<h2>CHAPTER X. BUSH TRADE AND FAN CUSTOMS.</h2>
<br/>
<p><i>Wherein the Voyager, having fallen among the black traders, discourses
on these men and their manner of life; and the difficulties and dangers
attending the barter they carry on with the bush savages; and on some
of the reasons that makes this barter so beloved and followed by both
the black trader and the savage. To which is added an account
of the manner of life of the Fan tribe; the strange form of coinage
used by these people; their manner of hunting the elephant, working
in iron; and such like things.</i></p>
<p>I spent a few, lazy, pleasant days at Agonjo, Mr. Glass doing all
he could to make me comfortable, though he had a nasty touch of fever
on him just then. His efforts were ably seconded by his good lady,
an exceedingly comely Gaboon woman, with pretty manners, and an excellent
gift in cookery. The third member of the staff was the store-keeper,
a clever fellow: I fancy a Loango from his clean-cut features and spare
make, but his tribe I know not for a surety.</p>
<p>One of these black trader factories is an exceedingly interesting
place to stay at, for in these factories you are right down on the bed
rock of the trade. On the Coast, for the greater part, the white
traders are dealing with black traders, middle men, who have procured
their trade stuff from the bush natives, who collect and prepare it.
Here, in the black trader factory, you see the first stage of the export
part of the trade: namely the barter of the collected trade stuff between
the collector and the middleman. I will not go into details regarding
it. What I saw merely confirmed my opinion that the native is
not cheated; no, not even by a fellow African trader; and I will merely
here pause to sing a pæan to a very unpopular class - the black
middleman as he exists on the South-West Coast. It is impossible
to realise the gloom of the lives of these men in bush factories, unless
you have lived in one. It is no use saying “they know nothing
better and so don’t feel it,” for they do know several things
better, being very sociable men, fully appreciative of the joys of a
Coast town, and their aim, object and end in life is, in almost every
case, to get together a fortune that will enable them to live in one,
give a dance twice a week, card parties most nights, and dress themselves
up so that their fellow Coast townsmen may hate them and their townswomen
love them. From their own accounts of the dreadful state of trade;
and the awful and unparalleled series of losses they have had, from
the upsetting of canoes, the raids and robberies made on them and their
goods by “those awful bush savages”; you would, if you were
of a trustful disposition, regard the black trader with an admiring
awe as the man who has at last solved the great commercial problem of
how to keep a shop and live by the loss. Nay, not only live, but
build for himself an equivalent to a palatial residence, and keep up,
not only it, but half a dozen wives, with a fine taste for dress every
one of them. I am not of a trustful disposition and I accept those
“losses” with a heavy discount, and know most of the rest
of them have come out of my friend the white trader’s pockets.
Still I can never feel the righteous indignation that I ought to feel,
when I see the black trader “down in a seaport town with his Nancy,”
etc., as Sir W. H. S. Gilbert classically says, because I remember those
bush factories.</p>
<p>Mr. Glass, however, was not a trader who made a fortune by losing
those of other people; for he had been many years in the employ of the
firm. He had risen certainly to the high post and position of
charge of the Rembwé, but he was not down giddy-flying at Gaboon.
His accounts of his experiences when he had been many years ago away
up the still little known Nguni River, in a factory in touch with the
lively Bakele, then in a factory among Fans and Igalwa on the Ogowé,
and now among Fans and Skekiani on the Rembwé, were fascinating,
and told vividly of the joys of first starting a factory in a wild district.
The way in which your customers, for the first month or so, enjoyed
themselves by trying to frighten you, the trader, out of your wits and
goods, and into giving them fancy prices for things you were trading
in, and for things of no earthly use to you, or any one else!
The trader’s existence during this period is marked by every unpleasantness
save dulness; from that he is spared by the presence of a mob of noisy,
dangerous, thieving savages all over his place all day; invading his
cook-house, to put some nastiness into his food as a trade charm; helping
themselves to portable property at large; and making themselves at home
to the extent of sitting on his dining-table. At night those customers
proceed to sleep all over the premises, with a view to being on hand
to start shopping in the morning. Woe betide the trader if he
gives in to this, and tolerates the invasion, for there is no chance
of that house ever being his own again; and in addition to the local
flies, etc., on the table-cloth, he will always have several big black
gentlemen to share his meals. If he raises prices, to tide over
some extra row, he is a lost man; for the Africans can understand prices
going up, but never prices coming down; and time being no object, they
will hold back their trade. Then the district is ruined, and the
trader along with it, for he cannot raise the price he gets for the
things he buys.</p>
<p>What that trader has got to do, is to be a “Devil man.”
They always kindly said they recognised me as one, which is a great
compliment. He must betray no weakness, but a character which
I should describe as a compound of the best parts of those of Cardinal
Richelieu, Brutus, Julius Caesar, Prince Metternich, and Mezzofanti,
the latter to carry on the native language part of the business; and
he must cast those customers out, not only from his house; but from
his yard; and adhere to the “No admittance except on business”
principle. This causes a good deal of unpleasantness, and the
trader’s nights are now cheered by lively war-dances outside his
stockade; the accompanying songs advertising that the customers are
coming over the stockade to raid the store, and cut up the trader “into
bits like a fish.” Sometimes they do come - and then - finish;
but usually they don’t; and gradually settle down, and respect
the trader greatly as “a Devil man”; and do business on
sound lines during the day. Over the stockade at night, by ones
and twos, stealing, they will come to the end of the chapter.</p>
<p>Moonlight nights are fairly restful for the bush trader, but when
it is inky black, or pouring with rain, he has got to be very much out
and about, and particularly vigilant has he got to be on tornado nights
- a most uncomfortable sort of weather to attend to business in, I assure
you.</p>
<p>The factory at Agonjo was typical; the house is a fine specimen of
the Igalwa style of architecture; mounted on poles above the ground;
the space under the house being used as a store for rubber in barrels,
and ebony in billets; thereby enabling the trader to hover over these
precious possessions, sleeping and waking, like a sitting hen over her
eggs. Near to the house are the sleeping places for the beach
hands, and the cook-house. In front, in a position commanded by
the eye from the verandah, and well withdrawn from the stockade, are
great piles of billets of red bar wood. The whole of the clean,
sandy yard containing these things, and divers others, is surrounded
by a stout stockade, its main face to the river frontage, the water
at high tide lapping its base, and at low tide exposing in front of
it a shore of black slime. Although I cite this factory as a typical
factory of a black trader, it is a specimen of the highest class, for,
being in connection with Messrs. Hatton and Cookson it is well kept
up and stocked. Firms differ much in this particular. Messrs.
Hatton and Cookson, like Messrs. Miller Brothers in the Bights, take
every care that lies in their power of the people who serve them, down
to the Kruboys working on their beaches, giving ample and good rations
and providing good houses. But this is not so with all firms on
the Coast. I have seen factories belonging to the Swedish houses
beside which this factory at Agonjo is a palace although those factories
are white man factories, and the unfortunate white men in them are expected
by these firms to live on native chop - an expectation the Agents by
no means realise, for they usually die. Black hands, however,
do not suffer much at the hands of such firms, for the Swedish Agents
are a quiet, gentlemanly set of men, in the best sense of that much
misused term, and they do not employ on their beaches such a staff of
black helpers as the English houses, so the two or three Kruboys on
a starvation beach can fairly well fend for themselves, for there is
always an adjacent village, and in that village there are always chickens,
and on the shore crabs, and in the river fish, and for the rest of his
diet the Kruboy flirts with the local ladies.</p>
<p>Although, as I have laid down, the bush factory at its best is a
place, as Mr. Tracey Tupman would say, more fitted for a wounded heart
than for one still able to feast on social joys, it is a luxurious situation
for a black trader compared to the other form of trading he deals with
- that of travelling among the native villages in the bush. This
has one hundred times the danger, and a thousand times the discomfort,
and is a thoroughly unhealthy pursuit. The journeys these bush
traders make are often remarkable, and they deserve great credit for
the courage and enterprise they display. Certainly they run less
risk of death from fever than a white man would; but, on the other hand,
their colour gives them no protection; and their chance of getting murdered
is distinctly greater, the white governmental powers cannot revenge
their death, in the way they would the death of a white man, for these
murders usually take place away in some forest region, in a district
no white man has ever penetrated.</p>
<p>You will naturally ask how it is that so many of these men do survive
“to lead a life of sin” as a missionary described to me
their Coast town life to be. This question struck me as requiring
explanation. The result of my investigations, and the answers
I have received from the men themselves, show that there is a reason
why the natives do not succumb every time to the temptation to kill
the trader, and take his goods, and this is twofold: firstly, all trade
in West Africa follows definite routes, even in the wildest parts of
it; and so a village far away in the forest, but on the trade route,
knows that as a general rule twice a year, a trader will appear to purchase
its rubber and ivory. If he does not appear somewhere about the
expected time, that village gets uneasy. The ladies are impatient
for their new clothes; the gentlemen half wild for want of tobacco;
and things coming to a crisis, they make inquiries for the trader down
the road, one village to another, and then, if it is found that a village
has killed the trader, and stolen all his goods, there is naturally
a big palaver, and things are made extremely hot, even for equatorial
Africa, for that village by the tobaccoless husbands of the clothesless
wives. Herein lies the trader’s chief safety, the village
not being an atom afraid, or disinclined to kill him, but afraid of
their neighbouring villages, and disinclined to be killed by them.
But the trader is not yet safe. There is still a hole in his armour,
and this is only to be stopped up in one way, namely, by wives; for
you see although the village cannot safely kill him, and take all his
goods, they can still let him die safely of a disease, and take part
of them, passing on sufficient stuff to the other villages to keep them
quiet. Now the most prevalent disease in the African bush comes
out of the cooking pot, and so to make what goes into the cooking pot
- which is the important point, for earthen pots do not in themselves
breed poison - safe and wholesome, you have got to have some one who
is devoted to your health to attend to the cooking affairs, and who
can do this like a wife? So you have a wife - one in each village
up the whole of your route. I know myself one gentleman whose
wives stretch over 300 miles of country, with a good wife base in a
Coast town as well. This system of judiciously conducted alliances,
gives the black trader a security nothing else can, because naturally
he marries into influential families at each village, and all his wife’s
relations on the mother’s side regard him as one of themselves,
and look after him and his interests. That security can lie in
women, especially so many women, the so-called civilised man may ironically
doubt, but the security is there, and there only, and on a sound basis,
for remember the position of a travelling trader’s wife in a village
is a position that gives the lady prestige, the discreet husband showing
little favours to her family and friends, if she asks for them when
he is with her; and then she has not got the bother of having a man
always about the house, and liable to get all sorts of silly notions
into his head if she speaks to another gentleman, and then go and impart
these notions to her with a cutlass, or a kassengo, as the more domestic
husband, I am assured by black ladies, is prone to.</p>
<p>You may now, I fear, be falling into the other adjacent error - from
the wonder why any black trader survives, namely, into the wonder why
any black trader gets killed; with all these safeguards, and wives.
But there is yet another danger, which no quantity of wives, nor local
jealousies avail to guard him through. This danger arises from
the nomadic habits of the bush tribes, notably the Fan. For when
a village has made up its mind to change its district, either from having
made the district too hot to hold it, with quarrels with neighbouring
villages; or because it has exhausted the trade stuff, <i>i.e</i>. rubber
and ivory in reach of its present situation; or because some other village
has raided it, and taken away all the stuff it was saving to sell to
the black trader; it resolves to give itself a final treat in the old
home, and make a commercial <i>coup</i> at one fell swoop. Then
when the black trader turns up with his boxes of goods, it kills him,
has some for supper, smokes the rest, and takes it and the goods, and
departs to found new homes in another district.</p>
<p>The bush trade I have above sketched is the bush trade with the Fans.
In those districts on the southern banks of the Ogowé the main
features of the trade, and the trader’s life are the same, but
the details are more intricate, for the Igalwa trader from Lembarene,
Fernan Vaz, or Njole, deals with another set of trading tribes, not
first hand with the collectors. The Fan villages on the trade
routes may, however, be regarded as trade depots, for to them filters
the trade stuff of the more remote villages, so the difference is really
merely technical, and in all villages alike the same sort of thing occurs.</p>
<p>The Igalwa or M’pongwe trader arrives with the goods he has
received from the white trader, and there are great rejoicing and much
uproar as his chests and bundles and demijohns are brought up from the
canoe. And presently, after a great deal of talk, the goods are
opened. The chiefs of the village have their pick, and divide
this among the principal men of the village, who pay for it in part
with their store of collected rubber or ivory, and take the rest on
trust, promising to collect enough rubber to pay the balance on the
next visit of the trader. Thereby the trader has a quantity of
debts outstanding in each village, liable to be bad debts, and herein
lies his chief loss. Each chief takes a certain understood value
in goods as a commission for himself - <i>nyeno</i> - giving the trader,
as a consideration for this, an understood bond to assist him in getting
in the trust granted to his village. This <i>nyeno</i> he utilises
in buying trade stuff from villages not on the trade route. Among
the Fans the men who have got the goods stand by with these to trade
for rubber with the general public and bachelors of the village, in
a way I will presently explain. In tribes like Ajumbas, Adooma,
etc., the men having the goods travel off, as traders, among their various
bush tribes, similarly paying their <i>nyeno</i>, and so by the time
the goods reach the final producing men, only a small portion of them
is left, but their price has necessarily risen. Still it is quite
absurd for a casual white traveller, who may have dropped in on the
terminus of a trade route, to cry out regarding the small value the
collector (who is often erroneously described as the producer) gets
for his stuff, compared to the price it fetches in Europe. For
before it even reaches the factory of the Coast Settlement, that stuff
has got to keep a whole series of traders. It appears at first
bad that this should be the case, but the case it is along the west
coast of the continent save in the districts commanded by the Royal
Niger company, who, with courage and enterprise, have pushed far inland,
and got in touch with the great interior trade routes - a performance
which has raised in the breasts of the Coast trader tribes who have
been supplanted, a keen animosity, which like most animosity in Africa,
is not regardful of truth. The tribes that have had the trade
of the Bight of Biafra passing through their hands have been accustomed,
according to the German Government who are also pressing inland, to
make seventy-five per cent. profit on it, and they resent being deprived
of this. A good deal is to be said in favour of their views; among
other things that the greater part of the seaboard districts of West
Africa, I may say every part from Sierra Leone to Cameroon, is structurally
incapable of being self-supporting under existing conditions.
Below Cameroon, on my beloved South-west coast, which is infinitely
richer than the Bight of Benin, rich producing districts come down to
the sea in most places until you reach the Congo; but here again the
middleman is of great use to the interior tribes, and if they do have
to pay him seventy-five per cent, serve them right. They should
not go making wife palaver, and blood palaver all over the place to
such an extent that the inhabitants of no village, unless they go<i>
en masse</i>, dare take a ten mile walk, save at the risk of their lives,
in any direction, so no palaver live.</p>
<p>We will now enter into the reason that induces the bush man to collect
stuff to sell among the Fans, which is the expensiveness of the ladies
in the tribe. A bush Fan is bound to marry into his tribe, because
over a great part of the territory occupied by them there is no other
tribe handy to marry into; and a Fan residing in villages in touch with
other tribes, has but little chance of getting a cheaper lady.
For there is, in the Congo Français and the country adjacent
to the north of it (Batanga), a regular style of aristocracy which may
be summarised firstly thus: All the other tribes look down on the Fans,
and the Fans look down on all the other tribes. This aristocracy
has sub-divisions, the M’pongwe of Gaboon are the upper circle
tribe; next come the Benga of Corisco; then the Bapuka; then the Banaka.
This system of aristocracy is kept up by the ladies. Thus a M’pongwe
lady would not think of marrying into one of the lower tribes, so she
is restricted, with many inner restrictions, to her own tribe.
A Benga lady would marry a M’pongwe, or a Benga, but not a Banaka,
or Bapuka; and so on with the others; but not one of them would marry
a Fan. As for the men, well of course they would marry any lady
of any tribe, if she had a pretty face, or a good trading connection,
if they were allowed to: that’s just man’s way. To
the south-east the Fans are in touch with the Bakele, a tribe that has
much in common with the Fan, but who differ from them in getting on
in a very friendly way with the little dwarf people, the Matimbas, or
Watwa, or Akoa: people the Fans cannot abide. With these Bakele
the Fan can intermarry, but there is not much advantage in so doing,
as the price is equally high, but still marry he must.</p>
<p>A young Fan man has to fend for himself, and has a scratchy kind
of life of it, aided only by his mother until - if he be an enterprising
youth - he is able to steal a runaway wife from a neighbouring village,
or if he is a quiet and steady young man, until he has amassed sufficient
money to buy a wife. This he does by collecting ebony and rubber
and selling it to the men who have been allotted goods by the chief
of the village, from the consignment brought up by the black trader.
He supports himself meanwhile by, if the situation of his village permits,
fishing and selling the fish, and hunting and killing game in the forest.
He keeps steadily at it in his way, reserving his roysterings until
he is settled in life. A truly careful young man does not go and
buy a baby girl cheap, as soon as he has got a little money together;
but works and saves on until he has got enough to buy a good, tough
widow lady, who, although personally unattractive, is deeply versed
in the lore of trade, and who knows exactly how much rubbish you can
incorporate in a ball of india rubber, without the white trader, or
the black bush factory trader, instantly detecting it. When the
Fan young man has married his wife, in a legitimate way on the cash
system, he takes her round to his relations, and shows her off; and
they make little presents to help the pair set up housekeeping.
But the young man cannot yet settle down, for his wife will not allow
him to. She is not going to slave herself to death doing all the
work of the house, etc., and so he goes on collecting, and she preparing,
trade stuff, and he grows rich enough to buy other wives - some of them
young children, others widows, no longer necessarily old. But
it is not until he is well on in life that he gets sufficient wives,
six or seven. For it takes a good time to get enough rubber to
buy a lady, and he does not get a grip on the ivory trade until he has
got a certain position in the village, and plantations of his own which
the elephants can be discovered raiding, in which case a percentage
of the ivory taken from the herd is allotted to him. Now and again
he may come across a dead elephant, but that is of the nature of a windfall;
and on rubber and ebony he has to depend during his early days.
These he changes with the rich men of his village for a very peculiar
and interesting form of coinage - bikei - little iron imitation axe-heads
which are tied up in bundles called ntet, ten going to one bundle, for
with bikei must the price of a wife be paid. You do not find bikei
close down to Libreville, among the Fans who are there in a semi-civilised
state, or more properly speaking in a state of disintegrating culture.
You must go for bush. I thought I saw in bikei a certain resemblance
in underlying idea with the early Greek coins I have seen at Cambridge,
made like the fore-parts of cattle; and I have little doubt that the
articles of barter among the Fans before the introduction of the rubber,
ebony, and ivory trades, which in their districts are comparatively
recent, were iron implements. For the Fans are good workers in
iron; and it would be in consonance with well-known instances among
other savage races in the matter of stone implements, that these things,
important of old, should survive, and be employed in the matter of such
an old and important affair as marriage. They thus become ju-ju;
and indeed all West African legitimate marriage, although appearing
to the casual observer a mere matter of barter, is never solely such,
but always has ju-ju in it.</p>
<p>We may as well here follow out the whole of the domestic life of
the Fan, now we have got him married. His difficulty does not
only consist in getting enough bikei together but in getting a lady
he can marry. No amount of bikei can justify a man in marrying
his first cousin, or his aunt; and as relationship among the Fans is
recognised with both his father and his mother, not as among the Igalwa
with the latter’s blood relations only, there are an awful quantity
of aunts and cousins about from whom he is debarred. But when
he has surmounted his many difficulties, and dodged his relations, and
married, he is seemingly a better husband than the man of a more cultured
tribe. He will turn a hand to anything, that does not necessitate
his putting down his gun outside his village gateway. He will
help chop firewood, or goat’s chop, or he will carry the baby
with pleasure, while his good lady does these things; and in bush villages,
he always escorts her so as to be on hand in case of leopards, or other
local unpleasantnesses. When inside the village he will lay down
his gun, within handy reach, and build the house, tease out fibre to
make game nets with, and plait baskets, or make pottery with the ladies,
cheerily chatting the while.</p>
<p>Fan pottery, although rough and sunbaked, is artistic in form and
ornamented, for the Fan ornaments all his work; the articles made in
it consist of cooking pots, palm-wine bottles, water bottles and pipes,
but not all water bottles, nor all pipes are made of pottery.
I wish they were, particularly the former, for they are occasionally
made of beautifully plaited fibre coated with a layer of a certain gum
with a vile taste, which it imparts to the water in the vessel.
They say it does not do this if the vessel is soaked for two days in
water, but it does, and I should think contaminates the stream it was
soaked in into the bargain. The pipes are sometimes made of iron
very neatly. I should imagine they smoked hot, but of this I have
no knowledge. One of my Ajumba friends got himself one of these
pipes when we were in Efoua, and that pipe was, on and off, a curse
to the party. Its owner soon learnt not to hold it by the bowl,
but by the wooden stem, when smoking it; the other lessons it had to
teach he learnt more slowly. He tucked it, when he had done smoking,
into the fold in his cloth, until he had had three serious conflagrations
raging round his middle. And to the end of the chapter, after
having his last pipe at night with it, he would lay it on the ground,
before it was cool. He learnt to lay it out of reach of his own
cloth, but his fellow Ajumbas and he himself persisted in always throwing
a leg on to it shortly after, and there was another row.</p>
<p>The Fan basket-work is strongly made, but very inferior to the Fjort
basket-work. Their nets are, however, the finest I have ever seen.
These are made mainly for catching small game, such as the beautiful
little gazelles (<i>Ncheri</i>) with dark gray skins on the upper part
of the body, white underneath, and satin-like in sleekness all over.
Their form is very dainty, the little legs being no thicker than a man’s
finger, the neck long and the head ornamented with little pointed horns
and broad round ears. The nets are tied on to trees in two long
lines, which converge to an acute angle, the bottom part of the net
lying on the ground. Then a party of men and women accompanied
by their trained dogs, which have bells hung round their necks, beat
the surrounding bushes, and the frightened small game rush into the
nets, and become entangled. The fibre from which these nets are
made has a long staple, and is exceedingly strong. I once saw
a small bush cow caught in a set of them and unable to break through,
and once a leopard; he, however, took his section of the net away with
him, and a good deal of vegetation and sticks to boot. In addition
to nets, this fibre is made into bags, for carrying things in while
in the bush, and into the water bottles already mentioned.</p>
<p>The iron-work of the Fans deserves especial notice for its excellence.
The anvil is a big piece of iron which is embedded firmly in the ground.
Its upper surface is flat, and pointed at both ends. The hammers
are solid cones of iron, the upper part of the cones prolonged so as
to give a good grip, and the blows are given directly downwards, like
the blows of a pestle. The bellows are of the usual African type,
cut out of one piece of solid but soft wood; at the upper end of these
bellows there are two chambers hollowed out in the wood and then covered
with the skin of some animal, from which the hair has been removed.
This is bound firmly round the rim of each chamber with tie-tie, and
the bag of it at the top is gathered up, and bound to a small piece
of stick, to give a convenient hand hold. The straight cylinder,
terminating in the nozzle, has two channels burnt in it which communicate
with each of the chambers respectively, and half-way up the cylinder,
there are burnt from the outside into the air passages, three series
of holes, one series on the upper surface, and a series at each side.
This ingenious arrangement gives a constant current of air up from the
nozzle when the bellows are worked by a man sitting behind them, and
rapidly and alternately pulling up the skin cover over one chamber,
while depressing the other. In order to make the affair firm it
is lashed to pieces of stick stuck in the ground in a suitable way so
as to keep the bellows at an angle with the nozzle directed towards
the fire. As wooden bellows like this if stuck into the fire would
soon be aflame, the nozzle is put into a cylinder made of clay.
This cylinder is made sufficiently large at the end, into which the
nozzle of the bellows goes, for the air to have full play round the
latter.</p>
<p>The Fan bellows only differ from those of the other iron-working
West Coast tribes in having the channels from the two chambers in one
piece of wood all the way. His forge is the same as the other
forges, a round cavity scooped in the ground; his fuel also is charcoal.
His other smith’s tool consists of a pointed piece of iron, with
which he works out the patterns he puts at the handle-end of his swords,
etc.</p>
<p>I must now speak briefly on the most important article with which
the Fan deals, namely ivory. His methods of collecting this are
several, and many a wild story the handles of your table knives could
tell you, if their ivory has passed through Fan hands. For ivory
is everywhere an evil thing before which the quest for gold sinks into
a parlour game; and when its charms seize such a tribe as the Fans,
“conclusions pass their careers.” A very common way
of collecting a tooth is to kill the person who owns one. Therefore
in order to prevent this catastrophe happening to you yourself, when
you have one, it is held advisable, unless you are a powerful person
in your own village, to bury or sink the said tooth and say nothing
about it until the trader comes into your district or you get a chance
of smuggling it quietly down to him. Some of these private ivories
are kept for years and years before they reach the trader’s hands.
And quite a third of the ivory you see coming on board a vessel to go
to Europe is dark from this keeping: some teeth a lovely brown like
a well-coloured meerschaum, others quite black, and gnawed by that strange
little creature - much heard of, and abused, yet little known in ivory
ports - the ivory rat.</p>
<p>Ivory, however, that is obtained by murder is private ivory.
The public ivory trade among the Fans is carried on in a way more in
accordance with European ideas of a legitimate trade. The greater
part of this ivory is obtained from dead elephants. There are
in this region certain places where the elephants are said to go to
die. A locality in one district pointed out to me as such a place,
was a great swamp in the forest. A swamp that evidently was deep
in the middle, for from out its dark waters no swamp plant, or tree
grew, and evidently its shores sloped suddenly, for the band of swamp
plants round its edge was narrow. It is just possible that during
the rainy season when most of the surrounding country would be under
water, elephants might stray into this natural trap and get drowned,
and on the drying up of the waters be discovered, and the fact being
known, be regularly sought for by the natives cognisant of this.
I inquired carefully whether these places where the elephants came to
die always had water in them, but they said no, and in one district
spoke of a valley or round-shaped depression in among the mountains.
But natives were naturally disinclined to take a stranger to these ivory
mines, and a white person who has caught - as any one who has been in
touch must catch - ivory fever, is naturally equally disinclined to
give localities.</p>
<p>A certain percentage of ivory collected by the Fans is from live
elephants, but I am bound to admit that their method of hunting elephants
is disgracefully unsportsmanlike. A herd of elephants is discovered
by rubber hunters or by depredations on plantations, and the whole village,
men, women, children, babies and dogs turn out into the forest and stalk
the monsters into a suitable ravine, taking care not to scare them.
When they have gradually edged the elephants on into a suitable place,
they fell trees and wreathe them very roughly together with bush rope,
all round an immense enclosure, still taking care not to scare the elephants
into a rush. This fence is quite inadequate to stop any elephant
in itself, but it is made effective by being smeared with certain things,
the smell whereof the elephants detest so much that when they wander
up to it, they turn back disgusted. I need hardly remark that
this preparation is made by the witch doctors and its constituents a
secret of theirs, and I was only able to find out some of them.
Then poisoned plantains are placed within the enclosure, and the elephants
eat these and grow drowsier and drowsier; if the water supply within
the enclosure is a pool it is poisoned, but if it is a running stream
this cannot be done. During this time the crowd of men and women
spend their days round the enclosure, ready to turn back any elephant
who may attempt to break out, going to and fro to the village for their
food. Their nights they spend in little bough shelters by the
enclosure, watching more vigilantly than by day, as the elephants are
more active at night, it being their usual feeding time. During
the whole time the witch doctor is hard at work making incantations
and charms, with a view to finding out the proper time to attack the
elephants. In my opinion, his decision fundamentally depends on
his knowledge of the state of poisoning the animals are in, but his
version is that he gets his information from the forest spirits.
When, however, he has settled the day, the best hunters steal into the
enclosure and take up safe positions in trees, and the outer crowd set
light to the ready-built fires, and make the greatest uproar possible,
and fire upon the staggering, terrified elephants as they attempt to
break out. The hunters in the trees fire down on them as they
rush past, the fatal point at the back of the skull being well exposed
to them.</p>
<p>When the animals are nearly exhausted, those men who do not possess
guns dash into the enclosure, and the men who do, reload and join them,
and the work is then completed. One elephant hunt I chanced upon
at the final stage had taken two months’ preparation, and although
the plan sounds safe enough, there is really a good deal of danger left
in it with all the drugging and ju-ju. There were eight elephants
killed that day, but three burst through everything, sending energetic
spectators flying, and squashing two men and a baby as flat as botanical
specimens.</p>
<p>The subsequent proceedings were impressive. The whole of the
people gorged themselves on the meat for days, and great chunks of it
were smoked over the fires in all directions. A certain portion
of the flesh of the hind leg was taken by the witch doctor for ju-ju,
and was supposed to be put away by him, with certain suitable incantations
in the recesses of the forest; his idea being apparently either to give
rise to more elephants, or to induce the forest spirits to bring more
elephants into the district.</p>
<p>Dr. Nassau tells me that the manner in which the ivory gained by
one of these hunts is divided is as follows: - “The witch doctor,
the chiefs, and the family on whose ground the enclosure is built, and
especially the household whose women first discovered the animals, decide
in council as to the division of the tusks and the share of the flesh
to be given to the crowd of outsiders. The next day the tusks
are removed and each family represented in the assemblage cuts up and
distributes the flesh.” In the hunt I saw finished, the
elephants had not been discovered, as in the case Dr. Nassau above speaks
of, in a plantation by women, but by a party of rubber hunters in the
forest some four or five miles from any village, and the ivory that
would have been allotted to the plantation holder in the former case,
went in this case to the young rubber hunters.</p>
<p>Such are the pursuits, sports and pastimes of my friends the Fans.
I have been considerably chaffed both by whites and blacks about my
partiality for this tribe, but as I like Africans in my way - not <i>à
la</i> Sierra Leone - and these Africans have more of the qualities
I like than any other tribe I have met, it is but natural that I should
prefer them. They are brave and so you can respect them, which
is an essential element in a friendly feeling. They are on the
whole a fine race, particularly those in the mountain districts of the
Sierra del Cristal, where one continually sees magnificent specimens
of human beings, both male and female. Their colour is light bronze,
many of the men have beards, and albinoes are rare among them.
The average height in the mountain districts is five feet six to five
feet eight, the difference in stature between men and women not being
great. Their countenances are very bright and expressive, and
if once you have been among them, you can never mistake a Fan.
But it is in their mental characteristics that their difference from
the lethargic, dying-out coast tribes is most marked. The Fan
is full of fire, temper, intelligence and go; very teachable, rather
difficult to manage, quick to take offence, and utterly indifferent
to human life. I ought to say that other people, who should know
him better than I, say he is a treacherous, thievish, murderous cannibal.
I never found him treacherous; but then I never trusted him, remembering
one of the aphorisms of my great teacher Captain Boler of Bonny, “It’s
not safe to go among bush tribes, but if you are such a fool as to go,
you needn’t go and be a bigger fool still, you’ve done enough.”
And Captain Boler’s other great aphorism was: “Never be
afraid of a black man.” “What if I can’t help
it?” said I. “Don’t show it,” said he.
To these precepts I humbly add another: “Never lose your head.”
My most favourite form of literature, I may remark, is accounts of mountaineering
exploits, though I have never seen a glacier or a permanent snow mountain
in my life. I do not care a row of pins how badly they may be
written, and what form of bumble-puppy grammar and composition is employed,
as long as the writer will walk along the edge of a precipice with a
sheer fall of thousands of feet on one side and a sheer wall on the
other; or better still crawl up an <i>arête</i> with a precipice
on either. Nothing on earth would persuade me to do either of
these things myself, but they remind me of bits of country I have been
through where you walk along a narrow line of security with gulfs of
murder looming on each side, and where in exactly the same way you are
as safe as if you were in your easy chair at home, as long as you get
sufficient holding ground: not on rock in the bush village inhabited
by murderous cannibals, but on ideas in those men’s and women’s
minds; and these ideas, which I think I may say you will always find,
give you safety. It is not advisable to play with them, or to
attempt to eradicate them, because you regard them as superstitious;
and never, never shoot too soon. I have never had to shoot, and
hope never to have to; because in such a situation, one white alone
with no troops to back him means a clean finish. But this would
not discourage me if I had to start, only it makes me more inclined
to walk round the obstacle, than to become a mere blood splotch against
it, if this can be done without losing your self-respect, which is the
mainspring of your power in West Africa.</p>
<p>As for flourishing about a revolver and threatening to fire, I hold
it utter idiocy. I have never tried it, however, so I speak from
prejudice which arises from the feeling that there is something cowardly
in it. Always have your revolver ready loaded in good order, and
have your hand on it when things are getting warm, and in addition have
an exceedingly good bowie knife, not a hinge knife, because with a hinge
knife you have got to get it open - hard work in a country where all
things go rusty in the joints - and hinge knives are liable to close
on your own fingers. The best form of knife is the bowie, with
a shallow half moon cut out of the back at the point end, and this depression
sharpened to a cutting edge. A knife is essential, because after
wading neck deep in a swamp your revolver is neither use nor ornament
until you have had time to clean it. But the chances are you may
go across Africa, or live years in it, and require neither. It
is just the case of the gentleman who asked if one required a revolver
in Carolina and was answered, “You may be here one year, and you
may be here two and never want it; but when you do want it you’ll
want it very bad.”</p>
<p>The cannibalism of the Fans, although a prevalent habit, is no danger,
I think, to white people, except as regards the bother it gives one
in preventing one’s black companions from getting eaten.
The Fan is not a cannibal from sacrificial motives like the negro.
He does it in his common sense way. Man’s flesh, he says,
is good to eat, very good, and he wishes you would try it. Oh
dear no, he never eats it himself, but the next door town does.
He is always very much abused for eating his relations, but he really
does not do this. He will eat his next door neighbour’s
relations and sell his own deceased to his next door neighbour in return;
but he does not buy slaves and fatten them up for his table as some
of the Middle Congo tribes I know of do. He has no slaves, no
prisoners of war, no cemeteries, so you must draw your own conclusions.
No, my friend, I will not tell you any cannibal stories. I have
heard how good M. du Chaillu fared after telling you some beauties,
and now you come away from the Fan village and down the Rembwé
river.</p>
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