<h2>CHAPTER XIX. THE GREAT PEAK OF CAMEROONS - (continued).</h2>
<br/>
<p><i>Setting forth how the Voyager for a second time reaches the S.E.
crater, with some account of the pleasures incidental to camping out
in the said crater.</i></p>
<p><i>September 24th</i>. - Lovely morning, the grey-white mist in the
forest makes it like a dream of Fairyland, each moss-grown tree stem
heavily gemmed with dewdrops. At 5.30 I stir the boys, for Sasu,
the sergeant, says he must go back to his military duties. The
men think we are all going back with him as he is our only guide, but
I send three of them down with orders to go back to Victoria - two being
of the original set I started with. They are surprised and disgusted
at being sent home, but they have got “hot foot,” and something
wrong in the usual seat of African internal disturbances, their “tummicks,”
and I am not thinking of starting a sanatorium for abdominally-afflicted
Africans in that crater plain above. Black boy is the other boy
returned, I do not want another of his attacks.</p>
<p>They go, and this leaves me in the forest camp with Kefalla, Xenia,
and Cook, and we start expecting the water sent for by Monrovia boy
yesterday forenoon. There are an abominable lot of bees about;
they do not give one a moment’s peace, getting beneath the waterproof
sheets over the bed. The ground, bestrewn with leaves and dried
wood, is a mass of large flies rather like our common house-fly, but
both butterflies and beetles seem scarce; and I confess I do not feel
up to hunting much after yesterday’s work, and deem it advisable
to rest. My face and particularly my lips are a misery to me,
having been blistered all over by yesterday’s sun, and last night
I inadvertently whipped the skin all off one cheek with the blanket,
and it keeps on bleeding, and, horror of horrors, there is no tea until
that water comes. I wish I had got the mountaineering spirit,
for then I could say, “I’ll never come to this sort of place
again, for you can get all you want in the Alps.” I have
been told this by my mountaineering friends - I have never been there
- and that you can go and do all sorts of stupendous things all day,
and come back in the evening to <i>table d’hôte</i> at an
hotel; but as I have not got the mountaineering spirit, I suppose I
shall come fooling into some such place as this as soon as I get the
next chance.</p>
<p>About 8.30, to our delight, the gallant Monrovia boy comes through
the bush with a demijohn of water, and I get my tea, and give the men
the only half-pound of rice I have and a tin of meat, and they eat,
become merry, and chat over their absent companions in a scornful, scandalous
way. Who cares for hotels now? When one is in a delightful
place like this, one must work, so off I go to the north into the forest,
after giving the rest of the demijohn of water into the Monrovia boy’s
charge with strict orders it is not to be opened till my return.
Quantities of beetles.</p>
<p>A little after two o’clock I return to camp, after having wandered
about in the forest and found three very deep holes, down which I heaved
rocks and in no case heard a splash. In one I did not hear the
rocks strike, owing to the great depth. I hate holes, and especially
do I hate these African ones, for I am frequently falling, more or less,
into them, and they will be my end.</p>
<p>The other demijohns of water have not arrived yet, and we are getting
anxious again because the men’s food has not come up, and they
have been so exceedingly thirsty that they have drunk most of the water
- not, however, since it has been in Monrovia’s charge; but at
3.15 another boy comes through the bush with another demijohn of water.
We receive him gladly, and ask him about the chop. He knows nothing
about it. At 3.45 another boy comes through the bush with another
demijohn of water; we receive him kindly; <i>he</i> does not know anything
about the chop. At 4.10 another boy comes through the bush with
another demijohn of water, and knowing nothing about the chop, we are
civil to him, and that’s all.</p>
<p>A terrific tornado which has been lurking growling about then sits
down in the forest and bursts, wrapping us up in a lively kind of fog,
with its thunder, lightning, and rain. It was impossible to hear,
or make one’s self heard at the distance of even a few paces,
because of the shrill squeal of the wind, the roar of the thunder, and
the rush of the rain on the trees round us. It was not like having
a storm burst over you in the least; you felt you were in the middle
of its engine-room when it had broken down badly. After half an
hour or so the thunder seemed to lift itself off the ground, and the
lightning came in sheets, instead of in great forks that flew like flights
of spears among the forest trees. The thunder, however, had not
settled things amicably with the mountain; it roared its rage at Mungo,
and Mungo answered back, quivering with a rage as great, under our feet.
One feels here as if one were constantly dropping, unasked and unregarded,
among painful and violent discussions between the elemental powers of
the Universe. Mungo growls and swears in thunder at the sky, and
sulks in white mist all the morning, and then the sky answers back,
hurling down lightnings and rivers of water, with total disregard of
Mungo’s visitors. The way the water rushes down from the
mountain wall through the watercourses in the jungle just above, and
then at the edge of the forest spreads out into a sheet of water that
is an inch deep, and that flies on past us in miniature cascades, trying
the while to put out our fire and so on, is - quite interesting.
(I exhausted my vocabulary on those boys yesterday.)</p>
<p>As soon as we saw what we were in for, we had thrown dry wood on
to the fire, and it blazed just as the rain came down, so with our assistance
it fought a good fight with its fellow elements, spitting and hissing
like a wild cat. It could have managed the water fairly well,
but the wind came, very nearly putting an end to it by carrying away
its protecting bough house, which settled on “Professor”
Kefalla, who burst out in a lecture on the foolishness of mountaineering
and the quantity of devils in this region. Just in the midst of
these joys another boy came through the bush with another demijohn of
water. We did not receive him even civilly; I burst out laughing,
and the boys went off in a roar, and we shouted at him, “Where
them chop?” “He live for come,” said the boy,
and we then gave him a hearty welcome and a tot of rum, and an hour
afterwards two more boys appear, one carrying a sack of rice and beef
for the men, and the other a box for me from Herr Liebert, containing
a luxurious supply of biscuits, candles, tinned meats, and a bottle
of wine and one of beer.</p>
<p>We are now all happy, though exceeding damp, and the boys sit round
the fire, with their big iron pot full of beef and rice, busy cooking
while they talk. Wonderful accounts of our prodigies of valour
I hear given by Xenia, and terrible accounts of what they have lived
through from the others, and the men who have brought up the demijohns
and the chop recount the last news from Buea. James’s wife
has run away again.</p>
<p>I have taken possession of two demijohns of water and the rum demijohn,
arranging them round the head of my bed. The worst of it is those
tiresome bees, as soon as the rain is over, come in hundreds after the
rum, and frighten me continually. The worthless wretches get intoxicated
on what they can suck from round the cork, and then they stagger about
on the ground buzzing malevolently. When the boys have had the
chop and a good smoke, we turn to and make up the loads for to-morrow’s
start up the mountain, and then, after more hot tea, I turn in on my
camp bed - listening to the soft sweet murmur of the trees and the pleasant,
laughing chatter of the men.</p>
<p><i>September 25th</i>. - Rolled off the bed twice last night into
the bush. The rain has washed the ground away from under its off
legs, so that it tilts; and there were quantities of large longicorn
beetles about during the night - the sort with spiny backs; they kept
on getting themselves hitched on to my blankets and when I wanted civilly
to remove them they made a horrid fizzing noise and showed fight - cocking
their horns in a defiant way. I awake finally about 5 A.M. soaked
through to the skin. The waterproof sheet has had a label sewn
to it, so is not waterproof, and it has been raining softly but amply
for hours.</p>
<p>About seven we are off again, with Xenia, Head man, Cook, Monrovia
boy and a labourer from Buea - the water-carriers have gone home after
having had their morning chop.</p>
<p>We make for the face of the wall by a route to the left of that I
took on Monday, and when we are clambering up it, some 600 feet above
the hillocks, swish comes a terrific rain-storm at us accompanied by
a squealing, bitter cold wind. We can hear the roar of the rain
on the forest below, and hoping to get above it we keep on; hoping,
however, is vain. The dense mist that comes with it prevents our
seeing more than two yards in front, and we get too far to the left.
I am behind the band to-day, severely bringing up the rear, and about
1 o’clock I hear shouts from the vanguard and when I get up to
them I find them sitting on the edge of one of the clefts or scars in
the mountain face.</p>
<p>I do not know how these quarry-like chasms have been formed.
They both look alike from below - the mountain wall comes down vertically
into them - and the bottom of this one slopes forward, so that if we
had had the misfortune when a little lower down to have gone a little
further to the left, we should have got on to the bottom of it, and
should have found ourselves walled in on three sides, and had to retrace
our steps; as it is we have just struck its right-hand edge. And
fortunately, the mist, thick as it is, has not been sufficiently thick
to lead the men to walk over it; for had they done so they would have
got killed, as the cliff arches in under so that we look straight into
the bottom of the scar some 200 or 300 feet below, when there is a split
in the mist. The sides and bottom are made of, and strewn with,
white, moss-grown masses of volcanic cinder rock, and sparsely shrubbed
with gnarled trees which have evidently been under fire - one of my
boys tells me from the burning of this face of the mountain by “the
Major from Calabar” during the previous dry season.</p>
<p>We keep on up a steep grass-covered slope, and finally reach the
top of the wall. The immense old crater floor before us is to-day
the site of a seething storm, and the peak itself quite invisible.
My boys are quite demoralised by the cold. I find most of them
have sold the blankets I gave them out at Buana; and those who have
not sold them have left them behind at Buea, from laziness perhaps,
but more possibly from a confidence in their powers to prevent us getting
so far.</p>
<p>I believe if I had collapsed too - the cold tempted me to do so as
nothing else can - they would have lain down and died in the cold sleety
rain.</p>
<p>I sight a clump of gnarled sparsely-foliaged trees bedraped heavily
with lichen, growing in a hollow among the rocks; thither I urge the
men for shelter and they go like storm-bewildered sheep. My bones
are shaking in my skin and my teeth in my head, for after the experience
I had had of the heat here on Monday I dared not clothe myself heavily.</p>
<p>The men stand helpless under the trees, and I hastily take the load
of blankets Herr Liebert lent us off a boy’s back and undo it,
throwing one blanket round each man, and opening my umbrella and spreading
it over the other blankets. Then I give them a tot of rum apiece,
as they sit huddled in their blankets, and tear up a lot of the brittle,
rotten wood from the trees and shrubs, getting horrid thorns into my
hands the while, and set to work getting a fire with it and the driest
of the moss from beneath the rocks. By the aid of it and Xenia,
who soon revived, and a carefully scraped up candle and a box of matches,
the fire soon blazes, Xenia holding a blanket to shelter it, while I,
with a cutlass, chop stakes to fix the blankets on, so as to make a
fire tent.</p>
<p>The other boys now revive, and I hustle them about to make more fires,
no easy work in the drenching rain, but work that has got to be done.
We soon get three well alight, and then I clutch a blanket - a wringing
wet blanket, but a comfort - and wrapping myself round in it, issue
orders for wood to be gathered and stored round each fire to dry, and
then stand over Cook while he makes the men’s already cooked chop
hot over our first fire, when this is done getting him to make me tea,
or as it more truly should be called, soup, for it contains bits of
rice and beef, and the general taste of the affair is wood smoke.</p>
<p>Kefalla by this time is in lecturing form again, so my mind is relieved
about him, although he says, “Oh, ma! It be cold, cold too
much. Too much cold kill we black man, all same for one as too
much sun kill you white man. Oh, ma!. . .,” etc. I
tell him they have only got themselves to blame; if they had come up
with me on Monday we should have been hot enough, and missed this storm
of rain.</p>
<p>When the boys have had their chop, and are curling themselves up
comfortably round their now blazing fires Xenia must needs start a theory
that there is a better place than this to camp in; he saw it when he
was with an unsuccessful expedition that got as far as this. Kefalla
is fool enough to go off with him to find this place; but they soon
return, chilled through again, and unsuccessful in their quest.
I gather that they have been to find caves. I wish they had found
caves, for I am not thinking of taking out a patent for our present
camp site.</p>
<p>The bitter wind and swishing rain keep on. We are to a certain
extent sheltered from the former, but the latter is of that insinuating
sort that nothing but a granite wall would keep off.</p>
<p>Just at sundown, however, as is usual in this country, the rain ceases
for a while, and I take this opportunity to get out my seaman’s
jersey. When I have fought my way into it, I turn to survey our
position, and find I have been carrying on my battle on the brink of
an abysmal hole whose mouth is concealed among the rocks and scraggly
shrubs just above our camp. I heave rocks down it, as we in Fanland
would offer rocks to an Ombwiri, and hear them go “knickity-knock,
like a pebble in Carisbrook well.” I think I detect a far
away splash, but it was an awesome way down. This mountain seems
set with these man-traps, and “some day some gentleman’s
nigger” will get killed down one.</p>
<p>The mist has now cleared away from the peak, but lies all over the
lower world, and I take bearings of the three highest cones or peaks
carefully. Then I go away over the rocky ground southwards, and
as I stand looking round, the mist sea below is cleft in twain for a
few minutes by some fierce down-draught of wind from the peak, and I
get a strange, clear, sudden view right down to Ambas Bay. It
is just like looking down from one world into another. I think
how Odin hung and looked down into Nifelheim, and then of how hot, how
deliciously hot, it was away down there, and then the mist closes over
it. I shiver and go back to camp, for night is coming on, and
I know my men will require intellectual support in the matter of procuring
firewood.</p>
<p>The men are now quite happy; over each fire they have made a tent
with four sticks with a blanket on, a blanket that is too wet to burn,
though I have to make them brace the blankets to windward for fear of
their scorching.</p>
<p>The wood from the shrubs here is of an aromatic and a resinous nature,
which sounds nice, but it isn’t; for the volumes of smoke it gives
off when burning are suffocating, and the boys, who sit almost on the
fire, are every few moments scrambling to their feet and going apart
to cough out smoke, like so many novices in training for the profession
of fire-eaters. However, they soon find that if they roll themselves
in their blankets, and lie on the ground to windward they escape most
of the smoke. They have divided up into three parties: Kefalla
and Xenia, who have struck up a great friendship, take the lower, the
most exposed fire. Head man, Cook, and Monrovia Boy have the upper
fire, and the labourer has the middle one - he being an outcast for
medical reasons. They are all steaming away and smoking comfortably.</p>
<p>I form the noble resolution to keep awake, and rouse up any gentleman
who may catch on fire during the night, and see to wood being put on
the fires, so elaborately settle myself on my wooden chop-box, wherein
I have got all the lucifers which are not in the soap-box. Owing
to there not being a piece of ground the size of a sixpenny piece level
in this place, the arrangement of my box camp takes time, but at last
it is done to my complete satisfaction, close to a tree trunk, and I
think, as I wrap myself up in my two wet blankets and lean against my
tree, what a good thing it is to know how to make one’s self comfortable
in a place like this. This tree stem is perfection, just the right
angle to be restful to one’s back, and one can rely all the time
on Nature hereabouts not to let one get thoroughly effete from luxurious
comfort, so I lazily watch and listen to Xenia and Kefalla at their
fire hard by.</p>
<p>They begin talking to each other on their different tribal societies;
Kefalla is a Vey, Xenia a Liberian, so in the interests of Science I
give them two heads of tobacco to stimulate their conversation.
They receive them with tragic grief, having no pipe, so in the interests
of Science I undo my blankets and give them two out of my portmanteau;
then do myself up again and pretend to be asleep. I am rewarded
by getting some interesting details, and form the opinion that both
these worthies, in their pursuit of their particular ju-jus, have come
into contact with white prejudices, and are now fugitives from religious
persecution. I also observe they have both their own ideas of
happiness. Kefalla holds it lies in a warm shirt, Xenia that it
abides in warm trousers; and every half-hour the former takes his shirt
off, and holds it in the fire smoke, and then puts it hastily on; and
Xenia, who is the one and only trouser wearer in our band, spends fifty
per cent. of the night on one leg struggling to get the other in or
out of these garments, when they are either coming off to be warmed,
or going on after warming.</p>
<p>There seem but few insects here. I have only got two moths
to-night - one pretty one with white wings with little red spots on,
like an old-fashioned petticoat such as an early Victorian-age lady
would have worn - the other a sweet thing in silver.</p>
<p>(Later, <i>i.e</i>., 2.15 A.M.). I have been asleep against
that abominable vegetable of a tree. It had its trunk covered
with a soft cushion of moss, and pretended to be a comfort - a right
angle to lean against, and a softly padded protection to the spine from
wind, and all that sort of thing; whereas the whole mortal time it was
nothing in this wretched world but a water-pipe, to conduct an extra
supply of water down my back. The water has simply streamed down
it, and formed a nice little pool in a rocky hollow where I keep my
feet, and I am chilled to the innermost bone, so have to scramble up
and drag my box to the side of Kefalla and Xenia’s fire, feeling
sure I have contracted a fatal chill this time. I scrape the ashes
out of the fire into a heap, and put my sodden boots into them, and
they hiss merrily, and I resolve not to go to sleep again. 5 A.M.
- Have been to sleep twice, and have fallen off my box bodily into the
fire in my wet blankets, and should for sure have put it out like a
bucket of cold water had not Xenia and Kefalla been roused up by the
smother I occasioned and rescued me - or the fire. It is not raining
now, but it is bitter cold and Cook is getting my tea. I give
the boys a lot of hot tea with a big handful of sugar in, and they then
get their own food hot.</p>
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