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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- Author: Charles Gibson
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Kasai. For a moment, Harden was undecided how to act. If he continued
on his way to Date Palm Island, some days might be wasted before he
again picked up the trail. In the end he decided to send Max and the
three Fans to the north, and go himself with M’Wané to the Island.
There he would load up the canoe, send half the boys down-stream on the
look-out for Max, and bring the others back to the portage to assist the
slaves.
The following morning he shook hands with his nephew, and continued on
the old route with which he was now familiar. He had not gone far,
however, before he noticed bloodstains on the leaves of the undergrowth;
and presently, to his utmost surprise, he came across one of the Loango
boys wounded by a bullet in the leg, and crawling painfully on hands and
knees towards the river.
This boy said that he had been hunting in the jungle--for they were
short of food on the Island--when he had come across a caravan
consisting of six Arabs and a white man. They were carrying a canoe
half-filled with supplies, and a great box which appeared to be
excessively heavy. The white man who led the way, seemed to be very
weak, for he staggered as he walked. Indeed, it is impossible to
imagine the hardships that the tall Portuguese underwent upon that last
and fateful journey. So anxious was he to save his rubies, to gain the
sea-coast in safety, that he had not brought with him sufficient
supplies. In consequence, he and his men were starving and, as we shall
see, they had an even more deadly foe to reckon with.
M’Wané, picking up the wounded boy in his arms, carried him like a baby
throughout the rest of the journey to Date Palm Island. There the man’s
wound was attended to, and he was placed in a canoe which was ready
loaded two hours after Edward had reached the river.
Once more Harden set forth upon his old track, leaving instructions that
the canoe was to drop down-stream on the afternoon of the following day.
The Loango boys from the Island, though they had complained of being
short of food, were in fine condition; and the party came up with Crouch
at the end of the second day. Thence they made better headway and,
following Cæsar’s trail, arrived eventually at the river, where they
found not only Max and the Fans, but the party from the Island.
And now followed a race down the river after the slave-drivers and their
chest of rubies. The three canoes which had been carried from the
Hidden River, were embarked on the Kasai. The slaves who had acted as
porters on the journey were given the option of finding their own way
back to their villages or going down to the Congo in the canoes. There
was never the slightest doubt that the majority would choose the former
course. Half their number had come from the Pambala village on the
slopes of Solitude Peak, and a score from other villages farther to the
south-west. In all there were only five who desired to journey to the
Congo, and these were men whom Cæsar had captured in the land of the
Bakutu.
The current of the river was so swift that the four canoes shot
down-stream at a great velocity with little help from the paddles. On
the upper reaches of the great river, rapids and waterfalls were
frequent, and at such times it was necessary to carry the canoe to
unbroken water. At each portage they found traces of Cæsar and his
Arabs. Once the camp-fire of the Portuguese was still alight, and soon
after that, on rounding a point, they came in sight of a canoe.
They thought at first that they had overtaken Cæsar, but they were
doomed to be disappointed. With the aid of their fieldglasses they
ascertained that the canoe was coming towards them, working slowly
up-stream against the force of the current.
They were still more surprised when they recognised, seated in the stern
of this canoe, the white solar topee and the black coat of a European.
A few minutes later Crouch was within hail.
"Who are you?" he asked, with both hands to his mouth.
And the answer came back in the accent of Aberdeen: "James Mayhew, of
the Scottish Missionary Society."
That, indeed, was so. This man alone, attended only by a few native
servants, was forcing his way in the absolute Unknown, in order to bring
the enlightenment of Christian knowledge into the depths of an endless
forest, inhabited by cannibals and dwarfs. They had time only to
congratulate the missionary upon his courage, and to wish him every
success. Crouch gave Mr. Mayhew directions as to how to reach the
Hidden Valley, and told him that, if he found his way to Solitude Peak
and said that he had come from the "White Wizard," he would find many
converts among the liberated slaves and the people of the village.
On being asked whether he had seen the Portuguese and his Arabs on the
river, the Missionary answered that he had passed them not an hour ago.
The Arabs had been paddling furiously, as if their lives depended upon
their reaching the Congo with as little delay as possible. As for the
Portuguese, he had been lying as if sick, in the body of the canoe, with
his head propped against a great ironbound chest.
Crouch waited to hear no more. Waving his hand to the Missionary, he
gave orders for the journey to continue.
That evening, they expected to arrive at Cæsar’s camp, but by midnight
they had come to the conclusion that the man was resolved to push on
without halting for food.
It was now that M’Wané and his four companions--the three that had gone
to Solitude Peak and the one who had been left at the Island--asked to
be put ashore. They said they were not far from their own people, and
were desirous of returning home. For all that, they were extremely
sorry to leave their masters, the great white men who had overcome the
Fire-gods.
When they left, there was much hand-shaking. Each man was presented
with a rifle and several rounds of ammunition, in addition to that they
received enough beads, brass rods, and cloth, to gladden the hearts of
any savage who ever roamed the equatorial forests.
Throughout the night the canoes paddled to the north-west. All this
time de Costa lay in the body of a canoe, groaning with ague and
shivering from fever. It is a strange thing that in the close and humid
atmosphere of the forest there is little malaria or malarial typhoid,
which cause such havoc among the white men on the great rivers of the
Congo Basin. For it is above the surface of the water that the
mosquitoes swarm, which breed these fell diseases.
At daybreak they sighted Cæsar. They saw his canoe for no longer than
an instant as it rounded a bend in the river. The natives plied their
paddles with a will, and Crouch, in the vanguard of the pursuit held his
rifle ready to fire.
All day long, beneath the blazing tropic sun, with the insects droning
in their ears and the yellow seething water rushing onward to the sea,
this strange race continued.
Three times did they catch sight of the fugitives; once in the morning,
once at mid-day, and the last time when the afternoon was drawing to a
close.
By then they were not five hundred yards in the rear. It seemed
probable that the Portuguese would be overtaken before night. Throughout
that day native settlements on either bank of the river had been
frequent. They were but two hundred miles above the point where the
Kasai joins the Congo, to the north of Stanley Pool.
At last they entered a broad reach, where the river was straight as a
Roman road. On either side the jungle rose to the height of about two
hundred feet--a tangled mass of vegetation, of creepers, vines,
convolvuli, so densely interwoven as to give the effect of endless
walls. Far in the distance, at the end of this long reach, they could
see an island standing in mid-stream, as if it floated on the surface of
the river.
Resolved to overtake the man before darkness set in and assisted his
escape, they urged the canoes forward, until Cæsar recognised himself
for lost. Two shots from Crouch, and Cæsar’s canoe drew in to the bank
of the island.
As they approached they saw the Portuguese lifted out of his canoe in
the arms of his faithful Arabs, and deposited on the bank. Then the
Arabs, taking their rifles in their hands, opened fire on their
pursuers.
They realized at once that resistance would be hopeless. The Loango
boys, after many weeks of inactivity on Date Palm Island, were spoiling
for a fight. Not all of them were armed with rifles, but the odds were
two to one against the Arabs, who knew that they could always trust the
white men to show mercy. No sooner had the Englishmen set foot upon the
island than they delivered up their arms.
Had Crouch shot them on the spot these men, who for two years had been
scourging slaves with their whips, had got no more than they deserved.
As it was, their weapons were not given back to them, and they were
turned adrift upon the great river, with a week’s provisions, to find
their way back as best they might to some settlement of their own kith
and kin.
And then the Englishmen were able to give their attention to Cæsar. The
tall man lay upon the ground, rigid as in death. The whole party
gathered around him, with the exception of de Costa, who was himself too
ill to land upon the island.
Cæsar’s complexion was a dull, slaty-blue. His face was drawn and
haggard, his eyes had sunk deep into their sockets. As Max pushed his
way through the inquisitive Loango boys, who stood gaping at the dying
man, Cæsar struggled to a sitting position, and supporting his back
against a tree, looked savagely about him.
"Stand back!" cried Max. "It’s cholera!"
It was then he realized the truth. Cæsar had thrashed one of his slaves
for no greater crime than having contracted the pestilence that was
ravaging his camp. Max had snatched the whip from the man’s hand and
brought down upon his face and hands and back the cruel thong, whose
very touch was contagion. And thus was the vengeance of God, upon one
who had done evil all his days, taken from the hands of Captain Crouch.
Max was actually on his way back to his canoe to procure his medicine
chest when the man looked about him, rolled his eyes to the heavens, as
if he who had shown so little of mercy to others thought to find it
there. Then he fell back with a groan, and lay cramped and twisted in
the agony of his death.
That night, they buried him upon the island. They filled ammunition
boxes with the rubies, and burnt the chest against which Cæsar had
rested his head. And then, they left him in the starlight, in the midst
of the great stillness of the lonely river, to make his peace with God.
THE FIRE-GODS - CHAPTER XXI--BACK AT THE "EXPLORERS’"
The green baize doors are just the same as ever; and in the inner
smoking room is Edward Harden, as large and clumsy-looking as on the
morning when we met him first at the top of St. James’s Street, except
that, perhaps, he is more sun-burnt and somewhat haggard.
It is winter; the London fog is without, and a great fire is roaring in
the grate. And before that fire is seated a young gentleman who now,
for the first time, is enjoying the privileges of a member.
Edward rose to his feet, and looked at the clock.
"It’s six," said he. "Crouch ought to be here."
Max Harden consulted his watch, as if
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