While engaged in the transport service of the mission, I was sitting quietly in my tent in Sadi Kiandunga’s town, when without the least warning a volley was fired at less than a hundred yards from my little camp. The men shouted, the women screamed, the wildest commotion2 ensued. Was it an attack upon the town? What had50 happened? As a man ran past the tent, I inquired the cause.
‘Oh, nothing,’ he said; ‘it is only a baby born, and everyone is glad and shouting out their joy at the safe birth; they have fired a feu-de-joie: don’t you do so in your country?’
The house where the little stranger had arrived was very small; a fire was burning inside, filling it with strong wood smoke; and as if that were not sufficient discomfort3 for such a time, the house was literally4 crammed5 with women, all shouting vociferously6, showing in this well-meaning but mistaken manner their sympathy in the mother’s joy.
The people rise at daybreak, and the fire, which has been kept smouldering all night, is replenished7, or, if it has gone out, fire is obtained from another household. The wife clears up the ashes from the hearth8, and sweeps out the chips and husks that remain from last night’s supper.
The husband, if a tidy man, sweeps his compound. Negro toilet operations then ensue. A calabash of water is taken behind the house, and filling his mouth with water Ndualu (Dom Alvaro) allows a thin stream to flow over his hands as he carefully washes them, also his face; then cleaning his teeth, he goes to sit in front of his house to comb his hair. The ladies have been bestirring51 themselves, and a snack of food is ready—a few roast ground-nuts, or a piece of prepared cassava.
The infants are placed in the care of older babies, and the women and girls of the town wend their way to the village spring, where they bathe and gossip until all the calabashes being full they return with the day’s supply of water. One calabash is for the baby, who is brought outside, and carefully washed, squalling lustily as the cold douche is poured over him. If the mother is careful, his feet are examined for jiggers. This sand flea10, brought from Brazils some twenty years ago, is a great pest. Burrowing11 into the feet often in the most tender parts, the insect swells12 until its eggs are mature, when the little cyst bursts, and they are set free. If they are not extracted the jiggers set up an inflammation, which may even terminate in mortification13. It is very common to see one or two toes absent from this cause.
The preliminaries of the day being over, the women start for the farms. Taking with them in the great conical basket a hoe, a little food, and a small calabash of water, the baby is carried on the hip9, or more often made to straddle its mother’s back, and tied on with a cloth dexterously15 fastened in front. So the poor child travels often through the hot sun, bound tightly to its mother’s reeking52 body, its little head but inadequately16 protected by its incipient18 wool. No wonder that an African baby who has survived the hardships of babyhood grows up to be strong, and able to bear great strain and fatigue19. The weaklings are early weeded out, and often poor mothers, wringing20 their hands, wail21 and deplore22 the loss of the little darling, whose death is due to their own lack of care, rather than to the supposed witchcraft23 and devilish malice24 of some one in the town.
The men will sometimes help in the farms when trees have to be felled, but otherwise the women perform the farm work; and as the ground does not need much scratching to produce a crop, the hoeing and weeding afford them healthy employment, sufficient to keep them so far out of mischief25. We have seen towns in the neighbourhood of Stanley Pool where the women do no farm work, living on the proceeds of their husband’s ivory trade; they gossip, smoke, sleep, and cook, or spend an hour or two in arranging the coiffure of their lord or of a companion. Laziness is not good for any folk, and where there is so little housework the gardening is not too severe a tax on the women. Towards evening they return, bringing some cabbage or cassava leaves, or something to make up some little relish26, and proceed to cook the evening meal.
53 The men have their own departments of work: they are great traders. The Congo week consists of four days; Nkandu, Konzo, Nhenge, Nsona, and every four or eight days they hold their markets. As they have many markets within a moderate distance, and occurring on different days of the week, there is generally a market to attend on each day, if any one is so disposed. The marketplaces are in open country, generally on a hill-top, away from towns. These precautions prevent surprises.
On the appointed day large numbers of men, women, and children are to be met carrying their goods. There is cassava in various forms, dried, in puddings, or as meal; plantain, ground-nuts, and other food-stuffs; pigs, goats, sheep, fowls27 and fish; dried caterpillars29 on skewers30; dried meat; wares31 from Europe; cloth, beads32, knives, guns, brass33 wire, salt, gunpowder34. Drink in abundance, palm wine, native beer, sometimes gin and rum. Native produce, such as palm oil, ground-nuts, sesamum, india-rubber, crates36 of fowls, bundles of native cloth, meal sieves37, baskets, hoes, etc.
Stringent38 laws are made to protect these markets. No one is allowed to come armed, no one may catch a debtor39 on market-day, no one may use a knife against another in a passion. The penalty54 for all these offences is death, and many muzzles40 of buried guns stick up in the market places to warn other rowdies against a like fate. Between the coast and Stanley Pool beads are the currency; above the Pool brass rods take their place. A man wishing to sell salt and to buy india-rubber, first sells his salt for beads, and with the beads buys the rubber. Large profits can be made on these markets, and many natives spend the greater part of their time travelling from one to another for the purpose of trade.
Children commence trading very early. A five-year old boy will somehow get three or four strings41 of beads, and with them will buy a small chicken. After a few months of patient care, it is worth eight or ten strings, and his capital is doubled. He is soon able to buy a small pig, which follows him about like a dog, and sleeps in his house until, by and by, it fetches a good amount on the market. The proceeds of rat hunting, barter42 among the town boys, and further trade, have meanwhile increased his stock in trade. When he grows older, he accompanies a caravan43 to the coast, he gets a nice present to carry food for his uncle; en route his ideas of trade are enlarged. He commences to buy india-rubber, and brings back with him next time salt and cloth, a gun and some powder, a55 knife, and a plate. And so by degrees he is encouraged to fresh effort, until he has sufficient to pay for a wife or two. Continuing still in trade, he buys and sells, investing his property in slave retainers, and hiding some in reserve, in case of misfortune, or against his death. For it is the ambition of all to be buried in a large quantity of cloth. Then the report goes that so and so was buried, and that he was wound in 200 fathoms44 of cloth, and that 50 guns were buried with him, and so on. This sort of burial is a Congo Westminster Abbey.
The girls help their mothers in farming and housework until they arrive at a marriageable age. In some places they are betrothed45 very early; the intended husband paying a deposit, and by instalments completing the price demanded by the girl’s maternal46 relatives. The amount is often heavy—reckoned by Congo wealth—but varies much according to the position of the girl’s family or the suitor’s wealth. It is altogether a business matter. Should the wife die, her maternal relatives have to provide another wife without further payment; and as frequently they have spent the sum paid in the first instance, they are landed in difficulties. Palavers47 about women are a fruitful source of war.
Children are considered the property of the wife’s56 relatives, the father has little or no control over them. The right of inheritance is from uncle to nephew, thus a man’s slaves and real property go to the eldest49 son of his eldest sister, or the next of kin14 on such lines. A wise nephew will therefore leave his father’s house, and go to live with his uncle, whom he hopes to succeed. His uncle also, knowing that his nephew is to inherit his goods, while his own children belong to his wife’s clan50, cares more for his nephew than his own children. The evil of the system is recognized by many, but they cannot see how the necessary revolution is to be brought about.
At the age of five or six the boys do not stay longer with their mothers. Some bigger boys having built a house, the small boys just breaking loose from parental51 restraints go to them, and beg to be allowed to live with them. They in turn promise to find them in firewood, and to be their little retainers pro17 tem. These boys’ houses are called mbonge. I turned up late at night (eight o’clock) in a native town, having made a forced march. I had never visited there before, and not liking52 to rouse the chief at such an hour, I went to the mbonge, and asked the boys whether I and my two attendants might sleep there to save fuss and trouble, as I must be off again at daybreak. ‘Oh,57 you are Ingelezo, are you? come in; yes, we are glad to see you, so often we have heard of you, and now we see you. We are very pleased.’ This was kindly53 spoken; so, stooping through the low doorway54, I entered a roomy house. Some ten boys had just finished supper, and squatted55 round a smoky fire. I was glad to stretch out on the papyrus56 mat they gave me, keeping low down, to avoid the smoke which otherwise almost blinded me. I had with me half a fowl28, a small bell (1?d.), and three strings of beads. A boy spitted my fowl over the fire, while my attendants dozed57, for they were worn out with the long march of the day. I begged some plantain, and a lad went to the door, and shouted, ‘Bring some plantain to the mbonge.’ A kindly woman brought some. When my meal was ready I asked for a pinch of salt and some water; they shouted for these, and got them. Having finished my meal, I coiled up in my blanket; and next morning, giving them the bell and three strings, thanked them, and so we parted.
The boys of the mbonge are well attended to; for to get the name of ‘stingy’ is the first step towards the terrible rumour58 of witch.
The constant activities of trade tend to develop the intellectual faculties59 of the people. Cute, long-headed men, with wonderful memories, having no58 account books or invoices60, they ask you sensible questions; and if you can speak their language, an hour’s chat may be as pleasant with them as with some whiter and more civilised folk. If you have a bargain to drive with them, you need all your wits and firmness; while if they are stronger than you, or have no reason to respect you, they will have their way.
Clever in pottery61 and metal work, making hoes and knives, casting bracelets62, anklets, and even bells from the brass rods of trade, beating out brass wire, and ribbon, they strike you at once as being of a superior type.
We might draw another picture. There are districts where there seems to be no energy in the people. Take, for instance, the Majinga or the Lukunga Valley, as we knew them two years ago. Here the natives live in the midst of plenty, for the soil is not to be equalled in richness. The proceeds of a goat sold on one of the markets will find a large family in palm fibre cloth for a year; while a crate35 or two of fowls will provide salt, gunpowder, and an occasional hoe or plate.
A boy grows up in this rich country, and for a while his intellect expands as he learns about the little world around him. As he grows older, he may bestir himself to find means to buy a gun,59 and then a wife: that accomplished63, he has practically nothing more to learn or live for. He sleeps or smokes all day, unless about September the grass is burnt and there is a little hunting, though a war or a palaver48 may sometimes break the monotony. Otherwise, his wife cultivates the land, and feeds him; he eats and sleeps. Living such an animal life, his intellect stagnates64, he becomes quarrelsome and stupid to a degree almost hopeless. Dirty, he is contented65 to see his hut fall to pieces almost over his head.
A CONGO NATIVE SMOKING.
The women are content often with a rag for clothing. They wear a grass stem three inches long through the nose, and a dirty rag for an earring66.60 The hair is matted with a mixture of oil and vegetable charcoal67; and if a lady happen to be in mourning the same filthy68 compound is smeared69 over her face.
With the advent70 of white men this sad picture has begun to change. The Livingstone Inland Mission (American Baptists) and the International Association have stations among them; their transport and that of the Baptist Missionary71 Society (English) passes through the country. The people are coming forward as carriers; they sell their goats, fowls, etc., are getting cloth; and in this short time a change for the better is apparent. Here lies all the difference between the degraded and the higher types of the African. The intellect of the one is stagnant72, while the other has everything to quicken it.
As children the better class will compare favourably73 with English boys; bright, sharp, anxious to learn, they push on well with their studies. Our schools are full of promise. At Stanley Pool the other day the boys were much concerned because a new boy had mastered his alphabet the first day. They all felt that he was too clever.
The future of these interesting people is full of the brightest hope. Give them the Gospel, and with it the advantages of education, and books to61 read; quicken within them tastes which will render labour a necessity and a pleasure; give them something high and noble to work and live for; and we shall see great and rapid changes. Christian74 Missions are no experiment. We have to deal with a vigorous race that will repay all that Christian effort can do on their behalf.
点击收听单词发音
1 depicted | |
描绘,描画( depict的过去式和过去分词 ); 描述 | |
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2 commotion | |
n.骚动,动乱 | |
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3 discomfort | |
n.不舒服,不安,难过,困难,不方便 | |
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4 literally | |
adv.照字面意义,逐字地;确实 | |
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5 crammed | |
adj.塞满的,挤满的;大口地吃;快速贪婪地吃v.把…塞满;填入;临时抱佛脚( cram的过去式) | |
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6 vociferously | |
adv.喊叫地,吵闹地 | |
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7 replenished | |
补充( replenish的过去式和过去分词 ); 重新装满 | |
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8 hearth | |
n.壁炉炉床,壁炉地面 | |
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9 hip | |
n.臀部,髋;屋脊 | |
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10 flea | |
n.跳蚤 | |
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11 burrowing | |
v.挖掘(洞穴),挖洞( burrow的现在分词 );翻寻 | |
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12 swells | |
增强( swell的第三人称单数 ); 肿胀; (使)凸出; 充满(激情) | |
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13 mortification | |
n.耻辱,屈辱 | |
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14 kin | |
n.家族,亲属,血缘关系;adj.亲属关系的,同类的 | |
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15 dexterously | |
adv.巧妙地,敏捷地 | |
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16 inadequately | |
ad.不够地;不够好地 | |
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17 pro | |
n.赞成,赞成的意见,赞成者 | |
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18 incipient | |
adj.起初的,发端的,初期的 | |
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19 fatigue | |
n.疲劳,劳累 | |
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20 wringing | |
淋湿的,湿透的 | |
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21 wail | |
vt./vi.大声哀号,恸哭;呼啸,尖啸 | |
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22 deplore | |
vt.哀叹,对...深感遗憾 | |
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23 witchcraft | |
n.魔法,巫术 | |
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24 malice | |
n.恶意,怨恨,蓄意;[律]预谋 | |
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25 mischief | |
n.损害,伤害,危害;恶作剧,捣蛋,胡闹 | |
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26 relish | |
n.滋味,享受,爱好,调味品;vt.加调味料,享受,品味;vi.有滋味 | |
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27 fowls | |
鸟( fowl的名词复数 ); 禽肉; 既不是这; 非驴非马 | |
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28 fowl | |
n.家禽,鸡,禽肉 | |
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29 caterpillars | |
n.毛虫( caterpillar的名词复数 );履带 | |
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30 skewers | |
n.串肉扦( skewer的名词复数 );烤肉扦;棒v.(用串肉扦或类似物)串起,刺穿( skewer的第三人称单数 ) | |
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31 wares | |
n. 货物, 商品 | |
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32 beads | |
n.(空心)小珠子( bead的名词复数 );水珠;珠子项链 | |
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33 brass | |
n.黄铜;黄铜器,铜管乐器 | |
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34 gunpowder | |
n.火药 | |
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35 crate | |
vt.(up)把…装入箱中;n.板条箱,装货箱 | |
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36 crates | |
n. 板条箱, 篓子, 旧汽车 vt. 装进纸条箱 | |
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37 sieves | |
筛,漏勺( sieve的名词复数 ) | |
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38 stringent | |
adj.严厉的;令人信服的;银根紧的 | |
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39 debtor | |
n.借方,债务人 | |
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40 muzzles | |
枪口( muzzle的名词复数 ); (防止动物咬人的)口套; (四足动物的)鼻口部; (狗)等凸出的鼻子和口 | |
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41 strings | |
n.弦 | |
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42 barter | |
n.物物交换,以货易货,实物交易 | |
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43 caravan | |
n.大蓬车;活动房屋 | |
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44 fathoms | |
英寻( fathom的名词复数 ) | |
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45 betrothed | |
n. 已订婚者 动词betroth的过去式和过去分词 | |
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46 maternal | |
adj.母亲的,母亲般的,母系的,母方的 | |
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47 palavers | |
n.废话,空话( palaver的名词复数 )v.废话,空话( palaver的第三人称单数 ) | |
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48 palaver | |
adj.壮丽堂皇的;n.废话,空话 | |
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49 eldest | |
adj.最年长的,最年老的 | |
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50 clan | |
n.氏族,部落,宗族,家族,宗派 | |
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51 parental | |
adj.父母的;父的;母的 | |
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52 liking | |
n.爱好;嗜好;喜欢 | |
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53 kindly | |
adj.和蔼的,温和的,爽快的;adv.温和地,亲切地 | |
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54 doorway | |
n.门口,(喻)入门;门路,途径 | |
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55 squatted | |
v.像动物一样蹲下( squat的过去式和过去分词 );非法擅自占用(土地或房屋);为获得其所有权;而占用某片公共用地。 | |
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56 papyrus | |
n.古以纸草制成之纸 | |
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57 dozed | |
v.打盹儿,打瞌睡( doze的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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58 rumour | |
n.谣言,谣传,传闻 | |
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59 faculties | |
n.能力( faculty的名词复数 );全体教职员;技巧;院 | |
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60 invoices | |
发票( invoice的名词复数 ); (发货或服务)费用清单; 清单上货物的装运; 货物的托运 | |
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61 pottery | |
n.陶器,陶器场 | |
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62 bracelets | |
n.手镯,臂镯( bracelet的名词复数 ) | |
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63 accomplished | |
adj.有才艺的;有造诣的;达到了的 | |
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64 stagnates | |
v.停滞,不流动,不发展( stagnate的第三人称单数 ) | |
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65 contented | |
adj.满意的,安心的,知足的 | |
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66 earring | |
n.耳环,耳饰 | |
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67 charcoal | |
n.炭,木炭,生物炭 | |
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68 filthy | |
adj.卑劣的;恶劣的,肮脏的 | |
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69 smeared | |
弄脏; 玷污; 涂抹; 擦上 | |
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70 advent | |
n.(重要事件等的)到来,来临 | |
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71 missionary | |
adj.教会的,传教(士)的;n.传教士 | |
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72 stagnant | |
adj.不流动的,停滞的,不景气的 | |
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73 favourably | |
adv. 善意地,赞成地 =favorably | |
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74 Christian | |
adj.基督教徒的;n.基督教徒 | |
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