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<h2> CHAPTER IX<br/> BAUSI THE KING </h2>
<p>About midday we made a start for Beza Town where King Bausi lived, which
we understood we ought to reach on the following evening. For some hours
the regiment marched in front, or rather round us, but as we complained to
Babemba of the noise and dust, with a confidence that was quite touching,
he sent it on ahead. First, however, he asked us to pass our word “by our
mothers,” which was the most sacred of oaths among many African peoples,
that we would not attempt to escape. I confess that I hesitated before
giving an answer, not being entirely enamoured of the Mazitu and of our
prospects among them, especially as I had discovered through Jerry that
the discomfited Imbozwi had departed from the soldiers on some business of
his own. Had the matter been left to me, indeed, I should have tried to
slip back into the bush over the border, and there put in a few months
shooting during the dry season, while working my way southwards. This,
too, was the wish of the Zulu hunters, of Hans, and I need not add of
Sammy. But when I mentioned the matter to Stephen, he implored me to
abandon the idea.</p>
<p>“Look here, Quatermain,” he said, “I have come to this God-forsaken
country to get that great Cypripedium, and get it I will or die in the
attempt. Still,” he added after surveying our rather blank faces, “I have
no right to play with your lives, so if you think the thing too dangerous
I will go on alone with this old boy, Babemba. Putting everything else
aside, I think that one of us ought to visit Bausi’s kraal in case the
gentleman you call Brother John should turn up there. In short, I have
made up my mind, so it is no use talking.”</p>
<p>I lit my pipe, and for quite a time contemplated this obstinate young man
while considering the matter from every point of view. Finally, I came to
the conclusion that he was right and I was wrong. It was true that by
bribing Babemba, or otherwise, there was still an excellent prospect of
effecting a masterly retreat and of avoiding many perils. On the other
hand, we had not come to this wild place in order to retreat. Further, at
whose expense had we come here? At that of Stephen Somers who wished to
proceed. Lastly, to say nothing of the chance of meeting Brother John, to
whom I felt no obligation since he had given us the slip at Durban, I did
not like the idea of being beaten. We had started out to visit some
mysterious savages who worshipped a monkey and a flower, and we might as
well go on till circumstances were too much for us. After all, dangers are
everywhere; those who turn back because of dangers will never succeed in
any life that we can imagine.</p>
<p>“Mavovo,” I said presently, pointing to Stephen with my pipe, “the <i>inkoosi</i>
Wazela does not wish to try to escape. He wishes to go on to the country
of the Pongo people if we can get there. And, Mavovo, remember that he has
paid for everything; we are his hired servants. Also that he says that if
we run back he will walk forward alone with these Mazitus. Still, if any
of you hunters desire to slip off, he will not look your way, nor shall I.
What say you?”</p>
<p>“I say, Macumazana, that, though young, Wazela is a chief with a great
heart, and that where you and he go, I shall go also, as I think will the
rest of us. I do not like these Mazitu, for if their fathers were Zulus
their mothers were low people. They are bastards, and of the Pongo I hear
nothing but what is evil. Still, no good ox ever turns in the yoke because
of a mud-hole. Let us go on, for if we sink in the swamp what does it
matter? Moreover, my Snake tells me that we shall not sink, at least not
all of us.”</p>
<p>So it was arranged that no effort should be made to return. Sammy, it is
true, wished to do so, but when it came to the point and he was offered
one of the remaining donkeys and as much food and ammunition as he could
carry, he changed his mind.</p>
<p>“I think it better, Mr. Quatermain,” he said, “to meet my end in the
company of high-born, lofty souls than to pursue a lonely career towards
the inevitable in unknown circumstances.”</p>
<p>“Very well put, Sammy,” I answered; “so while waiting for the inevitable,
please go and cook the dinner.”</p>
<p>Having laid aside our doubts, we proceeded on the journey comfortably
enough, being well provided with bearers to take the place of those who
had run away. Babemba, accompanied by a single orderly, travelled with us,
and from him we collected much information. It seemed that the Mazitu were
a large people who could muster from five to seven thousand spears. Their
tradition was that they came from the south and were of the same stock as
the Zulus, of whom they had heard vaguely. Indeed, many of their customs,
to say nothing of their language, resembled those of that country. Their
military organisation, however, was not so thorough, and in other ways
they struck me as a lower race. In one particular, it is true, that of
their houses, they were more advanced, for these, as we saw in the many
kraals that we passed, were better built, with doorways through which one
could walk upright, instead of the Kaffir bee-holes.</p>
<p>We slept in one of these houses on our march, and should have found it
very comfortable had it not been for the innumerable fleas which at length
drove us out into the courtyard. For the rest, these Mazitu much resembled
the Zulus. They had kraals and were breeders of cattle; they were ruled by
headmen under the command of a supreme chief or king; they believed in
witchcraft and offered sacrifice to the spirits of their ancestors, also
in some kind of a vague and mighty god who dominated the affairs of the
world and declared his will through the doctors. Lastly, they were, and I
dare say still are, a race of fighting men who loved war and raided the
neighbouring peoples upon any and every pretext, killing their men and
stealing their women and cattle. They had their virtues, too, being kindly
and hospitable by nature, though cruel enough to their enemies. Moreover,
they detested dealing in slaves and those who practised it, saying that it
was better to kill a man than to deprive him of his freedom. Also they had
a horror of the cannibalism which is so common in the dark regions of
Africa, and for this reason, more than any other, loathed the Pongo folk
who were supposed to be eaters of men.</p>
<p>On the evening of the second day of our march, during which we had passed
through a beautiful and fertile upland country, very well watered, and
except in the valleys, free from bush, we arrived at Beza. This town was
situated on a wide plain surrounded by low hills and encircled by a belt
of cultivated land made beautiful by the crops of maize and other cereals
which were then ripe to harvest. It was fortified in a way. That is, a
tall, unclimbable palisade of timber surrounded the entire town, which
fence was strengthened by prickly pears and cacti planted on its either
side.</p>
<p>Within this palisade the town was divided into quarters more or less
devoted to various trades. Thus one part of it was called the Ironsmiths’
Quarter; another the Soldiers’ Quarter; another the Quarter of the
Land-tillers; another that of the Skin-dressers, and so on. The king’s
dwelling and those of his women and dependents were near the North gate,
and in front of these, surrounded by semi-circles of huts, was a wide
space into which cattle could be driven if necessary. This, however, at
the time of our visit, was used as a market and a drilling ground.</p>
<p>We entered the town, that must in all have contained a great number of
inhabitants, by the South gate, a strong log structure facing a wooded
slope through which ran a road. Just as the sun was setting we marched to
the guest-huts up a central street lined with the population of the place
who had gathered to stare at us. These huts were situated in the Soldiers’
Quarter, not far from the king’s house and surrounded by an inner fence to
keep them private.</p>
<p>None of the people spoke as we passed them, for the Mazitu are polite by
nature; also it seemed to me that they regarded us with awe tempered by
curiosity. They only stared, and occasionally those of them who were
soldiers saluted us by lifting their spears. The huts into which we were
introduced by Babemba, with whom we had grown very friendly, were good and
clean.</p>
<p>Here all our belongings, including the guns which we had collected just
before the slaves ran away, were placed in one of the huts over which a
Mazitu mounted guard, the donkeys being tied to the fence at a little
distance. Outside this fence stood another armed Mazitu, also on guard.</p>
<p>“Are we prisoners here?” I asked of Babemba.</p>
<p>“The king watches over his guests,” he answered enigmatically. “Have the
white lords any message for the king whom I am summoned to see this
night?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” I answered. “Tell the king that we are the brethren of him who more
than a year ago cut a swelling from his body, whom we have arranged to
meet here. I mean the white lord with a long beard who among you black
people is called Dogeetah.”</p>
<p>Babemba started. “You are the brethren of Dogeetah! How comes it then that
you never mentioned his name before, and when is he going to meet you
here? Know that Dogeetah is a great man among us, for with him alone of
all men the king has made blood-brotherhood. As the king is, so is
Dogeetah among the Mazitu.”</p>
<p>“We never mentioned him because we do not talk about everything at once,
Babemba. As to when Dogeetah will meet us I am not sure; I am only sure
that he is coming.”</p>
<p>“Yes, lord Macumazana, but when, when? That is what the king will want to
know and that is what you must tell him. Lord,” he added, dropping his
voice, “you are in danger here where you have many enemies, since it is
not lawful for white men to enter this land. If you would save your lives,
be advised by me and be ready to tell the king to-morrow when Dogeetah,
whom he loves, will appear here to vouch for you, and see that he does
appear very soon and by the day you name. Since otherwise when he comes,
if come he does, he may not find you able to talk to him. Now I, your
friend, have spoken and the rest is with you.”</p>
<p>Then without another word he rose, slipped through the door of the hut and
out by the gateway of the fence from which the sentry moved aside to let
him pass. I, too, rose from the stool on which I sat and danced about the
hut in a perfect fury.</p>
<p>“Do you understand what that infernal (I am afraid I used a stronger word)
old fool told me?” I exclaimed to Stephen. “He says that we must be
prepared to state exactly when that other infernal old fool, Brother John,
will turn up at Beza Town, and that if we don’t we shall have our throats
cut as indeed has already been arranged.”</p>
<p>“Rather awkward,” replied Stephen. “There are no express trains to Beza,
and if there were we couldn’t be sure that Brother John would take one of
them. I suppose there <i>is</i> a Brother John?” he added reflectively.
“To me he seems to be—intimately connected with Mrs. Harris.”</p>
<p>“Oh! there is, or there was,” I explained. “Why couldn’t the confounded
ass wait quietly for us at Durban instead of fooling off butterfly hunting
to the north of Zululand and breaking his leg or his neck there if he has
done anything of the sort?”</p>
<p>“Don’t know, I am sure. It’s hard enough to understand one’s own motives,
let alone Brother John’s.”</p>
<p>Then we sat down on our stools again and stared at each other. At this
moment Hans crept into the hut and squatted down in front of us. He might
have walked in as there was a doorway, but he preferred to creep on his
hands and knees, I don’t know why.</p>
<p>“What is it, you ugly little toad?” I asked viciously, for that was just
what he looked like; even the skin under his jaw moved like a toad’s.</p>
<p>“The Baas is in trouble?” remarked Hans.</p>
<p>“I should think he was,” I answered, “and so will you be presently when
you are wriggling on the point of a Mazitu spear.”</p>
<p>“They are broad spears that would make a big hole,” remarked Hans again,
whereupon I rose to kick him out, for his ideas were, as usual,
unpleasant.</p>
<p>“Baas,” he went on, “I have been listening—there is a very good hole
in this hut for listening if one lies against the wall and pretends to be
asleep. I have heard all and understood most of your talk with that
one-eyed savage and the Baas Stephen.”</p>
<p>“Well, you little sneak, what of it?”</p>
<p>“Only, Baas, that if we do not want to be killed in this place from which
there is no escape, it is necessary that you should find out exactly on
what day and at what hour Dogeetah is going to arrive.”</p>
<p>“Look here, you yellow idiot,” I exclaimed, “if you are beginning that
game too, I’ll——” then I stopped, reflecting that my temper
was getting the better of me and that I had better hear what Hans had to
say before I vented it on him.</p>
<p>“Baas, Mavovo is a great doctor; it is said that his Snake is the
straightest and the strongest in all Zululand save that of his master,
Zikali, the old slave. He told you that Dogeetah was laid up somewhere
with a hurt leg and that he was coming to meet you here; no doubt
therefore he can tell you also <i>when</i> he is coming. I would ask him,
but he won’t set his Snake to work for me. So you must ask him, Baas, and
perhaps he will forget that you laughed at his magic and that he swore you
would never see it again.”</p>
<p>“Oh! blind one,” I answered, “how do I know that Mavovo’s story about
Dogeetah was not all nonsense?”</p>
<p>Hans stared at me amazed.</p>
<p>“Mavovo’s story nonsense! Mavovo’s Snake a liar! Oh! Baas, that is what
comes of being too much a Christian. Now, thanks to your father the
Predikant, I am a Christian too, but not so much that I have forgotten how
to know good magic from bad. Mavovo’s Snake a liar, and after he whom we
buried yonder was the first of the hunters whom the feathers named to him
at Durban!” and he began to chuckle in intense amusement, then added,
“Well, Baas, there it is. You must either ask Mavovo, and very nicely, or
we shall all be killed. <i>I</i> don’t mind much, for I should rather like
to begin again a little younger somewhere else, but just think what a
noise Sammy will make!” and turning he crept out as he had crept in.</p>
<p>“Here’s a nice position,” I groaned to Stephen when he had gone. “I, a
white man, who, in spite of some coincidences with which I am acquainted,
know that all this Kaffir magic is bosh am to beg a savage to tell me
something of which he <i>must</i> be ignorant. That is, unless we educated
people have got hold of the wrong end of the stick altogether. It is
humiliating; it isn’t Christian, and I’m hanged if I’ll do it!”</p>
<p>“I dare say you will be—hanged I mean—whether you do it or
whether you don’t,” replied Stephen with his sweet smile. “But I say, old
fellow, how do you know it is all bosh? We are told about lots of miracles
which weren’t bosh, and if miracles ever existed, why can’t they exist
now? But there, I know what you mean and it is no use arguing. Still, if
you’re proud, I ain’t. I’ll try to soften the stony heart of Mavovo—we
are rather pals, you know—and get him to unroll the book of his
occult wisdom,” and he went.</p>
<p>A few minutes later I was called out to receive a sheep which, with milk,
native beer, some corn, and other things, including green forage for the
donkeys, Bausi had sent for us to eat. Here I may remark that while we
were among the Mazitu we lived like fighting cocks. There was none of that
starvation which is, or was, so common in East Africa where the traveller
often cannot get food for love or money—generally because there is
none.</p>
<p>When this business was settled by my sending a message of thanks to the
king with an intimation that we hoped to wait upon him on the morrow with
a few presents, I went to seek Sammy in order to tell him to kill and cook
the sheep. After some search I found, or rather heard him beyond a reed
fence which divided two of the huts. He was acting as interpreter between
Stephen Somers and Mavovo.</p>
<p>“This Zulu man declares, Mr. Somers,” he said, “that he quite understands
everything you have been explaining, and that it is probable that we shall
all be butchered by this savage Bausi, if we cannot tell him when the
white man, Dogeetah, whom he loves, will arrive here. He says also that he
thinks that by his magic he could learn when this will happen—if it
is to happen at all—(which of course, Mr. Somers, for your private
information only, is a mighty lie of the ignorant heathen). He adds,
however, that he does not care one brass farthing—his actual
expression, Mr. Somers, is ‘one grain of corn on a mealie-cob’—about
his or anybody else’s life, which from all I have heard of his proceedings
I can well believe to be true. He says in his vulgar language that there
is no difference between the belly of a Mazitu-land hyena and that of any
other hyena, and that the earth of Mazitu-land is as welcome to his bones
as any other earth, since the earth is the wickedest of all hyenas, in
that he has observed that soon or late it devours everlastingly everything
which once it bore. You must forgive me for reproducing his empty and
childish talk, Mr. Somers, but you bade me to render the words of this
savage with exactitude. In fact, Mr. Somers, this reckless person
intimates, in short that some power with which he is not acquainted—he
calls it the ‘Strength that makes the Sun to shine and broiders the
blanket of the night with stars’ (forgive me for repeating his silly
words), caused him ‘to be born into this world, and, at an hour already
appointed, will draw him from this world back into its dark, eternal
bosom, there to be rocked in sleep, or nursed to life again, according to
its unknown will’—I translate exactly, Mr. Somers, although I do not
know what it all means—and that he does not care a curse when this
happens. Still, he says that whereas he is growing old and has known many
sorrows—he alludes here, I gather, to some nigger wives of his whom
another savage knocked on the head; also to a child to whom he appears to
have been attached—you are young with all your days and, he hopes,
joys, before you. Therefore he would gladly do anything in his power to
save your life, because although you are white and he is black he has
conceived an affection for you and looks on you as his child. Yes, Mr.
Somers, although I blush to repeat it, this black fellow says he looks
upon you as his child. He adds, indeed, that if the opportunity arises, he
will gladly give his life to save your life, and that it cuts his heart in
two to refuse you anything. Still he must refuse this request of yours,
that he will ask the creature he calls his Snake—what he means by
that, I don’t know, Mr. Somers—to declare when the white man, named
Dogeetah, will arrive in this place. For this reason, that he told Mr.
Quatermain when he laughed at him about his divinations that he would make
no more magic for him or any of you, and that he will die rather than
break his word. That’s all, Mr. Somers, and I dare say you will think—quite
enough, too.”</p>
<p>“I understand,” replied Stephen. “Tell the chief, Mavovo” (I observed he
laid an emphasis on the word, <i>chief</i>) “that I <i>quite</i>
understand, and that I thank him very much for explaining things to me so
fully. Then ask him whether, as the matter is so important, there is no
way out of this trouble?”</p>
<p>Sammy translated into Zulu, which he spoke perfectly, as I noted without
interpolations or additions.</p>
<p>“Only one way,” answered Mavovo in the intervals of taking snuff. “It is
that Macumazana himself shall ask me to do this thing, Macumazana is my
old chief and friend, and for his sake I will forget what in the case of
others I should always remember. If he will come and ask me, without
mockery, to exercise my skill on behalf of all of us, I will try to
exercise it, although I know very well that he believes it to be but as an
idle little whirlwind that stirs the dust, that raises the dust and lets
it fall again without purpose or meaning, forgetting, as the wise white
men forget, that even the wind which blows the dust is the same that
breathes in our nostrils, and that to it, we also are as is the dust.”</p>
<p>Now I, the listener, thought for a moment or two. The words of this
fighting savage, Mavovo, even those of them of which I had heard only the
translation, garbled and beslavered by the mean comments of the
unutterable Sammy, stirred my imagination. Who was I that I should dare to
judge of him and his wild, unknown gifts? Who was I that I should mock at
him and by my mockery intimate that I believed him to be a fraud?</p>
<p>Stepping through the gateway of the fence, I confronted him.</p>
<p>“Mavovo,” I said, “I have overheard your talk. I am sorry if I laughed at
you in Durban. I do not understand what you call your magic. It is beyond
me and may be true or may be false. Still, I shall be grateful to you if
you will use your power to discover, if you can, whether Dogeetah is
coming here, and if so, when. Now, do as it may please you; I have
spoken.”</p>
<p>“And I have heard, Macumazana, my father. To-night I will call upon my
Snake. Whether it will answer or what it will answer, I cannot say.”</p>
<p>Well, he did call upon his Snake with due and portentous ceremony and,
according to Stephen, who was present, which I declined to be, that mystic
reptile declared that Dogeetah, alias Brother John, would arrive in Beza
Town precisely at sunset on the third day from that night. Now as he had
divined on Friday, according to our almanac, this meant that we might hope
to see him—hope exactly described my state of mind on the matter—on
the Monday evening in time for supper.</p>
<p>“All right,” I said briefly. “Please do not talk to me any more about this
impious rubbish, for I want to go to sleep.”</p>
<p>Next morning early we unpacked our boxes and made a handsome selection of
gifts for the king, Bausi, hoping thus to soften his royal heart. It
included a bale of calico, several knives, a musical box, a cheap American
revolver, and a bundle of tooth-picks; also several pounds of the best and
most fashionable beads for his wives. This truly noble present we sent to
the king by our two Mazitu servants, Tom and Jerry, who were marched off
in the charge of several sentries, for I hoped that these men would talk
to their compatriots and tell them what good fellows we were. Indeed I
instructed them to do so.</p>
<p>Imagine our horror, therefore, when about an hour later, just as we were
tidying ourselves up after breakfast, there appeared through the gate, not
Tom and Jerry, for they had vanished, but a long line of Mazitu soldiers
each of whom carried one of the articles that we had sent. Indeed the last
of them held the bundle of toothpicks on his fuzzy head as though it were
a huge faggot of wood. One by one they set them down upon the lime
flooring of the verandah of the largest hut. Then their captain said
solemnly:</p>
<p>“Bausi, the Great Black One, has no need of the white men’s gifts.”</p>
<p>“Indeed,” I replied, for my dander was up. “Then he won’t get another
chance at them.”</p>
<p>The men turned away without more words, and presently Babemba turned up
with a company of about fifty soldiers.</p>
<p>“The king is waiting to see you, white lords,” he said in a voice of very
forced jollity, “and I have come to conduct you to him.”</p>
<p>“Why would he not accept our presents?” I asked, pointing to the row of
them.</p>
<p>“Oh! that is because of Imbozwi’s story of the magic shield. He said he
wanted no gifts to burn his hair off. But, come, come. He will explain for
himself. If the Elephant is kept waiting he grows angry and trumpets.”</p>
<p>“Does he?” I said. “And how many of us are to come?”</p>
<p>“All, all, white lord. He wishes to see every one of you.”</p>
<p>“Not me, I suppose?” said Sammy, who was standing close by. “I must stop
to make ready the food.”</p>
<p>“Yes, you too,” replied Babemba. “The king would look on the mixer of the
holy drink.”</p>
<p>Well, there was no way out of it, so off we marched, all well armed as I
need not say, and were instantly surrounded by the soldiers. To give an
unusual note to the proceedings I made Hans walk first, carrying on his
head the rejected musical box from which flowed the touching melody of
“Home, Sweet Home.” Then came Stephen bearing the Union Jack on a pole,
then I in the midst of the hunters and accompanied by Babemba, then the
reluctant Sammy, and last of all the two donkeys led by Mazitus, for it
seemed that the king had especially ordered that these should be brought
also.</p>
<p>It was a truly striking cavalcade, the sight of which under any other
circumstances would have made me laugh. Nor did it fail in its effect, for
even the silent Mazitu people through whom we wended our way, were moved
to something like enthusiasm. “Home, Sweet Home” they evidently thought
heavenly, though perhaps the two donkeys attracted them most, especially
when these brayed.</p>
<p>“Where are Tom and Jerry?” I asked of Babemba.</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” he answered; “I think they have been given leave to go to
see their friends.”</p>
<p>Imbozwi is suppressing evidence in our favour, I thought to myself, and
said no more.</p>
<p>Presently we reached the gate of the royal enclosure. Here to my dismay
the soldiers insisted on disarming us, taking away our rifles, our
revolvers, and even our sheath knives. In vain did I remonstrate, saying
that we were not accustomed to part with these weapons. The answer was
that it was not lawful for any man to appear before the king armed even
with so much as a dancing-stick. Mavovo and the Zulus showed signs of
resisting and for a minute I thought there was going to be a row, which of
course would have ended in our massacre, for although the Mazitus feared
guns very much, what could we have done against hundreds of them? I
ordered him to give way, but for once he was on the point of disobeying
me. Then by a happy thought I reminded him that, according to his Snake,
Dogeetah was coming, and that therefore all would be well. So he submitted
with an ill grace, and we saw our precious guns borne off we knew not
where.</p>
<p>Then the Mazitu soldiers piled their spears and bows at the gate of the
kraal and we proceeded with only the Union Jack and the musical box, which
was now discoursing “Britannia rules the waves.”</p>
<p>Across the open space we marched to where several broad-leaved trees grew
in front of a large native house. Not far from the door of this house a
fat, middle-aged and angry-looking man was seated on a stool, naked except
for a moocha of catskins about his loins and a string of large blue beads
round his neck.</p>
<p>“Bausi, the King,” whispered Babemba.</p>
<p>At his side squatted a little hunchbacked figure, in whom I had no
difficulty in recognising Imbozwi, although he had painted his scorched
scalp white with vermillion spots and adorned his snub nose with a purple
tip, his dress of ceremony I presume. Round and behind there were a number
of silent councillors. At some signal or on reaching a given spot, all the
soldiers, including old Babemba, fell upon their hands and knees and began
to crawl. They wanted us to do the same, but here I drew the line, feeling
that if once we crawled we must always crawl.</p>
<p>So at my word we advanced upright, but with slow steps, in the midst of
all this wriggling humanity and at length found ourselves in the august
presence of Bausi, “the Beautiful Black One,” King of the Mazitu.</p>
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