Black Ivory by R. M. Ballantyne (best ereader for graphic novels TXT) š
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āAh! I suppose Iāve been delirious, have I?ā said Harold with a faint smile.
To this Disco replied that he had not only been delirious, but stark staring mad, and expressed a very earnest hope that, now he had got his senses hauled taut again, heād belay them anā make all fast for, if he didnāt, it was his, Discoās opinion, that another breeze oā the same kind would blow āem all to ribbons.
āMoreover,ā continued Disco, firmly, āyouāre not to talk. I once nursed a messmate through a fever, anā I remember that the doctor wos werry partikler wāen he began to come round, in orderinā him to hold his tongue anā keep quiet.ā
āYou are right Disco. I will keep quiet, but you must first tell me what you are about, for it has roused my curiosity, and I canāt rest till I know.ā
āWell, sir, Iāll tell you, but donāt go for to make no obsarvations on it. Just keep your mouth shut anā yer ears open, anā Iāll do all the jawinā. Well, you must know, soon after you wos took bad, I felt as if Iād like some sort oā okipation wāen sittinā here watchinā of youāJumbo anā meās bin takinā the watch time about, for Antony isnāt able to hold a boy, much less you wāen you gits obstropolousāWell, sir, I had took a sort oā fancy for Yamboās youngest boy, for heās a fine, brave little shaver, he is, anā I thought Iād make him some sort oā toy, anā it struck me that the thing as āud please him most āud be a jumpinā-jack, so I set to anā made him one about a futt high.
āYou never see such a face oā joy as that youngster put on, sir, wāen I took it to him anā pulled the string. He give a little squeak of delight he did, tuk it in his hands, anā ran home to show it to his mother. Well, sir, wot dāee think, the poor boy come back soon after, blubberinā anā sobbinā, as natāral as if heād bin an English boy, anā says he to Tony, says he, āFatherās bin anā took it away from me!ā I wos surprised at this, anā went right off to see about it, anā wāen I come to Yamboās hut wot does I see but the chief pullinā the string oā the jumpinā-jack, anā grinninā anā sniggerinā like a blue-faced baboon in a passionāhis wife likewise standinā by holdinā her sides wiā laughinā. Well, sir, the moment I goes in, up gits the chief anā shouts for Tony, anā tells him to tell me that I must make him a jumpinā-jack! In course I says Iād do it with all the pleasure in life; and he says that I must make it full size, as big as hisself! I opened my eyes at this, but he said he must have a thing that was fit for a manāa chiefāso there was nothinā for it but to set to work. Anā it wornāt difficult to manage neither, for they supplied me with slabs oā timber an inch thick anā I soon blocked out the body anā limbs with a hatchet anā polished āem off with my knife, and then put āem together. Wāen the big jack wos all right Yambo took it away, for heād watched me all the time I wos at it, anā fixed it up to the branch of a tree anā set to work.
āI never, no I never, did,ā continued Disco, slapping his right thigh, while Jumbo grinned in sympathy, āsee sitch a big baby as Yambo became wāen he got that monstrous jumpinā-jack into actionāwith his courtiers all round him, their faces blazinā with surprise, or conwulsed wiā laughter. The chief hisself was too hard at work to laugh much. He could only glare anā grin, for, big anā strong though he is, the jack wos so awful heavy that it took all his weight anā muscle haulinā on the rope which okipied the place oā the string that weāre used to.
āāHaul away, my hearty,ā thought I, wāen I seed him heavinā, blowinā, anā swettinā at the jackās halyards, āyouāll not break that rope in a hurry.ā
āBut I was wrong, sir, for, although the halyards held on all right, I had not calkilated on such wiolent action at the joints. All of a sudden off comes a leg at the knee. It was goinā the upāard kick at the time, anā went up like a rocket, slap through a troop oā monkeys that was lookinā on aloft, which it scattered like foam in a gale. Yambo didnāt seem to care a pinch oā snuff. His blood was up. The sweat was runninā off him like rain. āHi!ā cries he, givinā another most awful tug. But it wasnāt high that time, for the other leg came off at the hip-jint on the down kick, anā went straight into the buzzum of a black warrior anā floored him wuss than he ever wos floored since he took to fightinā. Yambo didnāt care for that either. He gave another haul with all his might, which proved too much for jack without his legs, for it threw his arms out with such force that they jammed hard anā fast, as if the poor critter was howlinā for mercy!
āYambo looked awful blank at this. Then he turned sharp round and looked at me for all the world as if he meant to say āwot dāee mean by that? eh!ā
āāHe shouldnāt ought to lick into him like that,ā says I to Tony, āthe figure aināt made to be druv by a six-horse power steam-engine! But tell him Iāll fix it up with jints thatāll stand pullinā by an elephant, and Iāll make him another jack to the full as big as that one anā twice as strong.ā
āThis,ā added Disco in conclusion, taking up the head on which he had been engaged, āis the noo jack. The old unās outside working away at this moment like a winā-mill. Listen; donāt āee hear āem?ā
Harold listened and found no difficulty in hearing them, for peals of laughter and shrieks of delight burst forth every few minutes, apparently from a vast crowd outside the hut.
āI do believe,ā said Disco, rising and going towards the door of the hut āthat you can see āem from where you lay.ā
He drew aside the skin doorway as he spoke, and there, sure enough, was the gigantic jumping-jack hanging from the limb of a tree, clearly defined against the sky, and galvanically kicking about its vast limbs, with Yambo pulling fiercely at the tail, and the entire tribe looking on steeped in ecstasy and admiration.
It may easily be believed that the sight of this, coupled with Discoās narrative, was almost too much for Haroldās nerves, and for some time he exhibited, to Discoās horror, a tendency to repeat some antics which would have been much more appropriate to the jumping-jack, but, after a warm drink administered by his faithful though rough nurse, he became composed, and finally dropped into a pleasant sleep, which was not broken till late the following morning.
Refreshed in body, happy in mind, and thankful in spirit he rose to feel that the illness against which he had fought for many days was conquered, and that, although still very weak, he had fairly turned the corner, and had begun to regain some of his wonted health and vigour.
The mind of Yambo was a strange compoundāa curious mixture of gravity and rollicking joviality; at one time displaying a phase of intense solemnity; at another exhibiting quiet pleasantry and humour, but earnestness was the prevailing trait of his character. Whether indulging his passionate fondness for the jumping-jack, or engaged in guiding the deliberations of his counsellors, the earnest chief was equally devoted to the work in hand. Being a savageāand, consequently, led entirely by feeling, which is perhaps the chief characteristic of savage, as distinguished from civilised, man,āhe hated his enemies with exceeding bitterness, and loved his friends with all his heart.
Yambo was very tender to Harold during his illness, and the latter felt corresponding gratitude, so that there sprang up between the two a closer friendship than one could have supposed to be possible, considering that they were so different from each other, mentally, physically, and socially, and that their only mode of exchanging ideas was through the medium of a very incompetent interpreter.
Among other things Harold discovered that his friend the chief was extremely fond of anecdotes and stories. He, therefore, while in a convalescent state and unable for much physical exercise, amused himself, and spent much of his time, in narrating to him the adventures of Robinson Crusoe. Yamboās appetite for mental food increased, and when Crusoeās tale was finished he eagerly demanded more. Some of his warriors also came to hear, and at last the hut was unable to contain the audiences that wished to enter. Harold, therefore, removed to an open space under a banyan-tree, and there daily, for several hours, related all the tales and narratives with which he was acquainted, to the hundreds of open-eyed and open-mouthed negroes who squatted around him.
At first he selected such tales as he thought would be likely to amuse, but these being soon exhausted, he told them about anything that chanced to recur to his memory. Then, finding that their power to swallow the marvellous was somewhat crocodilish, he gave them Jack the Giant-killer, and Jack of Beanstalk notoriety, and Tom Thumb, Cinderella, etcetera, until his entire nursery stock was exhausted, after which he fell back on his inventive powers; but the labour of this last effort proving very considerable, and the results not being adequately great, he took to history, and told them stories about William Tell, and Wallace, and Bruce, and the Puritans of England, and the Scottish Covenanters, and the discoveries of Columbus, until the eyes and mouths of his black auditors were held so constantly and widely on the stretch, that Disco began to fear they would become gradually incapable of being shut, and he entertained a fear that poor Antonioās tongue would, ere long, be dried up at the roots.
At last a thought occurred to our hero, which he promulgated to Disco one morning as they were seated at breakfast on the floor of their hut.
āIt seems to me, Disco,ā he said, after a prolonged silence, during which they had been busily engaged with their knives and wooden spoons, āthat illness must be sent sometimes, to teach men that they give too little of their thoughts to the future world.ā
āWerry true, sir,ā replied Disco, in that quiet matter-of-course tone with which men generally receive axiomatic verities; āwe is raither given to be swallered up with this world, which aināt surprisinā neither, seeinā that weāve bin putt into it, and are surrounded by it, mixed up with it, steeped in it, so to speak, anā canāt werry well help ourselves.ā
āThat last is just the point Iām not quite so sure about,ā rejoined Harold. āSince Iāve been lying ill here, I have thought a good deal about forgetting to bring a Bible with me, and about the meaning of the term Christian, which name I bear; and yet I canāt, when I look honestly at it, see that I do much to deserve the name.ā
āWell, I donāt quite see that, sir,ā said Disco, with an argumentative curl of his right eyebrow; āyou doesnāt swear, or drink, or steal, or commit murder, anā a many other things oā that sort. Aināt that the result oā your being a Christian.ā
āIt may be so, Disco, but that is only what may be styled the
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