The Fire-Gods A Tale of the Congo by Charles Gibson (classic books for 7th graders TXT) 📕
Charles Gibson
Charliegibson.JPG
Charles Gibson in 2008.
Born Charles deWolf Gibson
March 9, 1943 (age 72)
Evanston, Illinois
Education Princeton University
Occupation Television journalist
Years active 1965 – 2009
Notable credit(s) Narrator for This Week (2012-present)
World News Saturday anchor (1987-1988)
World News with Charles Gibson anchor (2006-2009)
Good Morning America co-anchor (1987–1998; 1999–2006)
ABC News House of Representatives correspondent (1981-1987)
ABC News general assignment reporter (1977-1981)
ABC News White House correspondent (1976-1977)
Spouse(s) Arlene Gibson
Children Jessica Gibson
Katherine Gibson
Charles deWolf "Charlie" Gibson (born March 9, 1943) is a former United States broadcast television anchor and journalist. He was a host of Good Morning America from 1987 to 1998 and 1999 to 2006 and anchor of World News with Charles Gibson from 2006 to 2009.
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mouth, the great hatchet chin--these had not been given him for naught.
He may have had the strength of Hercules; yet he had never accomplished
his journey down the river, had it not been for the indomitable strength
of his mind. And now that he realized that the victory was his, that
his efforts had been crowned with success, the will, on a sudden,
relinquished its task, as a helmsman gives way to his successor at the
wheel--and Crouch fell forward in a faint.
At dawn, the sun found them lying together on the mud, and by the warmth
of its rays set the blood coursing more freely in their veins.
Max was the first to revive. He tried to lift himself, but found that
he was not able to do so, because of the weight of Crouch’s body on his
chest. He fell back again, and lay for some time with opened eyes,
staring upward at the sky.
He saw the colours change in the heavens. He heard the cries of the
birds upon the marsh. Then, once again, he struggled to an elbow.
With difficulty he lifted Crouch; and then, looking into the captain’s
face, he wondered where he was, and how it had come about that they two
were stranded, side by side, in the midst of surroundings with which he
was wholly unfamiliar.
Then he remembered, by degrees. The struggle with the Arab in the
back-water--his headlong rush throughout the length of the rapids--the
vision he had had of Crouch, frantic on the bank. And then--the ravine,
and at the end, the cataract--the thunder of the water--the rushing in
his ears.
The truth was not difficult to guess; indeed, there was no other
explanation. He tried to rise to his feet, but could not do so. At
that, he lay back again, to rest, and gave silent thanks in his heart to
Divine Providence by means of which he had been saved as by a miracle.
He had undergone the sensations of death, and yet he lived.
He had lain quite still and motionless, it may have been for an hour,
when Crouch sat up and looked about him. And when he had taken in the
scene, he let fall the following irrelevant remark--
"I’ve lost my pipe," said he.
He then got to his feet, and walking to the water’s edge--which was but
a few feet distant--he knelt down, scooped the water in his hands, and
drank.
Then he returned to Max, and seated himself by his side.
"Feeling queer?" he asked.
Max answered that he was very weak.
"Your strength ’ll return," said Crouch; "but you must have some cover
for your head."
He took off his coat, which was nothing but a bundle of tatters, and
rolling this into a kind of turban, he placed it upon Max’s forehead to
protect him from the heat of the sun. Then he went back to the water’s
edge, washed the blood from his face and hands, and bathed the back of
his neck. As he returned, he found the barrel of his broken rifle, and
stooped and picked it up.
"Look at that!" said he. "That was once the best rifle in this forsaken
continent. Not worth its weight as scrap-iron!"
"I suppose," said Max, "you’ll be offended if I try to thank you?"
"You suppose right," said Crouch. "Do you feel able to walk?"
"I think so."
"You don’t," said the captain. "There’s no hurry." Then he began to
think aloud. "If we work up-stream," said he, "we’ll be on the wrong
side of the river. By now Cæsar will have found our canoe. We’re not
armed; we have no food. There are precisely three ways in which we
might die: first, starvation; second, Cæsar; third, a buffalo. The
first’s a certainty. Both of us are too weak to swim the river at Hippo
Pool--to say nothing of crocodiles. On the other hand, if we go
down-stream, walking will be easy till we get to the mangrove swamp.
Have you got a knife?"
Max felt in his pockets, and produced the article in question. Crouch
looked at it.
"That’ll do," said he. "With this we should be able to dig out a canoe,
and make a couple of paddles. If we don’t die at the job, we ought to
work our way up to Date Palm Island. As soon as you’re ready, we’ll
start."
"I’m ready now," said Max.
"Then come along," said Crouch.
The mud lay in ridges, which had been baked hard by the sun. Between
these the water lay in long pools which, as they progressed farther to
the north, became more and more still, less disturbed by the current
that issued from the falls. Crouch patted his clothes as he limped
along.
"I’ve lost every blamed thing," said he; "pipe, pouch and baccy,
compass, knife and ammunition."
Max answered nothing. He thought it would not be wise to sympathize.
Crouch was a peculiar man in many ways.
Soon after midday they came to the mangrove swamp; and the crossing of a
mangrove swamp is a thing that most African explorers have accomplished.
The roots of the short, stunted trees stand out upon the surface of the
water. It is necessary to pass by way of these, stepping from one root
to another; and some knowledge of the art of balancing is utterly
essential. If you lose your foothold, you fall into the swamp, and
there you are set upon by leeches. Some of these are large--sometimes
as large as snails--but the kind generally met with is an animal so
small that it can work its way through the eye-holes of your boots.
Once this creature has laid hold upon your skin, and begun to suck your
blood, it begins to swell until it has attained the size of a cherry.
At the edge of the mangrove swamp Crouch and Max took off their boots,
and hung these across their shoulders. With bare feet they could get a
better footing upon the twisted roots of the trees.
For three hours they journeyed through the swamp, which was buried in
semi-darkness. It was far darker than the jungle. It is in these
swamps that the mosquitoes swarm in myriads, and all the deadly diseases
of the country are engendered. To pitch a standing camp in the vicinity
of a mangrove swamp, is to court a certain death from malaria or
typhoid.
They were weary, faint, and aching in their bones when they came upon
the banks of the Kasai. No wonder this had been named the "Hidden
River." It joined the great tributary of the Congo in a thousand little
streams, all flowing silently through darkness beneath the close-packed
trees.
Crouch turned to the right. He had been bearing to the east throughout,
and in a little while they were clear of the swamp, on terra firma.
Seating themselves, they put on their boots.
"By Christopher," said Crouch, "I’m weak! I don’t fancy making that
canoe with a jackknife."
"Nor I," said Max. "But we’ll do it."
Crouch laughed.
"We will," said he, but his face was white as a ghost. Then he sat bolt
upright and listened. "What’s that?" he cried.
Faint in the distance was a gentle, scraping sound, which grew louder
and louder as the minutes passed. Max at first could not believe the
evidence of his ears. He waited expectantly, and at last heard a
rippling sound, that was like the laughter of a child. He sprang to his
feet, and rushing to the water’s edge, looked up-stream, shading his
eyes with his hand. It was, indeed, the truth--a long canoe was
swinging down upon the tide.
THE FIRE-GODS - CHAPTER XIII--BACK TO THE UNKNOWN
A minute later they saw that the canoe was manned by six of their own
Loango boys, who made the blades of the paddles flash in the sunlight;
and, moreover, they recognized the canoe as the one they had left at
Date Palm Island.
Max lifted his voice and shouted from the bank. Whereat the boys ceased
to paddle, and regarded them amazed. Then, recognizing their masters,
they raised a shout in chorus, and drew in towards the bank.
Had these natives desired proof of the omnipotence of the Fire-gods,
they could have wished for nothing more. Had they searched Central
Africa from the Equator to the Zambesi, they could have found no two
people more wretched-looking and forlorn. Max was utterly exhausted,
and so faint that he could scarcely stand. As for Crouch, he might have
been mauled by a lion.
One of the boys flung himself upon the ground, then rose to a kneeling
position, and lifted his arms as in prayer.
"Master," he cried, "what did we tell you? We warned you of the
Fire-gods! We told you the valley was bewitched! We implored you not
to go!"
As the boy ran on in the same strain, Crouch gathered himself together,
growing purple in the face. With his tattered garments, which resembled
ruffled feathers, he looked like an infuriated turkey-cock. And then,
without warning, he landed the boy such a kick as lifted him bodily into
the air.
"Fire-gods be hanged!" he shouted. "These are jungle marks. If the
valley ’s bewitched, it’s bewitched by thorns. Look here! See for
yourselves!" So saying, he lifted his bare leg, in which the thorns
were sticking like so many pins in a pin-cushion. "I’ve seen the
Fire-gods," he ran on. "You blithering fools, I’ve taken tea with ’em.
I’ve doctored one with a dose of medicine, and I’ve played cards with
the other. And I’ve not done with them, yet--mind that! I’m going
back, by Christopher! and there’ll be the biggest war-palaver you ever
heard of in your lives. Come, get up, and get a move on! But, first,
what are you doing here?"
The boys answered that they had come down-stream to shoot hippopotami
for food. They said that about a mile farther down the river there was
a great grassy bank where many of these animals were to be found. Crouch
ordered them to get back into the canoe, saying that as soon as they
arrived at the island he would open a case of supplies--bully beef and
sardines, of which the Loango boys cherished the empty tins. Also, he
promised that in a day or so he would shoot a buffalo, and they would
not want for provisions. There was a certain amount of hippo meat in
the canoe, and that night Crouch and Max partook of the same food as the
boys. It was not until the afternoon of the following day that they
arrived at Date Palm Island.
They did not expect Edward Harden for some days. He was still forcing
his way towards the Kasai by way of the portage. In the meantime, not
only were they glad enough of a rest, but this was altogether essential.
It took Crouch some days to rid himself of the thorns which had attached
themselves to his skin. He refused all medical assistance from Max; and
the wonder of it was, that the wound in his thigh was healing rapidly
under his "Bull’s Eye treatment." This was wholly incomprehensible to
the young medical student, who beheld the theories he had studied at
hospital, and on which he had placed such store, dissipated to the
winds. In all probability, the fact was that Crouch had such firm
belief in his own remedy that his cure was an example of "faith
healing"; it is generally admitted in these days that "attitude of mind"
affects the health and can even bring about organic changes, for better
or for worse. At any rate, in three days he was sufficiently recovered
to set forth into the forest of rubber trees on the right bank of the
river in search of the buffalo he had promised the boys. Max--although
on this occasion he remained in camp--had by now completely recovered
his strength.
There were few things they carried with them to the Hidden River of
which they had not duplicates at Date Palm Island. Crouch had been able
to secure a new suit of clothes, tobacco and another pipe. As for
rifles, both Edward and Crouch were experienced explorers, and knew
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