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第5章

nada the lily-第5章

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you; it will be bright like the sun; and my people will grow great

with me; they shall eat up the whole world。 And when I am big and my

people are big; and we have stamped the earth flat as far as men can

travel; then I will remember your tribethe tribe of the Langeni; who

would not give me and my mother a cup of milk when we were weary。 You

see this gourd; for every drop it can hold the blood of a man shall

flowthe blood of one of your men。 But because you gave me the water

I will spare you; Mopo; and you only; and make you great under me。 You

shall grow fat in my shadow。 You alone I will never harm; however you

sin against me; this I swear。 But for that woman;〃 and he pointed to

my mother; 〃let her make haste and die; so that I do not need to teach

her what a long time death can take to come。 I have spoken。〃 And he

ground his teeth and shook his stick towards us。



My mother stood silent awhile。 Then she gasped out: 〃The little liar!

He speaks like a man; does he? The calf lows like a bull。 I will teach

him another notethe brat of an evil prophet!〃 And putting down

Baleka; she ran at the boy。



Chaka stood quite still till she was near; then suddenly he lifted the

stick in his hand; and hit her so hard on the head that she fell down。

After that he laughed; turned; and went away with his mother Unandi。



These; my father; were the first words I heard Chaka speak; and they

were words of prophecy; and they came true。 The last words I heard him

speak were words of prophecy also; and I think that they will come

true。 Even now they are coming true。 In the one he told how the Zulu

people should rise。 And say; have they not risen? In the other he

told how they should fall; and they did fall。 Do not the white men

gather themselves together even now against U'Cetywayo; as vultures

gather round a dying ox? The Zulus are not what they were to stand

against them。 Yes; yes; they will come true; and mine is the song of a

people that is doomed。



But of these other words I will speak in their place。



I went to my mother。 Presently she raised herself from the ground and

sat up with her hands over her face。 The blood from the wound the

stick had made ran down her face on to her breast; and I wiped it away

with grass。 She sat for a long while thus; while the child cried; the

cow lowed to be milked; and I wiped up the blood with the grass。 At

last she took her hands away and spoke to me。



〃Mopo; my son;〃 she said; 〃I have dreamed a dream。 I dreamed that I

saw the boy Chaka who struck me: he was grown like a giant。 He stalked

across the mountains and the veldt; his eyes blazed like the

lightning; and in his hand he shook a little assegai that was red with

blood。 He caught up people after people in his hands and tore them; he

stamped their kraals flat with his feet。 Before him was the green of

summer; behind him the land was black as when the fires have eaten the

grass。 I saw our people; Mopo; they were many and fat; their hearts

laughed; the men were brave; the girls were fair; I counted their

children by the hundreds。 I saw them again; Mopo。 They were bones;

white bones; thousands of bones tumbled together in a rocky place; and

he; Chaka; stood over the bones and laughed till the earth shook。

Then; Mopo; in my dream; I saw you grown a man。 You alone were left of

our people。 You crept up behind the giant Chaka; and with you came

others; great men of a royal look。 You stabbed him with a little

spear; and he fell down and grew small again; he fell down and cursed

you。 But you cried in his ear a namethe name of Baleka; your sister

and he died。 Let us go home; Mopo; let us go home; the darkness

falls。〃



So we rose and went home。 But I held my peace; for I was afraid; very

much afraid。







CHAPTER II



MOPO IS IN TROUBLE



Now; I must tell how my mother did what the boy Chaka had told her;

and died quickly。 For where his stick had struck her on the forehead

there came a sore that would not be healed; and in the sore grew an

abscess; and the abscess ate inwards till it came to the brain。 Then

my mother fell down and died; and I cried very much; for I loved her;

and it was dreadful to see her cold and stiff; with not a word to say

however loudly I called to her。 Well; they buried my mother; and she

was soon forgotten。 I only remembered her; nobody else didnot even

Baleka; for she was too littleand as for my father he took another

young wife and was content。 After that I was unhappy; for my brothers

did not love me; because I was much cleverer than they; and had

greater skill with the assegai; and was swifter in running; so they

poisoned the mind of my father against me and he treated me badly。 But

Baleka and I loved each other; for we were both lonely; and she clung

to me like a creeper to the only tree in a plain; and though I was

young; I learned this: that to be wise is to be strong; for though he

who holds the assegai kills; yet he whose mind directs the battle is

greater than he who kills。 Now I saw that the witch…finders and the

medicine…men were feared in the land; and that everybody looked up to

them; so that; even when they had only a stick in their hands; ten men

armed with spears would fly before them。 Therefore I determined that I

should be a witch…doctor; for they alone can kill those whom they hate

with a word。 So I learned the arts of the medicine…men。 I made

sacrifices; I fasted in the veldt alone; I did all those things of

which you have heard; and I learned much; for there is wisdom in our

magic as well as liesand you know it; my father; else you had not

come here to ask me about your lost oxen。



So things went on till I was twenty years of agea man full grown。 By

now I had mastered all I could learn by myself; so I joined myself on

to the chief medicine…man of our tribe; who was named Noma。 He was

old; had one eye only; and was very clever。 Of him I learned some

tricks and more wisdom; but at last he grew jealous of me and set a

trap to catch me。 As it chanced; a rich man of a neighbouring tribe

had lost some cattle; and came with gifts to Noma praying him to smell

them out。 Noma tried and could not find them; his vision failed him。

Then the headman grew angry and demanded back his gifts; but Noma

would not give up that which he once had held; and hot words passed。

The headman said that he would kill Noma; Noma said that he would

bewitch the headman。



〃Peace;〃 I said; for I feared that blood would be shed。 〃Peace; and

let me see if my snake will tell me where the cattle are。〃



〃You are nothing but a boy;〃 answered the headman。 〃Can a boy have

wisdom?〃



〃That shall soon be known;〃 I said; taking the bones in my hand。'1'



'1' The Kafir witch…doctors use the knuckle…bones of animals in their

    magic rites; throwing them something as we throw dice。ED。



〃Leave the bones alone!〃 screamed Noma。 〃We will ask nothing more of

our snakes for the good of this son of a dog。〃



〃He shall throw the bones;〃 answered the headman。 〃If you try to stop

him; I will let sunshine through you with my assegai。〃 And he lifted

his spear。



Then I made haste to begin; I threw the bones。 The headman sat on the

ground before me and answered my questions。 You know of these matters;

my fatherhow sometimes the witch…doctor has knowledge of where the

lost things are; for our ears are long; and sometimes his Ehlose tells

him; as but the other day it told me of your oxen。 Well; in this case;

my snake stood up。 I knew nothing of the man's cattle; but my Spirit

was with me and soon I saw them all; and told them to him one by one;

their colour; their ageeverything。 I told him; too; where they were;

and how one of them had fallen into a stream and lay there on its back

drowned; with its forefoot caught in a forked root。 As my Ehlose told

me so I told the headman。



Now; the man was pleased; and said that if my sight was good; and he

found the cattle; the gifts sh

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