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asking for some breakfast。 Job and Ustane got him on 
to the bottom; or rather the sacking of a litter; 
which was removed from its pole for that purpose; and 
with the aid of old Billali carried him out into the 
shade at the mouth of the cave; from which; by the 
way; every trace of the slaughter of the previous 
night had now been removed; and there we all 
breakfasted; and indeed spent that day; and most of 
the two following ones。

On the third morning Job and myself were practically 
recovered。 Leo also was so much better that I yielded 
to Billali's often expressed entreaty; and agreed to 
start at once upon our journey to Ko^r; which we were 
told was the name of the place where the mysterious 
_i_ She _i_ lived; though I still feared for its 
effects upon Leo; and especially lest the motion 
should cause his wound; which was scarcely skinned 
over; to break open again。 Indeed; had it not been for 
Billali's evident anxiety to get off; which led us to 
suspect that some difficulty or danger might threaten 
us if we did not comply with it; I would not have 
consented to go。

CHAPTER X

SPECULATIONS

WITHIN an hour of our finally deciding to start; five 
litters were brought up to the door of the cave; each 
accompanied by four regular bearers and two spare 
hands; also a band of about fifty armed Amahagger; who 
were to form the escort and carry the baggage。 Three 
of these litters; of course; were for us; and one for 
Billali; who; I was immensely relieved to hear; was to 
be our companion; while the fifth I presumed was for 
the use of Ustane。

〃Does the lady go with us; my father?〃 I asked of 
Billali; as he stood superintending things generally。

He shrugged his shoulders as he answered;

〃If she wills。 In this country the women do what they 
please。 We worship them; and give them their way; 
because without them the world could not go on; they 
are the source of life。〃

〃Ah;〃 I said; the matter never having struck me quite 
in that light before。

〃We worship them;〃 he went on; 〃up to a certain point; 
till at last they get unbearable; which;〃 he added; 
〃they do about every second generation。〃

〃And then what do you do?〃 I asked; with curiosity。

〃Then;〃 he answered; with a faint smile; 〃we rise; and 
kill the old ones as an example to the young ones; and 
to show them that we are the strongest。 My poor wife 
was killed in that way three years ago。 It was very 
sad; but; to tell thee the truth; my son; life has 
been happier since; for my age protects me from the 
young ones。〃

〃In short;〃 I replied; quoting the saying of a great 
man whose wisdom has not yet lightened the darkness of 
the Amahagger; 〃thou hast found thy position one of 
greater freedom and less responsibility。〃

This phrase puzzled him a little at first from its 
vagueness; though I think my translation hit off its 
sense very well; but at last he saw it; and 
appreciated it。

〃Yes; yes; my Baboon;〃 he said; 〃I see it now; but all 
the 'responsibilities' are killed; at least some of 
them are; and that is why there are so few old women 
about just now。 Well; they brought it on themselves。 
As for this girl;〃 he went on; in a graver tone; 〃I 
know not what to say。 She is a brave girl; and she 
loves the Lion (Leo); thou sawest how she clung to 
him; and saved his life。 Also; she is; according to 
our custom; wed to him; and has a right to go where he 
goes; unless;〃 he added; significantly; 〃 _i_ She _i_ 
would say her no; for her word overrides all rights。〃

〃And if _i_ She _i_ bade her leave him; and the girl 
refused? What then?〃

〃If;〃 he said; with a shrug; 〃the hurricane bids the 
tree to bend; and it will not; what happens?〃

And then; without waiting for an answer; he turned and 
walked to his litter; and in ten minutes from that 
time we were all well under way。

It took us an hour and more to cross the cup of the 
volcanic plain; and another half…hour or so to climb 
the edge on the farther side。 Once there; however; the 
view was a very fine one。 Before us was a long steep 
slope of grassy plain; broken here and there by clumps 
of trees mostly of the thorn tribe。 At the bottom of 
this gentle slope; some nine or ten miles away; we 
could make out a dim sea of marsh; over which the foul 
vapors hung like smoke about a city。 It was easy going 
for the bearers down the slopes; and by midday we had 
reached the borders of the dismal swamp。 Here we 
halted to eat our midday meal; and then; following a 
winding and devious path; plunged into the morass。 
Presently the path; at any rate to our unaccustomed 
eyes; grew so faint as to be almost indistinguishable 
from those made by the aquatic beasts and birds; and 
it is to this day a mystery to me how our bearers 
found their way across the marshes。 Ahead of the 
cavalcade marched two men with long poles; which they 
now and again plunged into the ground before them; the 
reason of this being that the nature of the soil 
frequently changed from causes with which I am not 
acquainted; so that places which might be safe enough 
to cross one month would certainly swallow the 
wayfarer the next。 Never did I see a more dreary and 
depressing scene。 Miles on miles of quagmire; varied 
only by bright green strips of comparatively solid 
ground; and by deep and sullen pools fringed with tall 
rushes; in which the bitterns boomed and the frogs 
croaked incessantly; miles on miles of it without a 
break; unless the fever fog can be called a break。 The 
only life in this great morass was that of the aquatic 
birds; and the animals that fed on them; of both of 
which there were vast numbers。 Geese; cranes; ducks; 
teal; coot; snipe; and plover swarmed all around us; 
many being of varieties that were quite new to me; and 
all so tame that one could almost have knocked them 
over with a stick。 Among these birds I especially 
noticed a very beautiful variety of painted snipe; 
almost the size of woodcock; and with a flight more 
resembling that bird's than an English snipe's。 In the 
pools; too; was a species of small alligator or 
enormous iguana; I do not know which; that fed; 
Billali told me; upon the waterfowl; also large 
quantities of a hideous black water snake; of which 
the bite is very dangerous; though not; I gathered; so 
deadly as a cobra's or a puff adder's。 The bullfrogs 
were also very large; and with voices proportionate to 
their size; and as for the mosquitoesthe 
〃musqueteers;〃 as Job called themthey were; if 
possible; even worse than they had been on the river; 
and tormented us greatly。 Undoubtedly; however; the 
worst feature of the swamp was the awful smell of 
rotting vegetation that hung about it; which was at 
times positively overpowering; and the malarious 
exhalations that accompanied it; which we were of 
course obliged to breathe。

On we went through it all; till at last the sun sank 
in sullen splendor just as we reached a spot of rising 
ground about two acres in extenta little oasis of 
dry in the midst of the miry wildernesswhere Billali 
announced that we were to camp。 The camping; however; 
turned out to be a very simple process; and consisted; 
in fact; in sitting down on the ground round a scanty 
fire made of dry reeds and some wood that had been 
brought with us。 However; we made the best we could of 
it; and smoked and ate with such appetite as the smell 
of damp; stifling heat would allow; for it was very 
hot on this low land; and yet; oddly enough; chilly at 
times。 But; however hot it was; we were glad enough to 
keep near the fire; because we found that the 
mosquitoes did not like the smoke。 Presently we rolled 
ourselves up in our blankets and tried to go to sleep; 
but so far as I was concerned the bullfrogs; and the 
extraordinary roaring and alarming sound produced by 
hundreds of snipe hovering high in the air; made sleep 
an impossibility; to say nothing of our other 
discomforts。 I turned and looked at Leo; who was next 
to me; he was dozing; but his face had a flushed 
appearance that I did not like; and by the flickering 
firelight I saw Ustane; who was lying on the other 
side of him; raise herself from time to time upon her 
elbow; and look at him anxiously enough; However; I 
could do nothing for him for we had all already taken 
a good dose of quinine; which was the only preventive 
we had; so I lay and watched the stars come out by 
thousands; till all the immense arch of heaven was 
sewn with glittering points; and every point a world! 
Here was a glorious sight by which man might well 
measure his own insignificance! Soon I gave up 
thinking about it; for the mind wearies easily when it 
strives to grapple with the Infinite; and to trace the 
footsteps of the Almighty as he strides from sphere to 
sphere; or deduce his purpose from his works。 Such 
things are not for us to know。 Knowledge is to the 
strong; and we are weak。 Too much wisdom would 
perchance blind our imperfect sight; and too much 
strength would make us drunk; and overweight our 
feeble reason till it fell; and we were drowned in the 
depths of our own vanity。 For what is the first result 
of 

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