<h2>CHAPTER XVI. FETISH - (concluded).</h2>
<br/>
<p><i>In which the discourse on apparitions is continued, with some
observations on secret societies, both tribal and murder, and the kindred
subject of leopards.</i></p>
<p>Apparitions are by no means always of human soul origin. All
the Tschwi and the Ewe gods, for example, have the habit of appearing
pretty regularly to their priests, and occasionally to the laity, like
Sasabonsum; but it is only to priests that these appearances are harmless
or beneficial. The effect of Sasabonsum’s appearance to
the layman I have cited above, and I could give many other examples
of the bad effects of those of other gods, but will only now mention
Tando, the Hater, the chief god of the Northern Tschwi, the Ashantees,
etc. He is terribly malicious, human in shape, and though not
quite white, is decidedly lighter in complexion than the chief god of
the Southern Tschwi, Bobowissi. His hair is lank, and he carries
a native sword and wears a long robe. His well-selected messengers
are those awful driver ants (Inkran) which it is not orthodox to molest
in Tando’s territories. He uses as his weapons lightning,
tempest, and disease, but the last is the most favourite one.</p>
<p>There is absolutely no trick too mean or venomous for Tando.
For example, he has a way of appearing near a village he has a grudge
against in the form of a male child, and wanders about crying bitterly,
until some kind-hearted, unsuspecting villager comes and takes him in
and feeds him. Then he develops a contagious disease that clears
that village out.</p>
<p>This form of appearance and subsequent conduct is, unhappily, not
rigidly confined to Tando, but is used by many spirits as a method of
collecting arrears in taxes in the way of sacrifices. I have found
traces of it among Bantu gods or spirits, and it gives rise to a general
hesitation in West Africa to take care of waifs and strays of unexplained
origin.</p>
<p>Other things beside gods and human spirits have the habit of becoming
incarnate. Once I had to sit waiting a long time at an apparently
perfectly clear bush path, because in front of us a spear’s ghost
used to fly across the path about that time in the afternoon, and if
any one was struck by it they died. A certain spring I know of
is haunted by the ghost of a pitcher. Many ladies when they have
gone alone to fill their pitchers in the evening time at this forest
spring have noticed a very fine pitcher standing there ready filled,
and thinking exchange is no robbery, or at any rate they would risk
it if it were, have left their own pitcher and taken the better looking
one; but always as soon as they have come within sight of the village
huts, the new pitcher has crumbled into dust, and the water in it been
spilt on the ground; and the worst of it is, when they have returned
to fetch their own discarded pitcher, they find it also shattered into
pieces.</p>
<p>There is also another class of apparition, of which I have met with
two instances, one among pure Negroes (Okÿon); the other among
pure Bantu (Kangwe). I will give the Bantu version of the affair,
because at Okÿon the incident had happened a good time before the
details were told me, and in the Bantu case they had happened the previous
evening. But there was very little difference in the main facts
of the case, and it was an important thing because in both cases the
underlying idea was sacrificial.</p>
<p>The woman who told me was an exceedingly intelligent, shrewd, reliable
person. She had been to the factory with some trade, and had got
a good price for it, and so was in a good temper on her return home
in the evening. She got out of her canoe and leaving her slave
boy to bring up the things, walked to her house, which was the ordinary
house of a prosperous Igalwa native, having two distinct rooms in it,
and a separate cook-house close by in a clean, sandy yard. She
trod on some nastiness in the yard, and going into the cook-house found
the slave girls round a very small and inefficient fire, trying to cook
the evening meal. She blew them up for not having a proper fire;
they said the wood was wet, and would not burn. She said they
lied, and she would see to them later, and she went into the chamber
she used for a sleeping apartment, and trod on something more on the
floor in the dark; those good-for-nothing hussies of slaves had not
lit her palm-oil lamp, and mentally forming the opinion that they had
been out flirting during her absence, and resolving to teach them well
the iniquity of such conduct, she sat down on her bed into a lot of
messy stuff of a clammy, damp nature. Now this fairly roused her,
for she is a notable housewife, who keeps her house and slaves in exceedingly
good order. So dismissing from her mind the commercial consideration
she had intended to gloat over when she came into her room, she called
Ingremina and others in a tone that brought those young ladies on the
spot. She asked them how they dared forget to light her lamp;
they said they had not, but the lamp in the room must have gone out
like the other lamps had, after burning dim and spluttering. They
further said they had not been out, but had been sitting round the fire
trying to make it burn properly. She duly whacked and pulled the
ears of all within reach. I say within reach for she is not very
active, weighing, I am sure, upwards of eighteen stone. Then she
went back into her room and got out her beautiful English paraffin lamp,
which she keeps in a box, and taking it into the cook-house, picked
up a bit of wood from the hissing, spluttering fire, and lit it.
When she picked up the wood she noticed that it was covered with the
same sticky abomination she had met before that evening, and it smelt
of the same faint smell she had noticed as soon as she had reached her
house, and by now the whole air seemed oppressive with it.</p>
<p>As soon as the lamp was alight she saw what the stuff was, namely,
blood. Blood was everywhere, the rest of the sticks in the fire
had it on them, it sizzled at the burning ends, and ran off the other
in rills. There were pools of it about her clean, sandy yard.
Her own room was reeking, the bed, the stools, the floor; it trickled
down the door-post; coagulated on the lintel. She herself was
smeared with it from the things she had come in contact with in the
dark, and the slaves seemed to have been sitting in pools of it.
The things she picked up off the table and shelf left rims of it behind
them; there was more in the skillets, and the oil in the open palm-oil
lamps had a film of it floating on the oil. Investigation showed
that the whole of the rest of her house was in a similar mess.
The good lady gave a complete catalogue of the household furniture and
its condition, which I need not give here. The slave girls when
the light came were terrified at what they saw, and she called in the
aristocracy of the village, and asked them their opinion on the blood
palaver. They said they could make nothing of it at first, but
subsequently formed the opinion that it meant something was going to
happen, and suggested with the kind, helpful cheerfulness of relatives
and friends, that they should not wonder if it were a prophecy of her
own death. This view irritated the already tried lady, and she
sent them about their business, and started the slaves on house-cleaning.
The blood cleaned up all right when you were about it, but kept on turning
up in other places, and in the one you had just cleaned as soon as you
left off and went elsewhere; and the morning came and found things in
much the same state until “before suntime,” say about 10
o’clock, when it faded away.</p>
<p>I cautiously tried to get my stately, touchy dowager duchess to explain
how it was that there was such a lot of blood, and how it was it got
into the house. She just said “it had to go somewhere,”
and refused to give rational explanations as <i>Chambers’s Journal</i>
does after telling a good ghost story. I found afterwards that
it was quite decided it was a case of “blood come before,”
and at Okÿon, Miss Slessor told me, in regard to the similar case
there, that this was the opinion held regarding the phenomenon.
It is always held uncanny in Africa if a person dies without shedding
blood. You see, the blood is the life, and if you see it come
out, you know the going of the thing, as it were. If you do not,
it is mysterious. At Okÿon, a few days after the blood appeared,
a nephew of the person whose house it came into was killed while felling
a tree in the forest; a bough struck him and broke his neck, without
shedding a drop of blood, and this bore out the theory, for the blood
having “to go somewhere” came before. In the Bantu
case I did not hear of such a supporting incident happening.</p>
<p>Certain African ideas about blood puzzle me. I was told by
a Batanga friend, a resident white trader, that a short time previously
a man was convicted of theft by the natives of a village close to him.
The hands and feet of the criminal were tied together, and he was flung
into the river. He got himself free, and swam to the other bank,
and went for bush. He was recaptured, and a stone tied to his
neck, and in again he was thrown. The second time he got free
and ashore, and was recaptured, and the chief then, most regretfully,
ordered that he was to be knocked on the head before being thrown in
for a third time. This time palaver set, but the chief knew that
he would die himself, by spitting the blood he had spilt, from his own
lungs, before the year was out. I inquired about the chief when
I passed this place, more than eighteen months after, and learnt from
a native that the chief was dead, and that he had died in this way.
The objection thus was not to shedding blood in a general way, but to
the shedding in the course of judicial execution. There may be
some idea of this kind underlying the ingenious and awful ways the negroes
have of killing thieves, by tying them to stakes in the rivers, or down
on to paths for the driver ants to kill and eat, but this is only conjecture;
I have not had a chance yet to work this subject up; and getting reliable
information about underlying ideas is very difficult in Africa.
The natives will say “Yes” to any mortal thing, if they
think you want them to; and the variety of their languages is another
great hindrance. Were it not for the prevalence of Kru English
or trade English, investigation would be almost impossible; but, fortunately,
this quaint language is prevalent, and the natives of different tribes
communicate with each other in it, and so round a fire, in the evening,
if you listen to the gossip, you can pick up all sorts of strange information,
and gain strange and often awful lights on your absent white friends’
characters, and your present companions’ religion. For example,
the other day I had a set of porters composed of four Bassa boys, two
Wei Weis, one Dualla, and two Yorubas. None of their languages
fitted, so they talked trade English, and pretty lively talk some of
it was, but of that anon.</p>
<p>I cannot close this brief notice of native ideas without mentioning
the secret societies; but to go fully into this branch of the subject
would require volumes, for every tribe has its secret society.
The Poorah of Sierra Leone, the Oru of Lagos, the Egbo of Calabar, the
Isyogo of the Igalwa, the Ukuku of the Benga, the Okukwe of the M’pongwe,
the Ikun of the Bakele, and the Lukuku of the Bachilangi Baluba, are
some of the most powerful secret societies on the West African Coast.</p>
<p>These secret societies are not essentially religious, their action
is mainly judicial, and their particularly presiding spirit is not a
god or devil in our sense of the word. The ritual differs for
each in its detail, but there are broad lines of agreement between them.
There are societies both for men and for women, but mixed societies
for both sexes are rare. Those that I have mentioned above are
all male, except the Lukuku, and women are utterly forbidden to participate
in the rites or become acquainted with their secrets, for one of the
chief duties of these societies is to keep the women in order; and besides
it is undoubtedly held that women are bad for certain forms of ju-ju,
even when these forms are not directly connected, as far as I can find
out, with the secret society. For example, the other day a chief
up the Mungo River deliberately destroyed his ju-ju by showing it to
his women. It was a great ju-ju, but expensive to keep up, requiring
sacrifices of slaves and goats, so what with trade being bad, fall in
the price of oil and ivory and so on, he felt he could not afford that
ju-ju, and so destroyed its power, so as to prevent its harming him
when he neglected it.</p>
<p>The general rule with these secret societies is to admit the young
free people at an age of about eight to ten years, the boys entering
the male, the girls the female society. Both societies are rigidly
kept apart. A man who attempts to penetrate the female mysteries
would be as surely killed as a woman who might attempt to investigate
the male mysteries; still I came, in 1893, across an amusing case which
demonstrates the inextinguishable thirst for knowledge, so long as that
knowledge is forbidden, which characterises our sex.</p>
<p>It was in the district just south of Big Batanga. The male
society had been very hard on the ladies for some time, and one day
one star-like intellect among the latter told her next-door neighbour,
in strict confidence, that she did not believe Ikun was a spirit at
all, but only old So-and-so dressed up in leaves. This rank heresy
spread rapidly, in strict confidence, among the ladies at large, and
they used to assemble together in the house of the foundress of the
theory, secretly of course, because husbands down there are hasty with
the cutlass and the kassengo, and they talked the matter over.
Somehow or other, this came to the ears of the men. Whether the
ladies got too emancipated and winked when Ikun was mentioned, or asked
how Mr. So-and-so was this morning, in a pointed way, after an Ikun
manifestation, I do not know; some people told me this was so, but others,
who, I fear, were right, considering the acknowledged slowness of men
in putting two and two together, and the treachery of women towards
each other, said that a woman had told a man that she had heard some
of the other women were going on in this heretical way. Anyhow,
the men knew, and were much alarmed; scepticism had spread by now to
such an extent that nothing short of burning or drowning all the women
could stamp it out and reintroduce the proper sense of awe into the
female side of Society, and after a good deal of consideration the men
saw, for men are undoubtedly more gifted in foresight than our sex,
that it was no particular use reintroducing this awe if there was no
female half of Society to be impressed by it. It was a brain-spraining
problem for the men all round, for it is clear Society cannot be kept
together without some superhuman aid to help to keep the feminine portion
of it within bounds.</p>
<p>Grave councils were held, and it was decided that the woman at whose
house these treasonable meetings were held should be sent away early
one morning on a trading mission to the nearest factory, a job she readily
undertook; and while the other women were away in the plantation or
at the spring, certain men entered her house secretly and dug a big
chamber out in the floor of the hut, and one of them, dressed as Ikun,
and provided with refreshments for the day, got into this chamber, and
the whole affair was covered over carefully and the floor re-sanded.
That afternoon there was a big manifestation of Ikun. He came
in the most terrible form, his howls were awful, and he finally went
dancing away into the bush as the night came down. The ladies
had just taken the common-sense precaution of removing all goats, sheep,
fowls, etc., into enclosed premises, for, like all his kind, he seizes
and holds any property he may come across in the street, but there was
evidently no emotional thrill in the female mind regarding him, and
when the leading lady returned home in the evening the other ladies
strolled into their leader’s hut to hear about what new cotton
prints, beads, and things Mr.--- had got at his factory by the last
steamer from Europe, and interesting kindred subjects bearing on Mr.---.
When they had threshed these matters out, the conversation turned on
to religion, and what fools those men had been making of themselves
all the afternoon with their Ikun. No sooner was his name uttered
than a venomous howl, terminating in squeals of rage and impatience,
came from the ground beneath them. They stared at each other for
one second, and then, feeling that something was tearing its way up
through the floor, they left for the interior of Africa with one accord.
Ikun gave chase as soon as he got free, but what with being half-stifled
and a bit cramped in the legs, and much encumbered with his vegetable
decorations, the ladies got clear away and no arrests were made - but
Society was saved. Scepticism became in the twinkling of an eye
a thing of the past; and, although no names were taken, the men observed
that certain ladies were particularly anxious, and regardless of expense,
in buying immunity from Ikun, and they fancied that these ladies were
probably in that hut on that particular evening, but they took no further
action against them, save making Ikun particularly expensive.
There ought to be a moral to an improving tale of this order, I know,
but the only one I can think of just now is that it takes a priest to
get round a woman; and I always feel inclined to jump on to the table
myself when I think of those poor dear creatures sitting on the floor
and feeling that awful thing clapper-clawing its way up right under
them.</p>
<p>Tattooing on the West Coast is comparatively rare, and I think I
may say never used with decorative intent only. The skin decorations
are either paint or cicatrices - in the former case the pattern is not
kept always the same by the individual. A peculiar form of it
you find in the Rivers, where a pattern is painted on the skin, and
then when the paint is dry, a wash is applied which makes the unpainted
skin rise up in between the painted pattern. The cicatrices are
sometimes tribal marks, but sometimes decorative. They are made
by cutting the skin and then placing in the wound the fluff of the silk
cotton tree.</p>
<p>The great point of agreement between all these West African secret
societies lies in the methods of initiation.</p>
<p>The boy, if he belongs to a tribe that goes in for tattooing, is
tattooed, and is handed over to instructors in the societies’
secrets and formula. He lives, with the other boys of his tribe
undergoing initiation, usually under the rule of several instructors,
and for the space of one year. He lives always in the forest,
and is naked and smeared with clay.</p>
<p>The boys are exercised so as to become inured to hardship; in some
districts, they make raids so as to perfect themselves in this useful
accomplishment. They always take a new name, and are supposed
by the initiation process to become new beings in the magic wood, and
on their return to their village at the end of their course, they pretend
to have entirely forgotten their life before they entered the wood;
but this pretence is not kept up beyond the period of festivities given
to welcome them home. They all learn, to a certain extent, a new
language, a secret language only understood by the initiated.</p>
<p>The same removal from home and instruction from initiated members
is also observed with the girls. However, in their case, it is
not always a forest-grove they are secluded in, sometimes it is done
in huts. Among the Grain Coast tribes however, the girls go into
a magic wood until they are married. Should they have to leave
the wood for any temporary reason, they must smear themselves with white
clay. A similar custom holds good in Okÿon, Calabar district,
where, should a girl have to leave the fattening-house, she must be
covered with white clay. I believe this fattening-house custom
in Calabar is not only for fattening up the women to improve their appearance,
but an initiatory custom as well, although the main intention is now,
undoubtedly, fattening, and the girl is constantly fed with fat-producing
foods, such as fou-fou soaked in palm oil. I am told, but I think
wrongly, that the white clay with which a Calabar girl is kept covered
while in the fattening-house, putting on an extra coating of it should
she come outside, is to assist in the fattening process by preventing
perspiration.</p>
<p>The duration of the period of seclusion varies somewhat. San
Salvador boys are six months in the wood. Cameroon boys are twelve
months. In most districts the girls are betrothed in infancy,
and they go into the wood or initiatory hut for a few months before
marriage. In this case the time seems to vary with the circumstances
of the individual; not so with the boys, for whom each tribal society
has a duly appointed course terminating at a duly appointed time; but
sometimes, as among some of the Yoruba tribes, the boy has to remain
under the rule of the presiding elders of the society, painted white,
and wearing only a bit of grass cloth, if he wears anything, until he
has killed a man. Then he is held to have attained man’s
estate by having demonstrated his courage and also by having secured
for himself the soul of the man he has killed as a spirit slave.</p>
<p>The initiation of boys into a few of the elementary dogmas of the
secret society by no means composes the entire work of the society.
All of them are judicial, and taken on the whole they do an immense
amount of good. The methods are frequently a little quaint.
Rushing about the streets disguised under masks and drapery, with an
imitation tail swinging behind you, while you lash out at every one
you meet with a whip or cutlass, is not a European way of keeping the
peace, or perhaps I should say maintaining the dignity of the Law.
But discipline must be maintained, and this is the West African way
of doing it.</p>
<p>The Egbo of Calabar is a fine type of the secret society. It
is exceedingly well developed in its details, not sketchy like Isyogo,
nor so red-handed as Poorah. Unfortunately, however, I cannot
speak with the same amount of knowledge of Egbo as I could of Poorah.</p>
<p>Egbo has the most grades of initiation, except perhaps Poorah, and
it exercises jurisdiction over all classes of crime except witchcraft.
Any Effik man who desires to become an influential person in the tribe
must buy himself into as high a grade of Egbo as he can afford, and
these grades are expensive, £1,500 or £1,000 English being
required for the higher steps, I am informed. But it is worth
it to a great trader, as an influential Effik necessarily is, for he
can call out his own class of Egbo and send it against those of his
debtors who may be of lower grades, and as the Egbo methods of delivering
its orders to pay up consist in placing Egbo at a man’s doorway,
and until it removes itself from that doorway the man dare not venture
outside his house, it is most successful.</p>
<p>Of course the higher a man is in Egbo rank, the greater his power
and security, for lower grades cannot proceed against higher ones.
Indeed, when a man meets the paraphernalia of a higher grade of Egbo
than that to which he belongs, he has to act as if he were lame, and
limp along past it humbly, as if the sight of it had taken all the strength
out of him, and, needless to remark, higher grade debtors flip their
fingers at lower grade creditors.</p>
<p>After talking so much about the secret society spirits, it may be
as well to say what they are. They are, one and all, a kind of
a sort of a something that usually (the exception is Ikun) lives in
the bush. Last February I was making my way back toward Duke Town
- late, as usual; I was just by a town on the Qwa River. As I
was hurrying onward I heard a terrific uproar accompanied by drums in
the thick bush into which, after a brief interval of open ground, the
path turned. I became cautious and alarmed, and hid in some dense
bush as the men making the noise approached. I saw it was some
ju-ju affair. They had a sort of box which they carried on poles,
and their dresses were peculiar, and abnormally ample over the upper
part of their body. They were prancing about in an ecstatic way
round the box, which had one end open, beating their drums and shouting.
They were fairly close to me, but fortunately turned their attention
to another bit of undergrowth, or that evening they would have landed
another kind of thing to what they were after. The bushes they
selected they surrounded and evidently did their best to induce something
to come out of them and go into their box arrangement. I was every
bit as anxious as they were that they should succeed, and succeed rapidly,
for you know there are a nasty lot of snakes and things in general,
not to mention driver ants, about that Calabar bush, that do not make
it at all pleasant to go sitting about in. However, presently
they got this something into their box and rejoiced exceedingly, and
departed staggering under the weight. I gave them a good start,
and then made the best of my way home; and all that night Duke Town
howled, and sang, and thumped its tom-toms unceasingly; for I was told
Egbo had come into the town. Egbo is very coy, even for a secret
society spirit, and seems to loathe publicity; but when he is ensconced
in this ark he utters sententious observations on the subject of current
politics, and his word is law. The voice that comes out of the
ark is very strange, and unlike a human voice. I heard it shortly
after Egbo had been secured. I expect, from what I saw, that there
was some person in that ark all the time, but I do not know. It
is more than I can do to understand my ju-ju details at present, let
alone explain them on rational lines. I hear that there is a tribe
on the slave coast who have been proved to keep a small child in the
drum that is the residence of their chief spirit, and that when the
child grows too large to go in it is killed, and another one that has
in the meantime been trained by the priests takes the place of the dead
one, until it, in its turn, grows too big and is killed, and so on.
I expect this killing of the children is not sacrificial, but arises
entirely from the fact that as ex-kings are dangerous to the body politic,
therefore still more dangerous would ex-gods be.</p>
<p>Very little is known by outsiders regarding Egbo compared to what
there must be to be known, owing to a want of interest or to a sense
of inability on the part of most white people to make head or tail out
of what seems to them a horrid pagan practice or a farrago of nonsense.</p>
<p>It is still a great power, although its officials in Duke or Creek
Town are no longer allowed to go chopping and whipping promiscuous-like,
because the Consul-General has a prejudice against this sort of thing,
and the Effik is learning that it is nearly as unhealthy to go against
his Consul-General as against his ju-ju. So I do not believe you
will ever get the truth about it in Duke Town, or Creek Town.
If you want to get hold of the underlying idea of these societies you
must go round out-of-the-way corners where the natives are not yet afraid
of being laughed at or punished.</p>
<p>Of the South-West Coast secret societies the Ukuku seems the most
powerful. The Isyogo belonging to those indolent Igalwas, and
M’pongwe is now little more than a play. You pretty frequently
come upon Isyogo dances just round Libreville. You will see stretched
across the little street in a cluster of houses, a line from which branches
are suspended, making a sort of screen. The women and children
keep one side of this screen, the men dancing on the other side to the
peculiar monotonous Isyogo tune. Poorah I have spoken of elsewhere.</p>
<p>I believe that these secret societies are always distinct from the
leopard societies. I have pretty nearly enough evidence to prove
that it is so in some districts, but not in all. So far my evidence
only goes to prove the distinction of the two among the Negroes, not
among the Bantu, and in all cases you will find some men belonging to
both. Some men, in fact, go in for all the societies in their
district, but not all the men; and in all districts, if you look close,
you will find several societies apart from the regular youth-initiating
one.</p>
<p>These other societies are practically murder societies, and their
practices usually include cannibalism, which is not an essential part
of the rites of the great tribal societies, Isyogo or Egbo. In
the Calabar district I was informed by natives that there was a society
of which the last entered member has to provide, for the entertainment
of the other members, the body of a relative of his own, and sacrificial
cannibalism is always breaking out, or perhaps I should say being discovered,
by the white authorities in the Niger Delta. There was the great
outburst of it at Brass, in 1895, and the one chronicled in the <i>Liverpool
Mercury</i> for August 13th, 1895, as occurring at Sierra Leone.
This account is worth quoting. It describes the hanging by the
Authorities of three murderers, and states the incidents, which took
place in the Imperi country behind Free Town.</p>
<p>One of the chief murderers was a man named Jowe, who had formerly
been a Sunday-school teacher in Sierra Leone. He pleaded in extenuation
of his offence that he had been compelled to join the society.
The others said they committed the murders in order to obtain certain
parts of the body for ju-ju purposes, the leg, the hand, the heart,
etc. The <i>Mercury</i> goes on to give the statement of the Reverend
Father Bomy of the Roman Catholic Mission. “He said he was
at Bromtu, where the St. Joseph Mission has a station, when a man was
brought down from the Imperi country in a boat. The poor fellow
was in a dreadful state, and was brought to the station for medical
treatment. He said he was working on his farm, when he was suddenly
pounced upon from behind. A number of sharp instruments were driven
into the back of his neck. He presented a fearful sight, having
wounds all over his body supposed to have been inflicted by the claws
of the leopard, but in reality they were stabs from sharp-pointed knives.
The native, who was a powerfully-built man, called out, and his cries
attracting the attention of his relations, the leopards made off.
The poor fellow died at Bromtu from the injuries. It was only
his splendid physique that kept him alive until his arrival at the Mission.”
The <i>Mercury</i> goes on to quote from the <i>Pall Mall</i>, and I
too go on quoting to show that these things are known and acknowledged
to have taken place in a colony like Sierra Leone, which has had unequalled
opportunities of becoming christianised for more than one hundred years,
and now has more than one hundred and thirty places of Christian worship
in it. “Some twenty years ago there was a war between this
tribe Taima and the Paramas. The Paramas sent some of their war
boys to be ambushed in the intervening country, the Imperi, but the
Imperi delivered these war boys to the enemy. In revenge, the
Paramas sent the Fetish Boofima into the Imperi country. This
Fetish had up to that time been kept active and working by the sacrifice
of goats, but the medicine men of the Paramas who introduced it into
the Imperi country decreed at the same time that human sacrifices would
be required to keep it alive, thereby working their vengeance on the
Imperi by leading them to exterminate themselves in sacrifice to the
Fetish. The country for years has been terrorised by this secret
worship of Boofima and at one time the Imperi started the Tonga dances,
at which the medicine men pointed out the supposed worshippers of Boofima
- the so-called Human Leopards, because when seizing their victims for
sacrifice they covered themselves with leopard skins, and imitating
the roars of the leopard, they sprang upon their victim, plunging at
the same time two three-pronged forks into each side of the throat.
The Government some years ago forbade the Tonga dances, and are now
striving to suppress the human leopards. There are also human
alligators who, disguised as alligators, swim in the creeks upon the
canoes and carry off the crew. Some of them have been brought
for trial but no complete case has been made out against them!”
In comment upon this account, which is evidently written by some one
well versed in the affair, I will only remark that sometimes, instead
of the three-pronged forks, there are fixed in the paws of the leopard
skin sharp-pointed cutting knives, the skin being made into a sort of
glove into which the hand of the human leopard fits. In one skin
I saw down south this was most ingeniously done. The knives were
shaped like the leopard’s claws, curved, sharp-pointed, and with
cutting edges underneath, and I am told the American Mendi Mission,
which works in the Sierra Leone districts, have got a similar skin in
their possession.</p>
<p>The human alligator mentioned, is our old friend the witch crocodile
- the spirit of the man in the crocodile. I never myself came
across a case of a man in his corporeal body swimming about in a crocodile
skin, and I doubt whether any native would chance himself inside a crocodile
skin and swim about in the river among the genuine articles for fear
of their penetrating his disguise mentally and physically.</p>
<p>In Calabar witch crocodiles are still flourishing. There is
an immense old brute that sporting Vice-Consuls periodically go after,
which is known to contain the spirit of a Duke Town chief who shall
be nameless, because they are getting on at such a pace just round Duke
Town that haply I might be had up for libel. When I was in Calabar
once, a peculiarly energetic officer had hit that crocodile and the
chief was forthwith laid up by a wound in his leg. He said a dog
had bit him. They, the chief and the crocodile, are quite well
again now, and I will say this in favour of that chief, that nothing
on earth would persuade me to believe that he went fooling about in
the Calabar River in his corporeal body, either in his own skin or a
crocodile’s.</p>
<p>The introduction of the Fetish Boofima into the country of the Imperi
is an interesting point as it shows that these different tribes have
the same big ju-ju. Similarly, Calabar Egbo can go into Okÿon,
and will be respected in some of the New Calabar districts, but not
at Brass, where the secret society is a distinct cult. Often a
neighbouring district will send into Calabar, or Brass, where the big
ju-ju is, and ask to have one sent up into their district to keep order,
but Egbo will occasionally be sent into a district without that district
in the least wanting it; but, as in the Imperi case, when it is there
it is supreme. But say, for example, you were to send Egbo round
from Calabar to Cameroon. Cameroon might be barely civil to it,
but would pay it no homage, for Cameroon has got no end of a ju-ju of
its own. It can rise up as high as the Peak, 13,760 feet.
I never saw the Cameroon ju-ju do this, but I saw it start up from four
feet to quite twelve feet in the twinkling of an eye, and I was assured
that it was only modest reticence on its part that made it leave the
other 13,748 feet out of the performance.</p>
<p>Doctor Nassau seems to think that the tribal society of the Corisco
regions is identical with the leopard societies. He has had considerable
experience of the workings of the Ukuku, particularly when he was pioneering
in the Benito regions, when it came very near killing him. He
says the name signifies a departed spirit. “It is a secret
society into which all the males are initiated at puberty, whose procedure
may not be seen by females, nor its laws disobeyed by any one under
pain of death, a penalty which is sometimes commuted to a fine, a heavy
fine. Its discussions are uttered as an oracle from any secluded
spot by some man appointed for the purpose.</p>
<p>“On trivial occasions any initiated man may personate Ukuku
or issue commands for the family. On other occasions, as in Shiku,
to raise prices, the society lays its commands on foreign traders.”</p>
<p>Some cases of Ukuku proceedings against white traders have come under
my own observation. A friend of mine, a trader in the Batanga
district, in some way incurred the animosity of the society’s
local branch. He had, as is usual in the South-West Coast trade
several sub-factories in the bush. He found himself boycotted;
no native came in to his yard to buy or sell at the store, not even
to sell food. He took no notice and awaited developments.
One evening when he was sitting on his verandah, smoking and reading,
he thought he heard some one singing softly under the house, this, like
most European buildings hereabouts, being elevated just above the earth.
He was attracted to the song and listened: it was evidently one of the
natives singing, not one of his own Kruboys, and so, knowing the language,
and having nothing else particular to do, he attended to the affair.</p>
<p>It was the same thing sung softly over and over again, so softly
that he could hardly make out the words. But at last, catching
his native name among them, he listened more intently than ever, down
at a knot-hole in the wooden floor. The song was - “They
are going to attack your factory at . . . to-morrow. They are
going to attack your factory at . . . to-morrow,” over and over
again, until it ceased; and then he thought he saw something darker
than the darkness round it creep across the yard and disappear in the
bush. Very early in the morning he, with his Kruboys and some
guns, went and established themselves in that threatened factory in
force. The Ukuku Society turned up in the evening, and reconnoitred
the situation, and finding there was more in it than they had expected,
withdrew.</p>
<p>In the course of the next twenty-four hours he succeeded in talking
the palaver successfully with them. He never knew who his singing
friend was, but suspected it was a man whom he had known to be grateful
for some kindness he had done him. Indeed there were, and are,
many natives who have cause to be grateful to him, for he is deservedly
popular among his local tribes, but the man who sang to him that night
deserves much honour, for he did it at a terrific risk.</p>
<p>Sometimes representatives of the Ukuku fraternity from several tribes
meet together and discuss intertribal difficulties, thereby avoiding
war.</p>
<p>Dr. Nassau distinctly says that the Bantu region leopard society
is identical with the Ukuku, and he says that although the leopards
are not very numerous here they are very daring, made so by immunity
from punishment by man. “The superstition is that on any
man who kills a leopard will fall a curse or evil disease, curable only
by ruinously expensive process of three weeks’ duration under
the direction of Ukuku. So the natives allow the greatest depredations
and ravages until their sheep, goats, and dogs are swept away, and are
roused to self-defence only when a human being becomes the victim of
the daring beast. With this superstition is united another similar
to the werewolf of Germany, viz., a belief in the power of human metamorphosis
into a leopard. A person so metamorphosed is called ‘Uvengwa.’
At one time in Benito an intense excitement prevailed in the community.
Doors and shutters were rattled at the dead of night, marks of leopard
claws were scratched on door-posts. Then tracks lay on every path.
Women and children in lonely places saw their flitting forms, or in
the dusk were knocked down by their spring, or heard their growl in
the thickets. It is difficult to decide in many of these reports
whether it is a real leopard or only an Uvengwa - to native fears they
are practically the same, - we were certain this time the Uvengwa was
the thief disguised in leopard’s skin, as theft is always heard
of about such times.”</p>
<p>When I was in Gaboon in September, 1895, there was great Uvengwa
excitement in a district just across the other side of the estuary,
mainly at a village that enjoyed the spacious and resounding name of
Rumpochembo, from a celebrated chief, and all these phenomena were rife
there. Again, when I was in a village up the Calabar there were
fourteen goats and five slaves killed in eight days by leopards, the
genuine things, I am sure, in this case; but here, as down South, there
was a strong objection to proceed against the leopard, and no action
was being taken save making the goat-houses stronger. In Okÿon,
when a leopard is killed, its body is treated with great respect and
brought into the killer’s village. Messages are then sent
to the neighbouring villages, and they send representatives to the village
and the gall-bladder is most carefully removed from the leopard and
burnt <i>coram publico</i>, each person whipping their hands down their
arms to disavow any guilt in the affair. This burning of the gall,
however, is not ju-ju, it is done merely to destroy it, and to demonstrate
to all men that it is destroyed, because it is believed to be a deadly
poison, and if any is found in a man’s possession the punishment
is death, unless he is a great chief - a few of these are allowed to
keep leopards’ gall in their possession. John Bailey tells
me that if a great chief commits a great crime, and is adjudged by a
conclave of his fellow chiefs to die, it is not considered right he
should die in a common way, and he is given leopards’ gall.
A precisely similar idea regarding the poisonous quality of crocodiles’
gall holds good down South.</p>
<p>The ju-ju parts of the leopard are the whiskers. You cannot
get a skin from a native with them on, and gay, reckless young hunters
wear them stuck in their hair and swagger tremendously while the Elders
shake their heads and keep a keen eye on their subsequent conduct.</p>
<p>I must say the African leopard is an audacious animal, although it
is ungrateful of me to say a word against him, after the way he has
let me off personally, and I will speak of his extreme beauty as compensation
for my ingratitude. I really think, taken as a whole, he is the
most lovely animal I have ever seen; only seeing him, in the one way
you can gain a full idea of his beauty, namely in his native forest,
is not an unmixed joy to a person, like myself, of a nervous disposition.
I may remark that my nervousness regarding the big game of Africa is
of a rather peculiar kind. I can confidently say I am not afraid
of any wild animal - until I see it - and then - well I will yield to
nobody in terror; fortunately as I say my terror is a special variety;
fortunately, because no one can manage their own terror. You can
suppress alarm, excitement, fear, fright, and all those small-fry emotions,
but the real terror is as dependent on the inner make of you as the
colour of your eyes, or the shape of your nose; and when terror ascends
its throne in my mind I become preternaturally artful, and intelligent
to an extent utterly foreign to my true nature, and save, in the case
of close quarters with bad big animals, a feeling of rage against some
unknown person that such things as leopards, elephants, crocodiles,
etc., should be allowed out loose in that disgracefully dangerous way,
I do not think much about it at the time. Whenever I have come
across an awful animal in the forest and I know it has seen me I take
Jerome’s advice, and instead of relying on the power of the human
eye rely upon that of the human leg, and effect a masterly retreat in
the face of the enemy. If I know it has not seen me I sink in
my tracks and keep an eye on it, hoping that it will go away soon.
Thus I once came upon a leopard. I had got caught in a tornado
in a dense forest. The massive, mighty trees were waving like
a wheat-field in an autumn gale in England, and I dare say a field mouse
in a wheat-field in a gale would have heard much the same uproar.
The tornado shrieked like ten thousand vengeful demons. The great
trees creaked and groaned and strained against it and their bush-rope
cables groaned and smacked like whips, and ever and anon a thundering
crash with snaps like pistol shots told that they and their mighty tree
had strained and struggled in vain. The fierce rain came in a
roar, tearing to shreds the leaves and blossoms and deluging everything.
I was making bad weather of it, and climbing up over a lot of rocks
out of a gully bottom where I had been half drowned in a stream, and
on getting my head to the level of a block of rock I observed right
in front of my eyes, broadside on, maybe a yard off, certainly not more,
a big leopard. He was crouching on the ground, with his magnificent
head thrown back and his eyes shut. His fore-paws were spread
out in front of him and he lashed the ground with his tail, and I grieve
to say, in face of that awful danger - I don’t mean me, but the
tornado - that depraved creature swore, softly, but repeatedly and profoundly.
I did not get all these facts up in one glance, for no sooner did I
see him than I ducked under the rocks, and remembered thankfully that
leopards are said to have no power of smell. But I heard his observation
on the weather, and the flip-flap of his tail on the ground. Every
now and then I cautiously took a look at him with one eye round a rock-edge,
and he remained in the same position. My feelings tell me he remained
there twelve months, but my calmer judgment puts the time down at twenty
minutes; and at last, on taking another cautious peep, I saw he was
gone. At the time I wished I knew exactly where, but I do not
care about that detail now, for I saw no more of him. He had moved
off in one of those weird lulls which you get in a tornado, when for
a few seconds the wild herd of hurrying winds seem to have lost themselves,
and wander round crying and wailing like lost souls, until their common
rage seizes them again and they rush back to their work of destruction.
It was an immense pleasure to have seen the great creature like that.
He was so evidently enraged and baffled by the uproar and dazzled by
the floods of lightning that swept down into the deepest recesses of
the forest, showing at one second every detail of twig, leaf, branch,
and stone round you, and then leaving you in a sort of swirling dark
until the next flash came; this, and the great conglomerate roar of
the wind, rain and thunder, was enough to bewilder any living thing.</p>
<p>I have never hurt a leopard intentionally; I am habitually kind to
animals, and besides I do not think it is ladylike to go shooting things
with a gun. Twice, however, I have been in collision with them.
On one occasion a big leopard had attacked a dog, who, with her family,
was occupying a broken-down hut next to mine. The dog was a half-bred
boarhound, and a savage brute on her own account. I, being roused
by the uproar, rushed out into the feeble moonlight, thinking she was
having one of her habitual turns-up with other dogs, and I saw a whirling
mass of animal matter within a yard of me. I fired two mushroom-shaped
native stools in rapid succession into the brown of it, and the meeting
broke up into a leopard and a dog. The leopard crouched, I think
to spring on me. I can see its great, beautiful, lambent eyes
still, and I seized an earthen water-cooler and flung it straight at
them. It was a noble shot; it burst on the leopard’s head
like a shell and the leopard went for bush one time. Twenty minutes
after people began to drop in cautiously and inquire if anything was
the matter, and I civilly asked them to go and ask the leopard in the
bush, but they firmly refused. We found the dog had got her shoulder
slit open as if by a blow from a cutlass, and the leopard had evidently
seized the dog by the scruff of her neck, but owing to the loose folds
of skin no bones were broken and she got round all right after much
ointment from me, which she paid me for with several bites. Do
not mistake this for a sporting adventure. I no more thought it
was a leopard than that it was a lotus when I joined the fight.
My other leopard was also after a dog. Leopards always come after
dogs, because once upon a time the leopard and the dog were great friends,
and the leopard went out one day and left her whelps in charge of the
dog, and the dog went out flirting, and a snake came and killed the
whelps, so there is ill-feeling to this day between the two. For
the benefit of sporting readers whose interest may have been excited
by the mention of big game, I may remark that the largest leopard skin
I ever measured myself was, tail included, 9 feet 7 inches. It
was a dried skin, and every man who saw it said, “It was the largest
skin he had ever seen, except one that he had seen somewhere else.”</p>
<p>The largest crocodile I ever measured was 22 feet 3 inches, the largest
gorilla 5 feet 7 inches. I am assured by the missionaries in Calabar,
that there was a python brought into Creek Town in the Rev. Mr. Goldie’s
time, that extended the whole length of the Creek Town mission-house
verandah and to spare. This python must have been over 40 feet.
I have not a shadow of doubt it was. Stay-at-home people will
always discredit great measurements, but experienced bushmen do not,
and after all, if it amuses the stay-at-homes to do so, by all means
let them; they have dull lives of it and it don’t hurt you, for
you know how exceedingly difficult it is to preserve really big things
to bring home, and how, half the time, they fall into the hands of people
who would not bother their heads to preserve them in a rotting climate
like West Africa.</p>
<p>The largest python skin I ever measured was a damaged one, which
was 26 feet. There is an immense one hung in front of a house
in San Paul de Loanda which you can go and measure yourself with comparative
safety any day, and which is, I think, over 20 feet. I never measured
this one. The common run of pythons is 10-15 feet, or rather I
should say this is about the sized one you find with painful frequency
in your chicken-house.</p>
<p>Of the Lubuku secret society I can speak with no personal knowledge.
I had a great deal of curious information regarding it from a Bakele
woman, who had her information second-hand, but it bears out what Captain
Latrobe Bateman says about it in his most excellent book <i>The</i>
<i>First Ascent of the Kasai</i> (George Phillip, 1889), and to his
account in Note J of the Appendix, I beg to refer the ethnologist.
My information also went to show what he calls “a dark inference
as to its true nature,” a nature not universally common by any
means to the African tribal secret society.</p>
<p>In addition to the secret society and the leopard society, there
are in the Delta some ju-jus held only by a few great chiefs.
The one in Bonny has a complete language to itself, and there is one
in Duke Town so powerful that should you desire the death of any person
you have only to go and name him before it. “These jujus
are very swift and sure.” I would rather drink than fight
with any of them - yes, far.</p>
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