pure air. Even the black boys seem to feel the triumph +of the white master, and their paddles never flashed so bravely, and +their songs never rang so wildly, as when they were racing him away +from the brooding Coast with its poisonous vapors toward the big +white ship that meant health and home. + +Although most of the ports we saw only from across a mile or two of +breakers, they always sent us something of interest. Sometimes all +the male passengers came on board drunk. With the miners of the Gold +Coast and the "Palm Oil Ruffians" it used to be a matter of +etiquette not to leave the Coast in any other condition. Not so to +celebrate your escape seemed ungenerous and ungrateful. At Sekondi +one of the miners from Ashanti was so completely drunk, that he was +swung over the side, tied up like a plum-pudding, in a bag. + +When he emerged from the bag his expression of polite inquiry was +one with which all could sympathize. To lose consciousness on the +veranda of a cafe, and awake with a bump on the deck of a steamer +many miles at sea, must strengthen one's belief in magic carpets. + +Another entertainment for the white passengers was when the boat +boys fought for the black passengers as they were lowered in the +mammy-chair. As a rule, in the boats from shore, there were twelve +boys to paddle and three or four extra men to handle and unhook the +mammy-chair and the luggage. While the boys with the paddles +manoeuvred to bring their boat next to the ship's side, the extra +boys tried to pull their rivals overboard, dragging their hands from +ropes and gunwales, and beating them with paddles. They did this +while every second the boat under them was spinning in the air or +diving ten feet into the hollow of the waves, and trying to smash +itself and every other boat into driftwood. From the deck the second +officer would swing a mammy-chair over the side with the idea of +dropping it into one of these boats. But before the chair could be +lowered, a rival boat would shove the first one away, and with a +third boat would be fighting for its place. Meanwhile, high above +the angry sea, the chair and its cargo of black women would be +twirling like a weathercock and banging against the ship's side. The +mammies were too terrified to scream, but the ship's officers +yelled and swore, the boat's crews shrieked, and the black babies +howled. Each baby was strapped between the shoulders of the mother. +A mammy-chair is like one of those two-seated swings in which people +sit facing one another. If to the shoulders of each person in the +swing was tied a baby, it is obvious that should the swing bump into +anything, the baby would get the worst of it. That is what happened +in the mammy-chair. Every time the chair spun around, the head of a +baby would come "crack!" against the ship's side. So the babies +howled, and no one of the ship's passengers, crowded six deep along +the rail, blamed them. The skull of the Ethiopian may be hard, but +it is most unfair to be swathed like a mummy so that you can neither +kick nor strike back, and then have your head battered against a +five-thousand-ton ship. + +How the boys who paddled the shore boats live long enough to learn +how to handle them is a great puzzle. We were told that the method +was to take out one green boy with a crew of eleven experts. But how +did the original eleven become experts? At Accra, where the waves +are very high and rough, are the best boat boys on the coast. We +watched the Custom House boat fight her way across the two miles of +surf to the shore. The fight lasted two hours. It was as thrilling +as watching a man cross Niagara Falls on a tight-rope. The greater +part of the two hours the boat stood straight in the air, as though +it meant to shake the crew into the sea, and the rest of the time it +ran between walls of water ten feet high and was entirely lost to +sight. Two things about the paddling on the West Coast make it +peculiar; the boys sit, not on the thwarts, but on the gunwales, as +a woman rides a side-saddle, and in many parts of the coast the boys +use paddles shaped like a fork or a trident. One asks how, sitting +as they do, they are able to brace themselves, and how with their +forked paddles they obtained sufficient resistance. A coaster's +explanation of the split paddle was that the boys did not want any +more resistance than they could prevent. + + [Illustration: The Kroo Boys Sit, Not On the Thwarts, but On the + Gunwales, as a Woman Rides a Side Saddle.] + +There is no more royal manner of progress than when one of these +boats lifts you over the waves, with the boys chanting some wild +chorus, with their bare bodies glistening, their teeth and eyes +shining, the splendid muscles straining, and the dripping paddles +flashing like twelve mirrors. + +Some of the chiefs have canoes of as much as sixty men-power, +and when these men sing, and their bodies and voices are in +unison, a war canoe seems the only means of locomotion, and a +sixty-horse-power racing car becomes a vehicle suited only to the +newly rich. + +I knew I had left the West Coast when, the very night we sailed from +Sierra Leone, for greater comfort, I reached for a linen bed-spread +that during four stifling, reeking weeks had lain undisturbed at the +foot of the berth. During that time I had hated it as a monstrous +thing; as something as hot and heavy as a red flannel blanket, as a +buffalo robe. And when, on the following night, I found the +wind-screen was not in the air port, and that, nevertheless, I still +was alive, I knew we had passed out of reach of the Equator, and +that all that followed would be as conventional as the "trippers" +who joined us at the Canary Isles; and as familiar as the low, gray +skies, the green, rain-soaked hills, and the complaining Channel +gulls that convoyed us into Plymouth Harbor. + + + + +VII + +ALONG THE EAST COAST + + +Were a man picked up on a flying carpet and dropped without warning +into Lorenco Marquez, he might guess for a day before he could make +up his mind where he was, or determine to which nation the place +belonged. + +If he argued from the adobe houses with red-tiled roofs and walls of +cobalt blue, the palms, and the yellow custom-house, he might think +he was in Santiago; the Indian merchants in velvet and gold +embroideries seated in deep, dark shops which breathe out dry, +pungent odors, might take him back to Bombay; the Soudanese and +Egyptians in long blue night-gowns and freshly ironed fezzes would +remind him of Cairo; the dwarfish Portuguese soldiers, of Madeira, +Lisbon, and Madrid, and the black, bare-legged policemen in khaki +with great numerals on their chests, of Benin, Sierra Leone, or +Zanzibar. After he had noted these and the German, French, and +English merchants in white duck, and the Dutch man-of-warsmen, who +look like ship's stewards, the French marines in coal-scuttle +helmets, the British Jack-tars in their bare feet, and the native +Kaffir women, each wrapped in a single, gorgeous shawl with a black +baby peering from beneath her shoulder-blades, he would decide, by +using the deductive methods of Sherlock Holmes, that he was in the +Midway of the Chicago Fair. + +Several hundred years ago Da Gama sailed into Delagoa Bay and +founded the town of Lorenco Marquez, and since that time the +Portuguese have always felt that it is only due to him and to +themselves to remain there. They have great pride of race, and they +like the fact that they possess and govern a colony. So, up to the +present time, in spite of many temptations to dispose of it, they +have made the ownership of Delagoa Bay an article of their national +religion. But their national religion does not require of them to +improve their property. And to-day it is much as it was when the +sails of Da Gama's fleet first stirred its poisonous vapors. + +The harbor itself is an excellent one and the bay is twenty-two +miles along, but there is only one landing-pier, and that such a +pier as would be considered inconsistent with the dignity of the +Larchmont Yacht Club. To the town itself Portugal has been content +to contribute as her share the gatherers of taxes, collectors of +customs and dispensers of official seals. She is indifferent to the +fact that the bulk of general merchandise, wine, and machinery that +enter her port is brought there by foreigners. She only demands that +they buy her stamps. Her importance in her own colony is that of a +toll-gate at the entrance of a great city. + +Lorenco Marquez is not a spot which one would select for a home. +When I was first there, the deaths from fever were averaging fifteen +a day, and men who dined at the club one evening were buried +hurriedly before midnight, and when I returned in the winter months, +the fever had abated, but on the night we arrived twenty men were +robbed. The fact that we complained to the police about one of the +twenty robberies struck the commandant as an act of surprising and +unusual interest. We gathered from his manner that the citizens of +Lorenco Marquez look upon being robbed as a matter too personal and +selfish with which to trouble the police. It was perhaps credulous +of us, as our hotel was liberally labelled with notices warning its +patrons that "Owing to numerous robberies in this hotel, our guests +will please lock their doors." This was one of three hotels owned by +the same man. One of the others had been described to us as the +"tough" hotel, and at the other, a few weeks previous, a friend had +found a puff-adder barring his bedroom door. The choice was somewhat +difficult. + +On her way from Lorenco Marquez to Beira our ship, the _Kanzlar_, +kept close to the shore, and showed us low-lying banks of yellow +sand and coarse green bushes. There was none of the majesty of +outline which reaches from Table Bay to Durban, none of the blue +mountains of the Colony, nor the deeply wooded table-lands and great +inlets of Kaffraria. The rocks which stretch along the southern +coast and against which the waves break with a report like the +bursting of a lyddite shell, had disappeared, and along Gazaland and +the Portuguese territory only swamps and barren sand-hills +accompanied us in a monotonous yellow line. From the bay we saw +Beira as a long crescent of red-roofed houses, many of them of four +stories with verandas running around each story, like those of the +summer hotels along the Jersey coast. It is a town built upon the +sands, with a low stone breakwater, but without a pier or jetty, the +lack of which gives it a temporary, casual air as though it were +more a summer resort than the one port of entry for all Rhodesia. It +suggested Coney Island to one, and to others Asbury Park and the +board-walk at Atlantic City. When we found that in spite of her +Portuguese flags and naked blacks, Beira reminded us of nothing +except an American summer-resort, we set to discovering why this +should be, and decided it was because, after the red dust of the +Colony and the Transvaal, we saw again stretches of white sand, and +instead of corrugated zinc, flimsy houses of wood, which you felt +were only opened for the summer season and which for the rest of +the year remained boarded up against driven sands and equinoctial +gales. Beira need only to have added to her "Sea-View" and "Beach" +hotels, a few bathing-suits drying on a clothes-line, a tin-type +artist, and a merry-go-round, to make us feel perfectly at home. +Beira being the port on the Indian Ocean which feeds Mashonaland and +Matabeleland and the English settlers in and around Buluwayo and +Salisbury, English influence has proclaimed itself there in many +ways. When we touched, which was when the British soldiers were +moving up to Rhodesia, the place, in comparison with Lorenco +Marquez, was brisk, busy, and clean. Although both are ostensibly +Portuguese, Beira is to Lorenco Marquez what the cleanest street of +Greenwich Village, of New York City, is to "Hell's Kitchen" and the +Chinese Quarter. The houses were well swept and cool, the shops were +alluring, the streets were of clean shifting white sand, and the +sidewalks, of gray cement, were as well kept as a Philadelphia +doorstep. The most curious feature of Beira is her private tram-car +system. These cars run on tiny tracks which rise out of the sand +and extend from one end of the town to the other, with branch lines +running into the yards of shops and private houses. The motive power +for these cars is supplied by black boys who run behind and push +them. Their trucks are about half as large as those on the hand-cars +we see flying along our railroad tracks at home, worked by gangs of +Italian laborers. On some of the trucks there is only a bench, +others are shaded by awnings, and a few have carriage-lamps and +cushioned seats and carpets. Each of them is a private conveyance; +there is not one which can be hired by the public. When a merchant +wishes to go down town to the port, his black boys carry his private +tram-car from his garden and settle it on the rails, the merchant +seats himself, and the boys push him and his baby-carriage to +whatever part of the city he wishes to go. When his wife is out +shopping and stops at a store the boys lift her car into the sand in +order to make a clear track for any other car which may be coming +behind them. One would naturally suppose that with the tracks and +switch-boards and sidings already laid, the next step would be to +place cars upon them for the convenience of the public, but this is +not the case, and the tracks through the city are jealously reserved +for the individuals who tax themselves five pounds a year to extend +them and to keep them in repair. After the sleds on the island of +Madeira these private street-cars of Beira struck me as being the +most curious form of conveyance I had ever seen. + + [Illustration: Going Visiting in Her Private Tram-car at Beira.] + +Beira was occupied by the Companhia de Mozambique with the idea of +feeding Salisbury and Buluwayo from the north, and drawing away some +of the trade which at that time was monopolized by the merchants of +Cape Town and Durban. But the tse-tse fly belt lay between Beira on +the coast and the boundary of the Chartered Company's possessions, +and as neither oxen nor mules could live to cross this, it was +necessary, in order to compete with the Cape-Buluwayo line, to build +a railroad through the swamp and jungle. This road is now in +operation. It is two hundred and twenty miles in length, and in the +brief period of two months, during the long course of its progress +through the marshes, two hundred of the men working on it died of +fever. Some years ago, during a boundary dispute between the +Portuguese and the Chartered Company, there was a clash between the +Portuguese soldiers and the British South African police. How this +was settled and the honor of the Portuguese officials satisfied, +Kipling has told us in the delightful tale of "Judson and the +Empire." It was off Beira that Judson fished up a buoy and anchored +it over a sand-bar upon which he enticed the Portuguese gunboat. A +week before we touched at Beira, the Portuguese had rearranged all +the harbor buoys, but, after the casual habits of their race, had +made no mention of the fact. The result was that the _Kanzlar_ was +hung up for twenty-four hours. We tried to comfort ourselves by +thinking that we were undoubtedly occupying the same mud-bank which +had been used by the strategic Judson to further the course of +empire. + +The _Kanzlar_ could not cross the bar to go to Chinde, so the +_Adjutant_, which belongs to the same line and which was created for +these shallow waters, came to the _Kanzlar_, bringing Chinde with +her. She brought every white man in the port, and those who could +not come on board our ship remained contentedly on the _Adjutant_, +clinging to her rail as she alternately sank below, or was tossed +high above us. For three hours they smiled with satisfaction as +though they felt that to have escaped from Chinde, for even that +brief time, was sufficient recompense for a thorough ducking and the +pains of sea-sickness. On the bridge of the _Adjutant_, in white +duck and pith helmets, were the only respectable members of Chinde +society. We knew that they were the only respectable members of +Chinde society, because they told us so themselves. On her lower +deck she brought two French explorers, fully dressed for the part as +Tartarin of Tarascon might have dressed it in white havelocks and +gaiters buckled up to the thighs, and clasping express rifles in new +leather cases. From her engine-room came stokers from Egypt, and +from her forward deck Malays in fresh white linen, Mohammedans in +fez and turban, Portuguese officials, chiefly in decorations, Indian +coolies and Zanzibari boys, very black and very beautiful, who wound +and unwound long blue strips of cotton about their shoulders, or +ears, or thighs as the heat, or the nature of the work of unloading +required. Among these strange peoples were goats, as delicately +colored as a meerschaum pipe, and with the horns of our red deer, +strange white oxen with humps behind the shoulders, those that are +exhibited in cages at home as "sacred buffalo," but which here are +only patient beasts of burden, and gray monkeys, wildcats, snakes +and crocodiles in cages addressed to "Hagenbeck, Hamburg." The +freight was no less curious; assegais in bundles, horns stretching +for three feet from point to point, or rising straight, like +poignards; skins, ground-nuts, rubber, and heavy blocks of bees-wax +wrapped in coarse brown sacking, and which in time will burn before +the altars of Roman Catholic churches in Italy, Spain, and France. + +People of the "Bromide" class who run across a friend from their own +city in Paris will say, "Well, to think of meeting _you_ here. How +small the world is after all!" If they wish a better proof of how +really small it is, how closely it is knit together, how the +existence of one canning-house in Chicago supports twenty stores in +Durban, they must follow, not the missionary or the explorers, not +the punitive expeditions, but the man who wishes to buy, and the man +who brings something to sell. Trade is what has brought the +latitudes together and made the world the small department store it +is, and forced one part of it to know and to depend upon the other. + +The explorer tells you, "I was the first man to climb Kilamajaro." +"I was the first to cut a path from the shores of Lake Nyassa into +the Congo Basin." He even lectures about it, in front of a wet sheet +in the light of a stereopticon, and because he has added some miles +of territory to the known world, people buy his books and learned +societies place initials after his distinguished name. But before +his grandfather was born and long before he ever disturbed the +waters of Nyassa the Phoenicians and Arabs and Portuguese and men +of his own time and race had been there before him to buy ivory, +both white and black, to exchange beads and brass bars and +shaving-mirrors for the tusks of elephants, raw gold, copra, rubber, +and the feathers of the ostrich. Statesmen will modestly say that a +study of the map showed them how the course of empire must take its +way into this or that undiscovered wilderness, and that in +consequence, at their direction, armies marched to open these tracts +which but for their prescience would have remained a desert. But +that was not the real reason. A woman wanted three feathers to wear +at Buckingham Palace, and to oblige her a few unimaginative traders, +backed by a man who owned a tramp steamer, opened up the East Coast +of Africa; another wanted a sealskin sacque, and fleets of ships +faced floating ice under the Northern Lights. The bees of the Shire +Riverway help to illuminate the cathedrals of St. Peters and Notre +Dame, and back of Mozambique thousands of rubber-trees are being +planted to-day, because, at the other end of the globe, people want +tires for their automobiles; and because the fashionable ornament of +the natives of Swaziland is, for no reason, no longer blue-glass +beads, manufacturers of beads in Switzerland and Italy find +themselves out of pocket by some thousands and thousands of pounds. + +The traders who were making the world smaller by bringing cotton +prints to Chinde to cover her black nakedness, her British Majesty's +consul at that port, and the boy lieutenant of the paddle-wheeled +gunboat which patrols the Zambesi River, were the gentlemen who +informed me that they were the only respectable members of Chinde +society. They came over the side with the gratitude of sailors whom +the _Kanzlar_ might have picked up from a desert island, where they +had been marooned and left to rot. They observed the gilded glory of +the _Kanzlar_ smoking-room, its mirrors and marble-topped tables, +with the satisfaction and awe of the California miner, who found all +the elegance of civilization in the red plush of a Broadway omnibus. +The boy-commander of the gunboat gazed at white women in the saloon +with fascinated admiration. + +"I have never," he declared, breathlessly, "I have never seen so +many beautiful women in one place at the same time! I'd forgotten +that there were so many white people in the world." + +"If I stay on board this ship another minute I shall go home," said +Her Majesty's consul, firmly. "You will have to hold me. It's coming +over me--I feel it coming. I shall never have the strength to go +back." He appealed to the sympathetic lieutenant. "Let's desert +together," he begged. + + [Illustration: One-half of the Street Cleaning Department of + Mozambique.] + +In the swamps of the East Coast the white exiles lay aside the +cloaks and masks of crowded cities. They do not try to conceal their +feelings, their vices, or their longings. They talk to the first +white stranger they meet of things which in the great cities a man +conceals even from his room-mate, and men they would not care to +know, and whom they would never meet in the fixed social pathways of +civilization, they take to their hearts as friends. They are too few +to be particular, they have no choice, and they ask no questions. It +is enough that the white man, like themselves, is condemned to +exile. They do not try to find solace in the thought that they are +the "foretrekkers" of civilization, or take credit to themselves +because they are the path-finders and the pioneers who bear the heat +and burden of the day. They are sorry for themselves, because they +know, more keenly than any outsider can know, how good is the life +they have given up, and how hard is the one they follow, but they do +not ask anyone else to be sorry. They would be very much surprised +if they thought you saw in their struggle against native and +Portuguese barbarism, fever, and savage tribes, a life of great good +and value, full of self-renunciation, heroism, and self-sacrifice. + +On the day they boarded the _Kanzlar_ the pains of nostalgia were +sweeping over the respectable members of Chinde society like waves +of nausea, and tearing them. With a grim appreciation of their own +condition, they smiled mockingly at the ladies on the quarter-deck, +as you have seen prisoners grin through the bars; they were even +boisterous and gay, but their gayety was that of children at recess, +who know that when the bell rings they are going back to the desk. + +A little English boy ran through the smoking-room, and they fell +upon him, and quarrelled for the privilege of holding him on their +knees. He was a shy, coquettish little English boy, and the +boisterous, noisy men did not appeal to him. To them he meant home +and family and the old nursery, papered with colored pictures from +the Christmas _Graphic_. His stout, bare legs and tangled curls and +sailor's hat, with "H.M.S. Mars" across it, meant all that was clean +and sweet-smelling in their past lives. + +"I'll arrest you for a deserter," said the lieutenant of the +gunboat. "I'll make the consul send you back to the _Mars_." He held +the boy on his knee fearfully, handling him as though he were some +delicate and precious treasure that might break if he dropped it. + +The agent of the Oceanic Development Company, Limited, whose +business in life is to drive savage Angonis out of the jungle, where +he hopes in time to see the busy haunts of trade, begged for the boy +with eloquent pleading. + +"You've had the kiddie long enough now," he urged. "Let me have him. +Come here, Mr. Mars, and sit beside me, and I'll give you fizzy +water--like lemon-squash, only nicer." He held out a wet bottle of +champagne alluringly. + +"No, he is coming to his consul," that youth declared. "He's coming +to his consul for protection. You are not fit characters to +associate with an innocent child. Come to me, little boy, and do not +listen to those degraded persons." So the "innocent child" seated +himself between the consul and the chartered trader, and they patted +his fat calves and red curls and took his minute hands in their +tanned fists, eying him hungrily, like two cannibals. But the little +boy was quite unconscious and inconsiderate of their hunger, and, +with the cruelty of children, pulled himself free and ran away. + +"He was such a nice little kiddie," they said, apologetically, as +though they felt they had been caught in some act of weakness. + +"I haven't got a card with me; I haven't needed one for two years," +said the lieutenant, genially. "But fancy your knowing Sparks! He +has the next station to mine; I'm at one end of the Shire River and +he's at the other; he patrols from Fort Johnson up to the top of the +lake. I suppose you've heard him play the banjo, haven't you? That's +where we hit it off--we're both terribly keen about the banjo. I +suppose if it wasn't for my banjo, I'd go quite off my head down +here. I know Sparks would. You see, I have these chaps at Chinde to +talk to, and up at Tete there's the Portuguese governor, but Sparks +has only six white men scattered along Nyassa for three hundred +miles." + +I had heard of Sparks and the six white men. They grew so lonely +that they agreed to meet once a month at some central station and +spend the night together, and they invited Sparks to attend the +second meeting. But when he arrived he found that they had organized +a morphine club, and the only six white men on Lake Nyassa were +sitting around a table with their sleeves rolled up, giving +themselves injections. Sparks told them it was a "disgusting +practice," and put back to his gunboat. I recalled the story to the +lieutenant, and he laughed mournfully. + +"Yes," he said; "and what's worse is that we're here for two years +more, with all this fighting going on at the Cape and in China. +Still, we have our banjos, and the papers are only six weeks old, +and the steamer stops once every month." + + [Illustration: Custom House, Zanzibar.] + +Fortunately there were many bags of bees-wax to come over the side, +so we had time in which to give the exiles the news of the outside +world, and they told us of their present and past lives: of how one +as an American filibuster had furnished coal to the Chinese Navy; +how another had sold "ready to wear" clothes in a New York +department store, and another had been attache at Madrid, and +another in charge of the forward guns of a great battle-ship. We +exchanged addresses and agreed upon the restaurant where we would +meet two years hence to celebrate their freedom, and we emptied many +bottles of iced-beer, and the fact that it was iced seemed to affect +the exiles more than the fact that it was beer. + +But at last the ship's whistle blew with raucous persistence. It was +final and heartless. It rang down the curtain on the mirage which +once a month comes to mock Chinde with memories of English villages, +of well-kept lawns melting into the Thames, of London asphalt and +flashing hansoms. With a jangling of bells in the engine-room the +mirage disappeared, and in five minutes to the exiles of Chinde the +_Kanzlar_ became a gray tub with a pennant of smoke on the horizon +line. + +I have known some men for many years, smoked and talked with them +until improper hours of the morning, known them well enough to +borrow their money, even their razors, and parted from them with +never a pang. But when our ship abandoned those boys to the unclean +land behind them, I could see them only in a blurred and misty +group. We raised our hats to them and tried to cheer, but it was +more of a salute than a cheer. I had never seen them before, I shall +never meet them again--we had just burned signals as our ships +passed in the night--and yet, I must always consider among the +friends I have lost, those white-clad youths who are making the ways +straight for others through the dripping jungles of the Zambesi, +"the only respectable members of Chinde Society."[A] + +[Footnote A: NOTE--I did not lose the white-clad youths. The +lieutenant now is the commander of a cruiser, and the consul, a +consul-general; and they write me that the editor of the Chinde +newspaper, on his editorial page, has complained that he, also, +should be included among the respectable members of Chinde Society. +He claims his absence at Tete, at the time of the visit of the +_Kanzlar_, alone prevented his social position being publicly +recognized. That justice may be done, he, now, is officially, though +tardily, created a member of Chinde's respectable society. R.H.D.] + +The profession of the slave-trader, unless it be that of his +contemporary, the pirate preying under his black flag, is the one +which holds you with the most grewsome and fascinating interest. Its +inhumanity, its legends of predatory expeditions into unknown +jungles of Africa, the long return marches to the Coast, the +captured blacks who fall dead in the trail, the dead pulling down +with their chains those who still live, the stifling holds of the +slave-ships, the swift flights before pursuing ships-of-war, the +casting away, when too closely chased, of the ship's cargo, and the +sharks that followed, all of these come back to one as he walks the +shore-wall of Mozambique. From there he sees the slave-dhows in the +harbor, the jungles on the mainland through which the slaves came by +the thousands, and still come one by one, and the ancient palaces of +the Portuguese governors, dead now some hundreds of years, to whom +this trade in human agony brought great wealth, and no loss of +honor. + + [Illustration: Chain-gangs of Petty Offenders Outside of Zanzibar.] + +Mozambique in the days of her glory was, with Zanzibar, the great +slave-market of East Africa, and the Portuguese and the Arabs who +fattened on this traffic built themselves great houses there, and a +fortress capable, in the event of a siege, of holding the garrison +and all the inhabitants as well. To-day the slave-trade brings to +those who follow it more of adventure than of financial profit, but +the houses and the official palaces and the fortress still remain, +and they are, in color, indescribably beautiful. Blue and pink and +red and light yellow are spread over their high walls, and have been +so washed and chastened by the rain and sun, that the whole city has +taken on the faint, soft tints of a once brilliant water-color. The +streets themselves are unpeopled, empty and strangely silent. Their +silence is as impressive as their beauty. In the heat of the day, +which is from sunrise to past sunset, you see no one, you hear no +footfall, no voices, no rumble of wheels or stamp of horses' hoofs. +The bare feet of the native, who is the only human being who dares +to move abroad, makes no sound, and in Mozambique there are no +carriages and no horses. Two bullock-carts, which collect scraps and +refuse from the white staring streets, are the only carts in the +city, and with the exception of a dozen 'rikshas are the only +wheeled vehicles the inhabitants have seen. + +I have never visited a city which so impressed one with the fact +that, in appearance, it had remained just as it was four hundred +years before. There is no decay, no ruins, no sign of disuse; it is, +on the contrary, clean and brilliantly beautiful in color, with +dancing blue waters all about it, and with enormous palms moving +above the towering white walls and red tiled roofs, but it is a city +of the dead. The open-work iron doors, with locks as large as +letter-boxes, are closed, the wooden window-shutters are barred, and +the wares in the shops are hidden from the sidewalk by heavy +curtains. There is a park filled with curious trees and with flowers +of gorgeous color, but the park is as deserted as a cemetery; along +the principal streets stretch mosaic pavements formed of great +blocks of white and black stone, they look like elongated +checker-boards, but no one walks upon them, and though there are +palaces painted blue, and government buildings in Pompeiian red, and +churches in chaste gray and white, there are no sentries to guard +the palaces, nor no black-robed priests enter or leave the +churches. They are like the palaces of a theatre, set on an empty +stage, and waiting for the actors. It will be a long time before the +actors come to Mozambique. It is, and will remain, a city of the +fifteenth century. It is now only a relic of a cruel and barbarous +period, when the Portuguese governors, the "gentlemen adventurers," +and the Arab slave-dealers, under its blue skies, and hidden within +its barred and painted walls, led lives of magnificent debauchery, +when the tusks of ivory were piled high along its water-front, and +the dhows at anchor reeked with slaves, and when in the +market-place, where the natives now sit bargaining over a bunch of +bananas or a basket of dried fish, their forefathers were themselves +bought and sold. + +In the five hundred years in which he has claimed the shore line of +East Africa from south of Lorenco Marquez to north of Mozambique, +and many hundreds of miles inland, the Portuguese has been the dog +in the manger among nations. In all that time he has done nothing to +help the land or the people whom he pretends to protect, and he +keeps those who would improve both from gaining any hold or +influence over either. It is doubtful if his occupation of the East +Coast can endure much longer. The English and the Germans now +surround him on every side. Even handicapped as they are by the lack +of the seaports which he enjoys, they have forced their way into the +country which lies beyond his and which bounds his on every side. +They have opened up this country with little railroads, with lonely +lengths of telegraph wires, and with their launches and gunboats +they have joined, by means of the Zambesi and Chinde Rivers, new +territories to the great Indian Ocean. His strip of land, which bars +them from the sea, is still unsettled and unsafe, its wealth +undeveloped, its people untamed. He sits at his cafe at the coast +and collects custom-dues and sells stamped paper. For fear of the +native he dares not march five miles beyond his sea-port town, and +the white men who venture inland for purposes of trade or to +cultivate plantations do so at their own risk, he can promise them +no protection. + +The land back of Mozambique is divided into "holdings," and the rent +of each holding is based upon the number of native huts it +contains. The tax per hut is one pound a year, and these holdings +are leased to any Portuguese who promises to pay the combined taxes +of all the huts. He also engages to cut new roads, to keep those +already made in repair, and to furnish a sufficient number of police +to maintain order. The lessees of these holdings have given rise to +many and terrible scandals. In the majority of cases, the lessee, +once out of reach of all authority and of public opinion, and +wielding the power of life and death, becomes a tyrant and +task-master over his district, taxing the natives to five and ten +times the amount which each is supposed to furnish, and treating +them virtually as his bondsmen. Up along the Shire River, the +lessees punish the blacks by hanging them from a tree by their +ankles and beating their bare backs with rhinoceros hide, until, as +it has been described to me by a reputable English resident, the +blood runs in a stream over the negro's shoulders, and forms a pool +beneath his eyes. + + [Illustration: The Ivory on the Right, Covered Only with Sacking, + Is Ready for Shipment to Boston, U.S.A.] + +You hear of no legitimate enterprise fostered by these lessees, of +no development of natural resources, but, instead, you are told +tales of sickening cruelty, and you can read in the consular +reports others quite as true; records of heartless treatment of +natives, of neglect of great resources, and of hurried snatching at +the year's crop and a return to the Coast, with nothing to show of +sustained effort or steady development. The incompetence of Portugal +cannot endure. Now that England has taken the Transvaal from the +Boer, she will find the seaport of Lorenco Marquez too necessary to +her interests to much longer leave it in the itching palms of the +Portuguese officials. Beira she also needs to feed Rhodesia, and the +Zambesi and Chinde Rivers to supply the British Central African +Company. Farther north, the Germans will find that if they mean to +make German Central Africa pay, they must control the seaboard. It +seems inevitable that, between the two great empires, the little +kingdom of Portugal will be crowded out, and having failed to +benefit either herself or anyone else on the East Coast, she will +withdraw from it, in favor of those who are fitter to survive her. + +There is no more interesting contrast along the coast of East +Africa than that presented by the colonies of England, Germany, and +Portugal. Of these three, the colonies of the Englishmen are, as one +expects to find them, the healthiest, the busiest, and the most +prosperous. They thrive under your very eyes; you feel that they +were established where they are, not by accident, not to gratify a +national vanity or a ruler's ambition, but with foresight and with +knowledge, and with the determination to make money; and that they +will increase and flourish because they are situated where the +natives and settlers have something to sell, and where the men can +bring, in return, something the natives and colonials wish to buy. +Port Elizabeth, Durban, East London, and Zanzibar belong to this +prosperous class, which gives good reason for the faith of those who +founded them. + +On the other hand, as opposed to these, there are the settlements of +the Portuguese, rotten and corrupt, and the German settlements of +Dar Es Salaam and Tanga which have still to prove their right to +exist. Outwardly, to the eye, they are model settlements. Dar Es +Salaam, in particular, is a beautiful and perfectly appointed +colonial town. In the care in which it is laid out, in the +excellence of its sanitary arrangements, in its cleanliness, and in +the magnificence of its innumerable official residences, and in +their sensible adaptability to the needs of the climate, one might +be deceived into believing that Dar Es Salaam is the beautiful +gateway of a thriving and busy colony. But there are no ramparts of +merchandise along her wharves, no bulwarks of strangely scented +bales blocking her water-front; no lighters push hurriedly from the +shore to meet the ship, although she is a German ship, or to receive +her cargo of articles "made in Germany." On the contrary, her +freight is unloaded at the English ports, and taken on at English +ports. And the German traders who send their merchandise to Hamburg +in her hold come over the side at Zanzibar, at Durban, and at Aden, +where the English merchants find in them fierce competitors. There +is nothing which goes so far to prove the falsity of the saying that +"trade follows the flag" as do these model German colonies with +their barracks, governor's palace, officers' clubs, public pleasure +parks, and with no trade; and the English colonies, where the German +merchants remain, and where, under the English flag, they grow +steadily rich. The German Emperor, believing that colonies are a +source of strength to an empire, rather than the weakness that they +are, has raised the German flag in Central East Africa, but the +ships of the German East African Company, subsidized by him, carry +their merchandize to the English ports, and his German subjects +remain where they can make the most money. They do not move to those +ports where the flag of their country would wave over them. + +Dar Es Salaam, although it lacks the one thing needful to make it a +model settlement, possesses all the other things which are needful, +and many which are pure luxuries. Its residences, as I have said, +have been built after the most approved scientific principles of +ventilation and sanitation. In no tropical country have I seen +buildings so admirably adapted to the heat and climatic changes and +at the same time more in keeping with the surrounding scenery. They +are handsome, cool-looking, white and clean, with broad verandas, +high walls, and false roofs under which currents of air are lured in +spite of themselves. The residences are set back along the high bank +which faces the bay. In front of them is a public promenade, newly +planted shade-trees arch over it, and royal palms reach up to it +from the very waters of the harbor. At one end of this semicircle +are the barracks of the Soudanese soldiers, and at the other is the +official palace of the governor. Everything in the settlement is +new, and everything is built on the scale of a city, and with the +idea of accommodating a great number of people. Hotels and cafes, +better than any one finds in the older settlements along the coast, +are arranged on the water-front, and there is a church capable of +seating the entire white population at one time. If the place is to +grow, it can do so only through trade, and when trade really comes +all these palaces and cafes and barracks which occupy the entire +water-front will have to be pushed back to make way for warehouses +and custom-house sheds. At present it is populated only by +officials, and, I believe, twelve white women. + + [Illustration: The Late Sultan of Zanzibar in His State Carriage.] + +You feel that it is an experiment, that it has been sent out like a +box of children's building blocks, and set up carefully on this +beautiful harbor. All that Dar Es Salaam needs now is trade and +emigrants. At present it is a show place, and might be exhibited at +a world's fair as an example of a model village. + +In writing of Zanzibar I am embarrassed by the knowledge that I am +not an unprejudiced witness. I fell in love with Zanzibar at first +sight, and the more I saw of it the more I wanted to take my luggage +out of the ship's hold and cable to my friends to try and have me +made Vice-Consul to Zanzibar through all succeeding administrations. + +Zanzibar runs back abruptly from a white beach in a succession of +high white walls. It glistens and glares, and dazzles you; the sand +at your feet is white, the city itself is white, the robes of the +people are white. It has no public landing-pier. Your rowboat is run +ashore on a white shelving beach, and you face an impenetrable mass +of white walls. The blue waters are behind you, the lofty +fortress-like facade before you, and a strip of white sand is at +your feet. + +And while you are wondering where this hidden city may be, a kind +resident takes you by the hand and pilots you through a narrow crack +in the rampart, along a twisting fissure between white-washed walls +where the sun cannot reach, past great black doorways of carved oak, +and out suddenly into the light and laughter and roar of Zanzibar. + +In the narrow streets are all the colors of the Orient, gorgeous, +unshaded, and violent; cobalt blue, greens, and reds on framework, +windows, and doorways; red and yellow in the awnings and curtains of +the bazaars, and orange and black, red and white, yellow, dark blue, +and purple, in the long shawls of the women. It is the busiest, and +the brightest and richest in color of all the ports along the East +African coast. Were it not for its narrow streets and its towering +walls it would be a place of perpetual sunshine. Everybody is either +actively busy, or contentedly idle. It is all movement, noise, and +glitter, everyone is telling everyone else to make way before him; +the Indian merchants beseech you from the open bazaars; their +children, swathed in gorgeous silks and hung with jewels and +bangles, stumble under your feet, the Sultan's troops assail you +with fife and drum, and the black women, wrapped below their bare +shoulders in the colors of the butterfly, and with teeth and brows +dyed purple, crowd you to the wall. Outside the city there are long +and wonderful roads between groves of the bulky mango-tree of +richest darkest green and the bending palm, shading deserted palaces +of former Sultans, temples of the Indian worshippers, native huts, +and the white-walled country residences and curtained verandas of +the white exiles. It is absurd to write them down as exiles, for it +is a Mohammedan Paradise to which they have been exiled. + +The exiles themselves will tell you that the reason you think +Zanzibar is a paradise, is because you have your steamer ticket in +your pocket. But that retort shows their lack of imagination, and a +vast ingratitude to those who have preceded them. For the charm of +Zanzibar lies in the fact that while the white men have made it +healthy and clean, have given it good roads, good laws, protection +for the slaves, quick punishment for the slave-dealers, and a firm +government under a benign and gentle Sultan, they have done all of +this without destroying one flash of its local color, or one throb +of its barbaric life, which is the showy, sunshiny, and sumptuous +life of the Far East. The good things of civilization are there, but +they are unobtrusive, and the evils of civilization appear not at +all, the native does not wear a derby hat with a kimona, as he does +in Japan, nor offer you souvenirs of Zanzibar manufactured in +Birmingham; Reuter's telegrams at the club and occasional steamers +alone connect his white masters with the outer world, and so +infrequent is the visiting stranger that the local phrase-book for +those who wish to converse in the native tongue is compiled chiefly +for the convenience of midshipmen when searching a slave-dhow. + + [Illustration: H.S.H. Hamud bin Muhamad bin Said, the Late Sultan + of Zanzibar.] + +Zanzibar is an "Arabian Nights" city, a comic-opera capital, a most +difficult city to take seriously. There is not a street, or any +house in any street, that does not suggest in its architecture and +decoration the untrammelled fancy of the scenic artist. You feel +sure that the latticed balconies are canvas, that the white adobe +walls are supported from behind by braces, that the sunshine is a +carbon light, that the chorus of boatmen who hail you on landing +will reappear immediately costumed as the Sultan's body-guard, that +the women bearing water-jars on their shoulders will come on in the +next scene as slaves of the harem, and that the national anthem will +prove to be Sousa's Typical Tune of Zanzibar. + +Several hundred years ago the Sultans of Zanzibar grew powerful and +wealthy through exporting slaves and ivory from the mainland. These +were not two separate industries, but one was developed by the other +and was dependent upon it. The procedure was brutally simple. A +slave-trader, having first paid his tribute to the Sultan, crossed +to the mainland, and marching into the interior made his bargain +with one of the local chiefs for so much ivory, and for so many men +to carry it down to the coast. Without some such means of transport +there could have been no bargain, so the chief who was anxious to +sell would select a village which had not paid him the taxes due +him, and bid the trader help himself to what men he found there. +Then would follow a hideous night attack, a massacre of women and +children, and the taking prisoners of all able-bodied males. These +men, chained together in long lines, and each bearing a heavy tooth +of ivory upon his shoulder, would be whipped down to the coast. It +was only when they had carried the ivory there, and their work was +finished, that the idea presented itself of selling them as well as +the ivory. Later, these bearers became of equal value with the +ivory, and the raiding of native villages and the capture of men and +women to be sold into slavery developed into a great industry. The +industry continues fitfully to-day, but it is carried on under great +difficulties, and at a risk of heavy punishments. What is called +"domestic slavery" is recognized on the island of Zanzibar, the vast +clove plantations which lie back of the port employing many hundreds +of these domestic slaves. It is not to free these from their slight +bondage that the efforts of those who are trying to suppress the +slave-trade is to-day directed, but to prevent others from being +added to their number. What slave-trading there is at present is by +Arabs and Indians. They convey the slaves in dhows from the mainland +to Madagascar, Arabia, or southern Persia, and to the Island of +Pemba, which lies north of Zanzibar, and only fifteen miles from the +mainland. If a slave can be brought this short distance in safety he +can be sold for five hundred dollars; on the mainland he is not +worth more than fifteen dollars. The channels, and the mouths of +rivers, and the little bays opening from the Island of Pemba are +patrolled more or less regularly by British gunboats, and junior +officers in charge of a cutter and a crew of half a dozen men, are +detached from these for a few months at a time on "boat service." It +seems to be an unprofitable pursuit, for one officer told me that +during his month of boat service he had boarded and searched three +hundred dhows, which is an average of ten a day, and found slaves on +only one of them. But as, on this occasion, he rescued four slaves, +and the slavers, moreover, showed fight, and wounded him and two of +his boat's crew, he was more than satisfied. + +The trade in ivory, which has none of these restrictions upon it, +still flourishes, and the cool, dark warerooms of Zanzibar are +stored high with it. In a corner of one little cellar they showed +us twenty-five thousand dollars worth of these tusks piled up as +carelessly as though they were logs in a wood-shed. One of the most +curious sights in Zanzibar is a line of Zanzibari boys, each +balancing a great tusk on his shoulder, worth from five hundred to +two thousand dollars, and which is unprotected except for a piece of +coarse sacking. + + [Illustration: A German "Factory" at Tanga, the Store Below, the + Living Apartments Above.] + +The largest exporters of ivory in the world are at Zanzibar, and +though probably few people know it, the firm which carries on this +business belongs to New York City, and has been in the ivory trade +with India and Africa from as far back as the fifties. In their +house at Zanzibar they have entertained every distinguished African +explorer, and the stories its walls have heard of native wars, +pirate dhows, slave-dealers, the English occupation, and terrible +marches through the jungles of the Congo, would make valuable and +picturesque history. The firm has always held a semi-official +position, for the reason that the United States Consul at Zanzibar, +who should speak at least Swahili and Portuguese, is invariably +chosen for the post from a drug-store in Yankton, Dakota, or a +post-office in Canton, Ohio. Consequently, on arriving at Zanzibar +he becomes homesick, and his first official act is to cable his +resignation, and the State Department instructs whoever happens to +be general manager of the ivory house to perform the duties of +acting-consul. So, the ivory house has nearly always held the eagle +of the consulate over its doorway. The manager of the ivory house, +who at the time of our visit was also consul, is Harris Robbins +Childs. Mr. Childs is well known in New York City, is a member of +many clubs there, and speaks at least five languages. He understands +the native tongue of Zanzibar so well that when the Prime Minister +of the Sultan took us to the palace to pay our respects, Childs +talked the language so much better than did the Sultan's own Prime +Minister that there was in consequence much joking and laughing. The +Sultan then was a most dignified, intelligent, and charming old +gentleman. He was popular both with his own people, who loved him +with a religious fervor, and with the English, who unobtrusively +conducted his affairs. + +There have been sultans who have acted less wisely than does Hamud +bin Muhamad bin Said. A few years ago one of these, Said Khaled, +defied the British Empire as represented by several gunboats, and +dared them to fire on his ship of war, a tramp steamer which he had +converted into a royal yacht. The gunboats were anchored about two +hundred yards from the palace, which stands at the water's edge, and +at the time agreed upon, they sank the Sultan's ship of war in the +short space of three minutes, and in a brief bombardment destroyed +the greater part of his palace. The ship of war still rests where +she sank, and her topmasts peer above the water only three hundred +yards distant from the windows of the new palace. They serve as a +constant warning to all future sultans. + +The new palace is of somewhat too modern architecture, and is not +nearly as dignified as are the massive white walls of the native +houses which surround it. But within it is a fairy palace, hung with +silk draperies, tapestries, and hand-painted curtains; the floors +are covered with magnificent rugs from Persia and India, and the +reception-room is crowded with treasures of ebony, ivory, lacquer +work, and gold and silver. There were two thrones made of silver +dragons, with many scales, and studded with jewels. The Sultan did +not seem to mind our openly admiring his treasures, and his +attendants, who stood about him in gorgeous-colored silks heavy with +gold embroideries, were evidently pleased with the deep impression +they made upon the visitors. The Sultan was very gentle and +courteous and human, especially in the pleasure he took over his son +and heir, who then was at school in England, and who, on the death +of his father, succeeded him. He seemed very much gratified when we +suggested that there was no better training-place for a boy than an +English public school; as Americans, he thought our opinion must be +unprejudiced. Before he sent us away, he gave Childs, and each of +us, a photograph of himself, one of which is reproduced in this +book. + +Our next port was the German settlement of Tanga. We arrived there +just as a blood-red sun was setting behind great and gloomy +mountains. The place itself was bathed in damp hot vapors, and +surrounded even to the water's edge by a steaming jungle. It was +more like what we expected Africa to be than was any other place we +had visited, and the proper touch of local color was supplied by a +trader, who gave as his reason for leaving us so early in the +evening that he needed sleep, as on the night before at his camp +three lions had kept him awake until morning. + + [Illustration: Soudanese Soldiers Under a German Officer Outside of + Tanga.] + +The bubonic plague prevented our landing at other ports. We saw them +only through field-glasses from the ship's side, so that there is, +in consequence, much that I cannot write of the East Coast of +Africa. But the trip, which allows one merely to nibble at the +Coast, is worth taking again when the bubonic plague has passed +away. It was certainly worth taking once. If I have failed to make +that apparent, the fault lies with the writer. It is certainly not +the fault of the East Coast, not the fault of the Indian Ocean, that +"sets and smiles, so soft, so bright, so blooming blue," or of the +exiles and "remittance men," or of the engineers who are building +the railroad from Cape Town to Cairo, or of any lack of interest +which the East Coast presents in its problem of trade, of conquest, +and of, among nations, the survival of the fittest. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Congo and Coasts of Africa +by Richard Harding Davis + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CONGO AND COASTS OF AFRICA *** + +***** This file should be named 14297.txt or 14297.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/1/4/2/9/14297/ + +Produced by Janet Kegg and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed +Proofreading Team + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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