登陆注册
18876700000077

第77章

Now a fierce debate broke out, the war party maintaining that the manifestations were genuine, the peace party that they were a fraud. In the end, as neither side would give way and as Zikali, when appealed to, sat silent as a stone, refusing any explanation, the king said--"Must we sit here talking, talking, till daylight? There is but one man who can know the truth, that is Macumazahn. Let him deny it as he will, he was the lover of this Mameena while she was alive, for with my own eyes I saw him kiss her before she killed herself. It is certain, therefore, that he knows if the woman we seemed to see was Mameena or another, since there are things which a man never forgets. I propose, therefore, that we should question him and form our own judgment of his answer."

This advice, which seemed to promise a road out of a blind ally, met with instant acceptance.

"Let it be so," they cried with one voice, and in another minute I was once more conducted from behind my tree and set down upon the stool in front of the Council, with my back to the fire and Zikali, "that his eyes might not charm me."

"Now, Watcher-by-Night," said Cetewayo, "although you have lied to us in a certain matter, of this we do not think much, since it is one upon which both men and women always lie, as every judge will know. Therefore we still believe you to be an honest man, as your dealings have proved for many years. As an honest man, therefore, we beg you to give us a true answer to a plain question. Was the Shape we saw before us just now a woman or a spirit, and if a spirit, was it the ghost of Mameena, the beautiful witch who died near this place nearly the quarter of a hundred years ago, she whom you loved, or who loved you, which is just the same thing, since a man always loves a woman who loves him, or thinks that he does?"

Now after reflection I replied in these words and as conscientiously as I could--"King and Councillors, I do not know if what we all saw was a ghost or a living person, but, as I do not believe in ghosts, or at any rate that they come back to the world on such errands, I conclude that it was a living person. Still it may have been neither, but only a mere picture produced before us by the arts of Zikali. So much for the first question. Your second is--was this spirit or woman or shadow, that of her whom I remember meeting in Zululand many years ago? King and Councillors, I can only say that it was very like her. Still one handsome young woman often greatly resembles another of the same age and colouring. Further, the moon gives an uncertain light, especially when it is tempered by smoke from a fire. Lastly, memory plays strange tricks with all of us, as you will know if you try to think of the face of any one who has been dead for more than twenty years. For the rest, the voice seemed similar, the beads and ornaments seemed similar, and the figure repeated to me certain words which I thought I alone had heard come from the lips of her who is dead. Also she gave me a strange message from another who is dead, referring to a matter which I believed was known only to me and that other. Yet Zikali is very clever and may have learned these things in some way unguessed by me, and what he has learned, others may have learned also. King and Councillors, I do not think that what we saw was the spirit of Mameena. I think it a woman not unlike to her who had been taught her lesson. I have nothing more to say, and therefore I pray you not to ask me any further questions about Mameena of whose name I grow weary."

At this point Zikali seemed to wake out of his indifference, or his torpor, for he looked up and said darkly--"It is strange that the cleverest are always those who first fall into the trap. They go along, gazing at the stars at night, and forget the pit which they themselves have dug in the morning.

O-ho-ho! Oho-ho!"

Now the wrangling broke out afresh. The peace party pointed triumphantly to the fact that I, the white man who ought to know, put no faith in this apparition, which was therefore without doubt a fraud. The war party on the other hand declared that I was deceiving them for reasons of my own, one of which would be that I did not wish to see the Zulus eat up my people. So fierce grew the debate that I thought it would end in blows and perhaps in an attack on myself or Zikali who all the while sat quite careless and unmoved, staring at the moon. At length Cetewayo shouted for silence, spitting, as was his habit when angry.

"Make an end," he cried, "lest I cause some of you to grow quiet for ever," whereon the recriminations ceased. "Opener of Roads," he went on, "many of those who are present think like Macumazahn here, that you are but an old cheat, though whether or no I be one of these I will not say. They demand a sign of you that none can dispute, and I demand it also before I speak the word of peace or war. Give us then that sign or begone to whence you came and show your face no more at Ulundi."

"What sign does the Council require, Son of Panda?" asked Zikali quietly. "Let them agree on one together and tell me now at once, for I who am old grow weary and would sleep. Then if it can be given I will give it; and if I cannot give it, I will get me back to my own house and show my face no more at Ulundi, who do not desire to listen again to fools who babble like contending waters round a stone and yet never stir the stone because they run two ways at once."

Now the Councillors stared at each other, for none knew what sign to ask. At length old Sigananda said--"O King, it is well known that the Black One who went before you had a certain little assegai handled with the royal red wood, which drank the blood of many. It was with this assegai that Mopo his servant, who vanished from the land after the death of Dingaan, let out the life of the Black One at the kraal Duguza, but what became of it afterwards none have heard for certain.

同类推荐
  • 南华真经章句音义

    南华真经章句音义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 江汉丛谈

    江汉丛谈

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 七夕

    七夕

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 渔樵问对

    渔樵问对

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 贤愚经

    贤愚经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 卧底在佛门

    卧底在佛门

    心性善良的主角,虽然身世悲苦但是却有喜欢的富家女孩。无法看破红尘的他,却偏偏与佛有缘。误学到至高的佛门神通,被绑上寺庙,终极卧底。以佛门神通练就绝世剑术,仗剑天涯,好不自在!
  • 倾世小仙

    倾世小仙

    文艺版:上一世暗恋成灾,命运却使他们彼此错过,大红的婚服映着烛光,迷蒙而又悲伤。这一世他们又在虹澜湖边相遇,他颤抖的伸出手,轻吟道:飘渺间,何处从,不知眼前物真与否。直白版:这是一个悲催姑娘的恋爱史,上一世被诳的魂飞魄散不说,这一世却被那人盯上,且给圈养了,真是是可忍,叔不可忍!舅舅不可忍!姥姥不可忍!而她却被蒙在鼓里不得不忍......(欢迎入坑,此文甜中有虐,虐中思甜,小七我可是个好人哦!!!)
  • 世界历史未解之谜大全集(优秀青少年最想知道)

    世界历史未解之谜大全集(优秀青少年最想知道)

    在绵延不绝的五千年世界历史长河中,人类创造了辉煌灿烂的世界文明,又给后人留下了众多扑朔迷离的未解之谜——特洛伊战争真的爆发过吗,古巴比伦的通天塔修在何处,埃及金字塔隐藏着多少千古之谜,是谁建造了英国庞大的巨石阵,华盛顿为何拒绝竞选第三任总统,拿破仑神秘死亡的真相是什么,牛顿的黑匣子里藏着什么秘密,二战中德国为何未能造出原子弹,泰坦尼克号因何沉没海底,希特勒因何下令大肆屠杀犹太人,日本天皇二战后逃脱审判之谜,肯尼迪家族为何悲剧不断。走进神秘莫测的历史长廊,打开一段段尘封的往事和谜题,在探索中增长人生见识,在沉思中肩负历史使命,迈向无限广阔、无限精彩的未来世界!
  • 陶

    龙仁青,当代著名作家。1967年3月生于青海湖畔铁卜加草原1986年7月毕业于青海海南民族师范学校藏语言文学专业。先后从事广播、电视、报纸等媒体的新闻翻译(汉藏文)、记者、编辑、导演、制片等职,现供职于青海电视台影视部。
  • 总裁待嫁

    总裁待嫁

    怀孕八月跌下楼梯,鲜血染红了衣裙,也染红了她的眼睛……一朝重生,她匆匆离婚,躲他,越远越好。他却纠缠不放,狂追不舍。她怒:“冷封!你说过,若有来生,定不娶我!”他点头:“对!我说过,来生不娶你,所以——我嫁你!”轰动全球:封天总裁入赘洛家,风光大嫁……情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 九阳武神

    九阳武神

    周锋,一个缺少命魂的少年,机缘巧合下得到了杀神风无情的九阳坠,并且修炼无上神功《九阳逆天诀》,从此命运的轨迹发生了改变。扶摇直上,激战天下,舍我取谁?驰骋九州,纵横寰宇,看我九阳武神!
  • 开阔眼界的战争故事

    开阔眼界的战争故事

    生活中不乏充满聪明机智的事情,只要睁开自己的双眼仔细观察、认真思考,就能从中得到有益的经验,并将之转化为自己的人生阅历,解决处理生活中的难题,为自己的生活增光添彩。
  • 男主养成记

    男主养成记

    穿越进一本男主修仙文也就算了,偏偏穿成了女主,还是两个女主中的一个!洛颖川看着自己的小身板毫无压力,毕竟一切都有变数。于是,一不小心男主女主的关系被她拉上了大家都是好基友的歪路......情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 探墓有戏

    探墓有戏

    诈尸,假人,妖妃,小丑,偷梁换柱,美女成群,国王,变身,神物······故事开始为了搭救被变成怪兽的父母,南枫谭不得不把自己“卖”给国王,国王嗜好就是让其研究古墓。后经“二道贩子”把此男来回转手。居然获得了神器。屌丝逆袭成高富帅。娶美女老婆回家去。
  • 《匮封宝鉴》

    《匮封宝鉴》

    这是一段从未被载入史册的“历史”,有太多的民族在这场“历史”中消失,他们都曾为那个时代做出过努力。故事起始于唐建中四年,伴随着京城盛大的“开国大典”,一支残兵败部正从葱岭以西一路败逃至玉门关,一切也由此展开...