When I got back to Bangalang, my first
movement was to take possession of the quarters assigned
me by the Mongo, and to make myself as comfortable
as possible in a land whose chief requirements are
shade and shelter. My house, built of cane plastered
with mud, consisted of two earthen-floored rooms and
a broad verandah. The thatched roof was rather
leaky, while my furniture comprised two arm-chests
covered with mats, a deal table, a bamboo settle,
a tin-pan with palm-oil for a lamp, and a German looking-glass
mounted in a paper frame. I augmented these comforts
by the addition of a trunk, mattress, hammock and pair
of blankets; yet, after all this embellishment, I confess
my household was rather a sorry affair.
It is time I should make the reader
acquainted with the individual who was the presiding
genius of the scene, and, in some degree, a type of
his peculiar class in Africa.
Mr. Ormond was the son of an opulent
slave-trader from Liverpool, and owed his birth to
the daughter of a native chief on the Rio Pongo.
His father seems to have been rather proud of his
mulatto stripling, and dispatched him to England to
be educated. But Master John had made little
progress in belles-lettres, when news of
the trader’s death was brought to the British
agent, who refused the youth further supplies of money.
The poor boy soon became an outcast in a land which
had not yet become fashionably addicted to philanthropy;
and, after drifting about awhile in England, he shipped
on board a merchantman. The press-gang soon got
possession of the likely mulatto for the service of
his Britannic Majesty. Sometimes he played the
part of dandy waiter in the cabin; sometimes he swung
a hammock with the hands in the forecastle. Thus,
five years slipped by, during which the wanderer visited
most of the West Indian and Mediterranean stations.
At length the prolonged cruise was
terminated, and Ormond paid off. He immediately
determined to employ his hoarded cash in a voyage to
Africa, where he might claim his father’s property.
The project was executed; his mother was still found
alive; and, fortunately for the manly youth, she recognized
him at once as her first-born.
The reader will recollect that these
things occurred on the west coast of Africa in the
early part of the present century, and that the tenure
of property, and the interests of foreign traders,
were controlled entirely by such customary
laws as prevailed on the spot. Accordingly, a
“grand palaver” was appointed, and all
Mr. Ormond’s brothers, sisters, uncles, and
cousins, many of whom were in possession
of his father’s slaves or their descendants, were
summoned to attend. The “talk” took
plate at the appointed time. The African mother
stood forth stanchly to assert the identity and rights
of her first-born, and, in the end, all of the Liverpool
trader’s property, in houses, lands, and negroes,
that could be ascertained, was handed over, according
to coast-law, to the returned heir.
When the mulatto youth was thus suddenly
elevated into comfort, if not opulence, in his own
country, he resolved to augment his wealth by pursuing
his father’s business. But the whole country
was then desolated by a civil war, occasioned, as
most of them are, by family disputes, which it was
necessary to terminate before trade could be comfortably
established.
To this task Ormond steadfastly devoted
his first year. His efforts were seconded by
the opportune death of one of the warring chiefs.
A tame opponent, a brother of Ormond’s
mother, was quickly brought to terms by
a trifling present; so that the sailor boy soon concentrated
the family influence, and declared himself “MONGO,”
or, Chief of the River.
Bangalang had long been a noted factory
among the English traders. When war was over,
Ormond selected this post as his permanent residence,
while he sent runners to Sierra Leone and Goree with
notice that he would shortly be prepared with ample
cargoes. Trade, which had been so long interrupted
by hostilities, poured from the interior. Vessels
from Goree and Sierra Leone were seen in the offing,
responding to his invitation. His stores were
packed with British, French, and American fabrics;
while hides, wax, palm-oil, ivory, gold, and slaves,
were the native products for which Spaniards and Portuguese
hurried to proffer their doubloons and bills.
It will be readily conjectured that
a very few years sufficed to make Jack Ormond not
only a wealthy merchant, but a popular Mongo among
the great interior tribes of Foulahs and Mandingoes.
The petty chiefs, whose territory bordered the sea,
flattered him with the title of king; and, knowing
his Mormon taste, stocked his harem with
their choicest children as the most valuable tokens
of friendship and fidelity.
When I was summoned to act as secretary
or clerk of such a personage, I saw immediately that
it would be well not only to understand my duties
promptly, but to possess a clear estimate of the property
I was to administer and account for. Ormond’s
easy habits satisfied me that he was not a man of
business originally, or had become sadly negligent
under the debasing influence of wealth and voluptuousness.
My earliest task, therefore, was to make out a minute
inventory of his possessions, while I kept a watchful
eye on his stores, never allowing any one to enter
them unattended. When I presented this document,
which exhibited a large deficiency, the Mongo received
it with indifference, begging me not to “annoy
him with accounts.” His manner indicated
so much petulant fretfulness, that I augured from it
the conscious decline or disorder of his affairs.
As I was returning to the warehouse
from this mortifying interview, I encountered an ancient
hag, a sort of superintendent Cerberus or
manager of the Mongo’s harem, who,
by signs, intimated that she wanted the key to the
“cloth-chest,” whence she immediately helped
herself to several fathoms of calico. The crone
could not speak English, and, as I did not understand
the Soosoo dialect, we attempted no oral argument
about the propriety of her conduct; but, taking a
pencil and paper, and making signs that she should
go to the Mongo, who would write an order for the
raiment, I led her quietly to the door. The wrath
of the virago was instantly kindled, while her horrid
face gleamed with that devilish ferocity, which, in
some degree is lost by Africans who dwell on our continent.
During the reign of my predecessors, it seems that
she had been allowed to control the store keys, and
to help herself unstintedly. I knew not, of course,
what she said on this occasion; but the violence
of her gestures, the nervous spasms of her limbs,
the flashing of her eyes, the scream of her voluble
tongue, gave token that she swelled with a rage which
was augmented by my imperturbable quietness.
At dinner, I apprised Mr. Ormond of the negro’s
conduct; but he received the announcement with the
same laugh of indifference that greeted the account
of his deficient inventory.
That night I had just stretched myself
on my hard pallet, and was revolving the difficulties
of my position with some degree of pain at my forced
continuance in Africa, when my servant tapped softly
at the door, and announced that some one demanded
admittance, but begged that I would first of all extinguish
the light. I was in a country requiring caution;
so I felt my pistols before I undid the latch.
It was a bright, star-light night; and, as I opened
the door sufficiently to obtain a glance beyond, still
maintaining my control of the aperture, I
perceived the figure of a female, wrapped in cotton
cloth from head to foot, except the face, which I
recollected as that of the beautiful quarteroon
I was whirling in the waltz, when surprised by the
Mongo. She put forth her hands from the folds
of her garment, and laying one softly on my arm, while
she touched her lips with the other, looked wistfully
behind, and glided into my apartment.
This poor girl, the child of a mulatto
mother and a white parent, was born in the settlement
of Sierra Leone, and had acquired our language with
much more fluency than is common among her race.
It was said that her father had been originally a
missionary from Great Britain, but abandoned his profession
for the more lucrative traffic in slaves, to which
he owed an abundant fortune. It is probable that
the early ecclesiastical turn of her delinquent progenitor
induced him, before he departed for America, to bestow
on his child the biblical name of ESTHER.
I led my trembling visitor to the
arm-chest, and, seating her gently by my side, inquired
why I was favored by so stealthy a visit from the
harem. My suspicions were aroused; for,
though a novice in Africa, I knew enough of the discipline
maintained in these slave factories, not to allow
my fancy to seduce me with the idea that her visit
was owing to mad-cap sentimentality.
The manner of these quarteroon
girls, whose complexion hardly separates them from
our own race, is most winningly graceful; and Esther,
with abated breath, timidly asked my pardon for intruding,
while she declared I had made so bitter an enemy of
Unga-golah, the head-woman of the seraglio, that,
in spite of danger, she stole to my quarters with
a warning. Unga swore revenge. I had insulted
and thwarted her; I was able to thwart her at all
times, if I remained the Mongo’s “book-man;” I
must soon “go to another country;” but,
if I did not, I would quickly find the food of Bangalang
excessively unwholesome! “Never eat any
thing that a Mandingo offers you,” said Esther.
“Take your meals exclusively from the Mongo’s
table. Unga-golah knows all the Mandingo jujus,
and she will have no scruple in using them in order
to secure once more the control of the store keys.
Good night!”
With this she rose to depart, begging
me to be silent about her visit, and to believe that
a poor slave could feel true kindness for a white
man, or even expose herself to save him.
If an unruly passion had tugged at
my heartstrings, the soft appeal, the liquid tones,
the tenderness of this girl’s humanity, would
have extinguished it in an instant. It was the
first time for many a long and desolate mouth that
I had experienced the gentle touch of a woman’s
hand, or felt the interest of mortal solicitude fall
like a refreshing dew upon my heart! Who will
censure me for halting on my door-sill as I led her
forth, retaining her little hand in mine, while I
cast my eyes over the lithe symmetry of those slender
and rounded limbs; while I feasted on the flushed
magnolia of those beautiful cheeks, twined my fingers
in the trailing braids of that raven hair, peered
into the blackness of those large and swimming orbs,
felt a tear trickle down my hardening face, and left,
on those coral lips, the print of a kiss that was
fuller of gratitude than passion!
Nowadays that Mormonism is grafting
a “celestial wifery” upon the civilization
of the nineteenth century, I do not think it amiss
to recall the memory of those African establishments
which formed so large a portion of a trader’s
homestead. It is not to be supposed that the
luxurious harem of Turkey or Egypt was transferred
to the Guinea coast, or that its lofty walls were
barricaded by stout gates, guarded by troops of sable
eunuchs. The “wifery” of my employer
was a bare inclosure, formed by a quadrangular cluster
of mud-houses, the entrance to whose court-yard was
never watched save at night. Unga-golah, the
eldest and least delectable of the dames, maintained
the establishment’s police, assigned gifts or
servants to each female, and distributed her master’s
favors according to the bribes she was cajoled by.
In early life and during his gorged
prosperity, Ormond, a stout, burly, black-eyed,
broad-shouldered, short-necked man, ruled
his harem with the rigid decorum of the East.
But as age and misfortunes stole over the sensual
voluptuary, his mental and bodily vigor became impaired,
not only by excessive drink, but by the narcotics to
which he habitually resorted for excitement.
When I became acquainted with him, his face and figure
bore the marks of a worn-out debauche.
His harem now was a fashion of the country rather
than a domestic resort. His wives ridiculed him,
or amused themselves as they pleased. I learned
from Esther that there was hardly one who did not “flirt”
with a lover in Bangalang, and that Unga-golah was
blinded by gifts, while the stupor of the Mongo was
perpetuated by liquor.
It may be supposed that in such a
seraglio, and with such a master, there were
but few matrimonial jealousies; still, as it would
be difficult to find, even in our most Christian society,
two females without some lurking bitterness towards
rivals, so it is not to be imagined that the Mongo’s
mansion was free from womanly quarrels. These
disputes chiefly occurred when Ormond distributed gifts
of calico, beads, tobacco, pipes and looking-glasses.
If the slightest preference or inequality was shown,
adieu to order. Unga-golah descended below zero!
The favorite wife, outraged by her neglected authority,
became furious; and, for a season, pandemonium was
let loose in Bangalang.
One of these scenes of passion occurs
to me as I write. I was in the store with the
Mongo when an aggrieved dame, not remarkable either
for delicacy of complexion or sweetness of odor, entered
the room, and marching up with a swagger to her master,
dashed a German looking-glass on the floor at his
feet. She wanted a larger one, for the glass
bestowed on her was half an inch smaller than the gifts
to her companions.
When Ormond was sober, his pride commonly
restrained him from allowing the women to molest his
leisure; so he quietly turned from the virago and
ordered her out of the store.
But my lady was not to be appeased
by dignity like this. “Ha!” shrieked
the termagant, as she wrenched off her handkerchief.
“Ha!” yelled she, tearing off one sleeve,
and then the other. “Ha!” screamed
the fiend, kicking a shoe into one corner, and the
other shoe into another corner. “Ha!
Mongo!” roared the beldame, as she stripped every
garment from her body and stood absolutely naked
before us, slapping her wool, cheeks, forehead, breasts,
arms, stomach and limbs, and appealing to Ormond to
say where she was deficient in charms, that she should
be slighted half an inch on a looking-glass?
As the Mongo was silent, she strode
up to me for an opinion; but, scarlet with blushes,
I dived behind the cloth-chest, and left the laughing
Ormond to gratify the whim of the “model artiste.”
Years afterwards, I remember seeing
an infuriate Ethiopian fling her infant into the fire
because its white father preferred the child of another
spouse. Indeed, I was glad my station at Bangalang
did not make it needful for the preservation of my
respectability that I should indulge in the luxury
of African matrimony!
But these exhibitions of jealous passion
were not excited alone by the unequal distribution
of presents from the liege lord of Bangalang.
I have observed that Ormond’s wives took advantage
of his carelessness and age, to seek congenial companionship
outside the harem. Sometimes the preference
of two of these sable belles alighted on the
same lover, and then the battle was transferred from
a worthless looking-glass to the darling beau.
When such a quarrel arose, a meeting between the rivals
was arranged out of the Mongo’s hearing; when,
throwing off their waist-cloths, the controversy was
settled between the female gladiators without much
damage. But, now and then, the matter was not
left to the ladies. The sable lovers themselves
took up the conflict, and a regular challenge passed
between the gay Othellos.
At the appointed time, the duellists
appeared upon “the field of honor” accompanied
by friends who were to witness their victory or sympathize
in their defeat. Each stalwart savage leaped into
the arena, armed with a cow-hide cat, whose sharp
and triple thongs were capable of inflicting the harshest
blows. They stripped, and tossed three cowries
into the air to determine which of the two should
receive the first lashing. The unfortunate loser
immediately took his stand, and received, with the
firmness of a martyr, the allotted number of blows.
Then came the turn of the whipper, who, with equal
constancy, offered his back to the scourge of the enraged
sufferer. Thus they alternated until one gave
in, or until the bystanders decreed victory to him
who bore the punishment longest without wincing.
The flayed backs of these “chivalrous men of
honor” were ever after displayed in token of
bravery; and, doubtless, their Dulcineas devoted
to their healing the subtlest ointment and tenderest
affection recognized among Africans.