“One piecee thing that my
have got,
Maskee that thing
my no can do.
You talkee you no sabey what?
Bamboo.”
They landed, and were at once conducted
to the Palace. About half way they were met by
the Governor, who welcomed them in English a
great relief to our travellers, whose guide could
speak nothing but Kgovjnian.
“I don’t half like the
way they grin at us as we go by!” the old man
whispered to his son. “And why do they say
‘Bamboo!’ so often?”
“It alludes to a local custom,”
replied the Governor, who had overheard the question.
“Such persons as happen in any way to displease
Her Radiancy are usually beaten with rods.”
The old man shuddered. “A
most objectional local custom!” he remarked
with strong emphasis. “I wish we had never
landed! Did you notice that black fellow, Norman,
opening his great mouth at us? I verily believe
he would like to eat us!”
Norman appealed to the Governor, who
was walking at his other side. “Do they
often eat distinguished strangers here?” he said,
in as indifferent a tone as he could assume.
“Not often not ever!”
was the welcome reply. “They are not good
for it. Pigs we eat, for they are fat. This
old man is thin.”
“And thankful to be so!”
muttered the elder traveller. “Beaten we
shall be without a doubt. It’s a comfort
to know it won’t be Beaten without the B!
My dear boy, just look at the peacocks!”
They were now walking between two
unbroken lines of those gorgeous birds, each held
in check, by means of a golden collar and chain, by
a black slave, who stood well behind, so as not to
interrupt the view of the glittering tail, with its
network of rustling feathers and its hundred eyes.
The Governor smiled proudly.
“In your honour,” he said, “Her Radiancy
has ordered up ten thousand additional peacocks.
She will, no doubt, decorate you, before you go, with
the usual Star and Feathers.”
“It’ll be Star without
the S!” faltered one of his hearers.
“Come, come! Don’t
lose heart!” said the other. “All
this is full of charm for me.”
“You are young, Norman,”
sighed his father; “young and light-hearted.
For me, it is Charm without the C.”
“The old one is sad,”
the Governor remarked with some anxiety. “He
has, without doubt, effected some fearful crime?”
“But I haven’t!”
the poor old gentleman hastily exclaimed. “Tell
him I haven’t, Norman!”
“He has not, as yet,”
Norman gently explained. And the Governor repeated,
in a satisfied tone, “Not as yet.”
“Yours is a wondrous country!”
the Governor resumed, after a pause. “Now
here is a letter from a friend of mine, a merchant,
in London. He and his brother went there a year
ago, with a thousand pounds apiece; and on New-Year’s-day
they had sixty thousand pounds between them!”
“How did they do it?”
Norman eagerly exclaimed. Even the elder traveller
looked excited.
The Governor handed him the open letter.
“Anybody can do it, when once they know how,”
so ran this oracular document. “We borrowed
nought: we stole nought. We began the year
with only a thousand pounds apiece: and last
New-Year’s-day we had sixty thousand pounds between
us sixty thousand golden sovereigns!”
Norman looked grave and thoughtful
as he handed back the letter. His father hazarded
one guess. “Was it by gambling?”
“A Kgovjnian never gambles,”
said the Governor gravely, as he ushered them through
the palace gates. They followed him in silence
down a long passage, and soon found themselves in
a lofty hall, lined entirely with peacocks’
feathers. In the centre was a pile of crimson
cushions, which almost concealed the figure of Her
Radiancy a plump little damsel, in a robe
of green satin dotted with silver stars, whose pale
round face lit up for a moment with a half-smile as
the travellers bowed before her, and then relapsed
into the exact expression of a wax doll, while she
languidly murmured a word or two in the Kgovjnian dialect.
The Governor interpreted. “Her
Radiancy welcomes you. She notes the Impenetrable
Placidity of the old one, and the Imperceptible Acuteness
of the youth.”
Here the little potentate clapped
her hands, and a troop of slaves instantly appeared,
carrying trays of coffee and sweetmeats, which they
offered to the guests, who had, at a signal from the
Governor, seated themselves on the carpet.
“Sugar-plums!” muttered
the old man. “One might as well be at a
confectioner’s! Ask for a penny bun, Norman!”
“Not so loud!” his son
whispered. “Say something complimentary!”
For the Governor was evidently expecting a speech.
“We thank Her Exalted Potency,”
the old man timidly began. “We bask in
the light of her smile, which ”
“The words of old men are weak!”
the Governor interrupted angrily. “Let
the youth speak!”
“Tell her,” cried Norman,
in a wild burst of eloquence, “that, like two
grasshoppers in a volcano, we are shrivelled up in
the presence of Her Spangled Vehemence!”
“It is well,” said the
Governor, and translated this into Kgovjnian.
“I am now to tell you,” he proceeded,
“what Her Radiancy requires of you before you
go. The yearly competition for the post of Imperial
Scarf-maker is just ended; you are the judges.
You will take account of the rate of work, the lightness
of the scarves, and their warmth. Usually the
competitors differ in one point only. Thus, last
year, Fifi and Gogo made the same number of scarves
in the trial-week, and they were equally light; but
Fifi’s were twice as warm as Gogo’s and
she was pronounced twice as good. But this year,
woe is me, who can judge it? Three competitors
are here, and they differ in all points! While
you settle their claims, you shall be lodged, Her
Radiancy bids me say, free of expense in
the best dungeon, and abundantly fed on the best bread
and water.”
The old man groaned. “All
is lost!” he wildly exclaimed. But Norman
heeded him not: he had taken out his note-book,
and was calmly jotting down the particulars.
“Three they be,” the Governor
proceeded, “Lolo, Mimi, and Zuzu. Lolo
makes 5 scarves while Mimi makes 2; but Zuzu makes
4 while Lolo makes 3! Again, so fairylike is
Zuzu’s handiwork, 5 of her scarves weigh no more
than one of Lolo’s; yet Mimi’s is lighter
still 5 of hers will but balance 3 of Zuzu’s!
And for warmth one of Mimi’s is equal to 4 of
Zuzu’s; yet one of Lolo’s is as warm as
3 of Mimi’s!”
Here the little lady once more clapped her hands.
“It is our signal of dismissal!”
the Governor hastily said. “Pay Her Radiancy
your farewell compliments and walk out backwards.”
The walking part was all the elder
tourist could manage. Norman simply said “Tell
Her Radiancy we are transfixed by the spectacle of
Her Serene Brilliance, and bid an agonized farewell
to her Condensed Milkiness!”
“Her Radiancy is pleased,”
the Governor reported, after duly translating this.
“She casts on you a glance from Her Imperial
Eyes, and is confident that you will catch it!”
“That I warrant we shall!”
the elder traveller moaned to himself distractedly.
Once more they bowed low, and then
followed the Governor down a winding staircase to
the Imperial Dungeon, which they found to be lined
with coloured marble, lighted from the roof, and splendidly
though not luxuriously furnished with a bench of polished
malachite. “I trust you will not delay
the calculation,” the Governor said, ushering
them in with much ceremony. “I have known
great inconvenience great and serious inconvenience result
to those unhappy ones who have delayed to execute
the commands of Her Radiancy! And on this occasion
she is resolute: she says the thing must and
shall be done: and she has ordered up ten thousand
additional bamboos!” With these words he left
them, and they heard him lock and bar the door on
the outside.
“I told you how it would end!”
moaned the elder traveller, wringing his hands, and
quite forgetting in his anguish that he had himself
proposed the expedition, and had never predicted anything
of the sort. “Oh that we were well out
of this miserable business!”
“Courage!” cried the younger
cheerily. “Haec olim meminisse juvabit!
The end of all this will be glory!”
“Glory without the L!”
was all the poor old man could say, as he rocked himself
to and fro on the malachite bench. “Glory
without the L!”