November-December 1888
For Becker I have not been able to
conceal my distaste, for he seems to me both false
and foolish. But of his successor, the unfortunately
famous Dr. Knappe, we may think as of a good enough
fellow driven distraught. Fond of Samoa and
the Samoans, he thought to bring peace and enjoy popularity
among the islanders; of a genial, amiable, and sanguine
temper, he made no doubt but he could repair the breach
with the English consul. Hope told a flattering
tale. He awoke to find himself exchanging defiances
with de Coetlogon, beaten in the field by Mataafa,
surrounded on the spot by general exasperation, and
disowned from home by his own government. The
history of his administration leaves on the mind of
the student a sentiment of pity scarcely mingled.
On Blacklock he did not call, and,
in view of Leary’s attitude, may be excused.
But the English consul was in a different category.
England, weary of the name of Samoa, and desirous
only to see peace established, was prepared to wink
hard during the process and to welcome the result of
any German settlement. It was an unpardonable
fault in Becker to have kicked and buffeted his ready-made
allies into a state of jealousy, anger, and suspicion.
Knappe set himself at once to efface these impressions,
and the English officials rejoiced for the moment in
the change. Between Knappe and de Coetlogon
there seems to have been mutual sympathy; and, in
considering the steps by which they were led at last
into an attitude of mutual defiance, it must be remembered
that both the men were sick, Knappe from
time to time prostrated with that formidable complaint,
New Guinea fever, and de Coetlogon throughout his whole
stay in the islands continually ailing.
Tamasese was still to be recognised,
and, if possible, supported: such was the German
policy. Two days after his arrival, accordingly,
Knappe addressed to Mataafa a threatening despatch.
The German plantation was suffering from the proximity
of his “war-party.” He must withdraw
from Laulii at once, and, whithersoever he went, he
must approach no German property nor so much as any
village where there was a German trader. By
five o’clock on the morrow, if he were not gone,
Knappe would turn upon him “the attention of
the man-of-war” and inflict a fine. The
same evening, November 14th, Knappe went on board
the Adler, which began to get up steam.
Three months before, such direct intervention
on the part of Germany would have passed almost without
protest; but the hour was now gone by. Becker’s
conduct, equally timid and rash, equally inconclusive
and offensive, had forced the other nations into a
strong feeling of common interest with Mataafa.
Even had the German demands been moderate, de Coetlogon
could not have forgotten the night of the taumualua,
nor how Mataafa had relinquished, at his request,
the attack upon the German quarter. Blacklock,
with his driver of a captain at his elbow, was not
likely to lag behind. And Mataafa having communicated
Knappe’s letter, the example of the Germans
was on all hands exactly followed; the consuls hastened
on board their respective war-ships, and these began
to get up steam. About midnight, in a pouring
rain, Pelly communicated to Fritze his intention to
follow him and protect British interests; and Knappe
replied that he would come on board the Lizard
and see de Coetlogon personally. It was deep
in the small hours, and de Coetlogon had been long
asleep, when he was wakened to receive his colleague;
but he started up with an old soldier’s readiness.
The conference was long. De Coetlogon protested,
as he did afterwards in writing, against Knappe’s
claim: the Samoans were in a state of war; they
had territorial rights; it was monstrous to prevent
them from entering one of their own villages because
a German trader kept the store; and in case property
suffered, a claim for compensation was the proper
remedy. Knappe argued that this was a question
between Germans and Samoans, in which de Coetlogon
had nothing to see; and that he must protect German
property according to his instructions. To which
de Coetlogon replied that he was himself in the same
attitude to the property of the British; that he understood
Knappe to be intending hostilities against Laulii;
that Laulii was mortgaged to the MacArthurs; that
its crops were accordingly British property; and that,
while he was ever willing to recognise the territorial
rights of the Samoans, he must prevent that property
from being molested “by any other nation.”
“But if a German man-of-war does it?”
asked Knappe. “We shall prevent it
to the best of our ability,” replied the colonel.
It is to the credit of both men that this trying
interview should have been conducted and concluded
without heat; but Knappe must have returned to the
Adler with darker anticipations.
At sunrise on the morning of the 15th,
the three ships, each loaded with its consul, put
to sea. It is hard to exaggerate the peril of
the forenoon that followed, as they lay off Laulii.
Nobody desired a collision, save perhaps the reckless
Leary; but peace and war trembled in the balance;
and when the Adler, at one period, lowered her
gun ports, war appeared to preponderate. It
proved, however, to be a last and therefore
surely an unwise extremity. Knappe
contented himself with visiting the rival kings, and
the three ships returned to Apia before noon.
Beyond a doubt, coming after Knappe’s decisive
letter of the day before, this impotent conclusion
shook the credit of Germany among the natives of both
sides; the Tamaseses fearing they were deserted, the
Mataafas (with secret delight) hoping they were feared.
And it gave an impetus to that ridiculous business
which might have earned for the whole episode the
name of the war of flags. British and American
flags had been planted the night before, and were
seen that morning flying over what they claimed about
Laulii. British and American passengers, on the
way up and down, pointed out from the decks of the
war-ships, with generous vagueness, the boundaries
of problematical estates. Ten days later, the
beach of Saluafata bay fluttered (as I have told in
the last chapter) with the flag of Germany.
The Americans riposted with a claim to Tamasese’s
camp, some small part of which (says Knappe) did really
belong to “an American nigger.” The
disease spread, the flags were multiplied, the operations
of war became an egg-dance among miniature neutral
territories; and though all men took a hand in these
proceedings, all men in turn were struck with their
absurdity. Mullan, Leary’s successor,
warned Knappe, in an emphatic despatch, not to squander
and discredit the solemnity of that emblem which was
all he had to be a defence to his own consulate.
And Knappe himself, in his despatch of March 21st,
1889, castigates the practice with much sense.
But this was after the tragicomic culmination had
been reached, and the burnt rags of one of these too-frequently
mendacious signals gone on a progress to Washington,
like Caesar’s body, arousing indignation where
it came. To such results are nations conducted
by the patent artifices of a Becker.
The discussion of the morning, the
silent menace and defiance of the voyage to Laulii,
might have set the best-natured by the ears.
But Knappe and de Coetlogon took their difference
in excellent part. On the morrow, November 16th,
they sat down together with Blacklock in conference.
The English consul introduced his colleagues, who
shook hands. If Knappe were dead-weighted with
the inheritance of Becker, Blacklock was handicapped
by reminiscences of Leary; it is the more to the credit
of this inexperienced man that he should have maintained
in the future so excellent an attitude of firmness
and moderation, and that when the crash came, Knappe
and de Coetlogon, not Knappe and Blacklock, were found
to be the protagonists of the drama. The conference
was futile. The English and American consuls
admitted but one cure of the evils of the time:
that the farce of the Tamasese monarchy should cease.
It was one which the German refused to consider.
And the agents separated without reaching any result,
save that diplomatic relations had been restored between
the States and Germany, and that all three were convinced
of their fundamental differences.
Knappe and de Coetlogon were still
friends; they had disputed and differed and come within
a finger’s breadth of war, and they were still
friends. But an event was at hand which was to
separate them for ever. On December 4th came
the Royalist, Captain Hand, to relieve the
Lizard. Pelly of course had to take his
canvas from the consulate hospital; but he had in
charge certain awnings belonging to the Royalist,
and with these they made shift to cover the wounded,
at that time (after the fight at Laulii) more than
usually numerous. A lieutenant came to the consulate,
and delivered (as I have received it) the following
message: “Captain Hand’s compliments,
and he says you must get rid of these niggers at once,
and he will help you to do it.” Doubtless
the reply was no more civil than the message.
The promised “help,” at least, followed
promptly. A boat’s crew landed and the
awnings were stripped from the wounded, Hand himself
standing on the colonel’s verandah to direct
operations. It were fruitless to discuss this
passage from the humanitarian point of view, or from
that of formal courtesy. The mind of the new
captain was plainly not directed to these objects.
But it is understood that he considered the existence
of a hospital a source of irritation to Germans and
a fault in policy. His own rude act proved in
the result far more impolitic. The hospital had
now been open some two months, and de Coetlogon was
still on friendly terms with Knappe, and he and his
wife were engaged to dine with him that day.
By the morrow that was practically ended. For
the rape of the awnings had two results: one,
which was the fault of de Coetlogon, not at all of
Hand, who could not have foreseen it; the other which
it was his duty to have seen and prevented.
The first was this: the de Coetlogons found themselves
left with their wounded exposed to the inclemencies
of the season; they must all be transported into the
house and verandah; in the distress and pressure of
this task, the dinner engagement was too long forgotten;
and a note of excuse did not reach the German consulate
before the table was set, and Knappe dressed to receive
his visitors. The second consequence was inevitable.
Captain Hand was scarce landed ere it became public
(was “sofort bekannt,” writes Knappe)
that he and the consul were in opposition. All
that had been gained by the demonstration at Laulii
was thus immediately cast away; de Coetlogon’s
prestige was lessened; and it must be said plainly
that Hand did less than nothing to restore it.
Twice indeed he interfered, both times with success;
and once, when his own person had been endangered,
with vehemence; but during all the strange doings
I have to narrate, he remained in close intimacy with
the German consulate, and on one occasion may be said
to have acted as its marshal. After the worst
is over, after Bismarck has told Knappe that “the
protests of his English colleague were grounded,”
that his own conduct “has not been good,”
and that in any dispute which may arise he “will
find himself in the wrong,” Knappe can still
plead in his defence that Captain Hand “has
always maintained friendly intercourse with the German
authorities.” Singular epitaph for an English
sailor. In this complicity on the part of Hand
we may find the reason and I had almost
said, the excuse of much that was excessive
in the bearing of the unfortunate Knappe.
On the 11th December, Mataafa received
twenty-eight thousand cartridges, brought into the
country in salt-beef kegs by the British ship Richmond.
This not only sharpened the animosity between whites;
following so closely on the German fizzle at Laulii,
it raised a convulsion in the camp of Tamasese.
On the 13th Brandeis addressed to Knappe his famous
and fatal letter. I may not describe it as a
letter of burning words, but it is plainly dictated
by a burning heart. Tamasese and his chiefs,
he announces, are now sick of the business, and ready
to make peace with Mataafa. They began the war
relying upon German help; they now see and say that
“e faaalo Siamani i Peritania ma America,
that Germany is subservient to England and the States.”
It is grimly given to be understood that the despatch
is an ultimatum, and a last chance is being offered
for the recreant ally to fulfil her pledge. To
make it more plain, the document goes on with a kind
of bilious irony: “The two German war-ships
now in Samoa are here for the protection of German
property alone; and when the Olga shall have
arrived” [she arrived on the morrow] “the
German war-ships will continue to do against the insurgents
precisely as little as they have done heretofore.”
Plant flags, in fact.
Here was Knappe’s opportunity,
could he have stooped to seize it. I find it
difficult to blame him that he could not. Far
from being so inglorious as the treachery once contemplated
by Becker, the acceptance of this ultimatum would
have been still in the nature of a disgrace.
Brandeis’s letter, written by a German, was hard
to swallow. It would have been hard to accept
that solution which Knappe had so recently and so
peremptorily refused to his brother consuls.
And he was tempted, on the other hand, by recent changes.
There was no Pelly to support de Coetlogon, who might
now be disregarded. Mullan, Leary’s successor,
even if he were not precisely a Hand, was at least
no Leary; and even if Mullan should show fight, Knappe
had now three ships and could defy or sink him without
danger. Many small circumstances moved him in
the same direction. The looting of German plantations
continued; the whole force of Mataafa was to a large
extent subsisted from the crops of Vailele; and armed
men were to be seen openly plundering bananas, breadfruit,
and cocoa-nuts under the walls of the plantation building.
On the night of the 13th the consulate stable had
been broken into and a horse removed. On the
16th there was a riot in Apia between half-castes and
sailors from the new ship Olga, each side claiming
that the other was the worse of drink, both (for a
wager) justly. The multiplication of flags and
little neutral territories had, besides, begun to
irritate the Samoans. The protests of German
settlers had been received uncivilly. On the
16th the Mataafas had again sought to land in Saluafata
bay, with the manifest intention to attack the Tamaseses,
or (in other words) “to trespass on German lands,
covered, as your Excellency knows, with flags.”
I quote from his requisition to Fritze, December
17th. Upon all these considerations, he goes
on, it is necessary to bring the fighting to an end.
Both parties are to be disarmed and returned to their
villages Mataafa first. And in case
of any attempt upon Apia, the roads thither are to
be held by a strong landing-party. Mataafa was
to be disarmed first, perhaps rightly enough in his
character of the last insurgent. Then was to
have come the turn of Tamasese; but it does not appear
the disarming would have had the same import or have
been gone about in the same way. Germany was
bound to Tamasese. No honest man would dream
of blaming Knappe because he sought to redeem his country’s
word. The path he chose was doubtless that of
honour, so far as honour was still left. But
it proved to be the road to ruin.
Fritze, ranking German officer, is
understood to have opposed the measure. His
attitude earned him at the time unpopularity among
his country-people on the spot, and should now redound
to his credit. It is to be hoped he extended
his opposition to some of the details. If it
were possible to disarm Mataafa at all, it must be
done rather by prestige than force. A party
of blue-jackets landed in Samoan bush, and expected
to hold against Samoans a multiplicity of forest paths,
had their work cut out for them. And it was
plain they should be landed in the light of day, with
a discouraging openness, and even with parade.
To sneak ashore by night was to increase the danger
of resistance and to minimise the authority of the
attack. The thing was a bluff, and it is impossible
to bluff with stealth. Yet this was what was
tried. A landing-party was to leave the Olga
in Apia bay at two in the morning; the landing was
to be at four on two parts of the foreshore of Vailele.
At eight they were to be joined by a second landing-party
from the Eber. By nine the Olgas
were to be on the crest of Letongo Mountain, and the
Ebers to be moving round the promontory by the
seaward paths, “with measures of precaution,”
disarming all whom they encountered. There was
to be no firing unless fired upon. At the appointed
hour (or perhaps later) on the morning of the 19th,
this unpromising business was put in hand, and there
moved off from the Olga two boats with some
fifty blue-jackets between them, and a praam
or punt containing ninety, the boats and
the whole expedition under the command of Captain-Lieutenant
Jaeckel, the praam under Lieutenant Spengler.
The men had each forty rounds, one day’s provisions,
and their flasks filled.
In the meanwhile, Mataafa sympathisers
about Apia were on the alert. Knappe had informed
the consuls that the ships were to put to sea next
day for the protection of German property; but the
Tamaseses had been less discreet. “To-morrow
at the hour of seven,” they had cried to their
adversaries, “you will know of a difficulty,
and our guns shall be made good in broken bones.”
An accident had pointed expectation towards Apia.
The wife of Le Mamea washed for the German ships a
perquisite, I suppose, for her husband’s unwilling
fidelity. She sent a man with linen on board
the Adler, where he was surprised to see Le
Mamea in person, and to be himself ordered instantly
on shore. The news spread. If Mamea were
brought down from Lotoanuu, others might have come
at the same time. Tamasese himself and half his
army might perhaps lie concealed on board the German
ships. And a watch was accordingly set and warriors
collected along the line of the shore. One detachment
lay in some rifle-pits by the mouth of the Fuisa.
They were commanded by Seumanu; and with his party,
probably as the most contiguous to Apia, was the war-correspondent,
John Klein. Of English birth, but naturalised
American, this gentleman had been for some time representing
the New York World in a very effective manner,
always in the front, living in the field with the
Samoans, and in all vicissitudes of weather, toiling
to and fro with his despatches. His wisdom was
perhaps not equal to his energy. He made himself
conspicuous, going about armed to the teeth in a boat
under the stars and stripes; and on one occasion, when
he supposed himself fired upon by the Tamaseses, had
the petulance to empty his revolver in the direction
of their camp. By the light of the moon, which
was then nearly down, this party observed the Olga’s
two boats and the praam, which they described as “almost
sinking with men,” the boats keeping well out
towards the reef, the praam at the moment apparently
heading for the shore. An extreme agitation seems
to have reigned in the rifle-pits. What were
the newcomers? What was their errand? Were
they Germans or Tamaseses? Had they a mind to
attack? The praam was hailed in Samoan and did
not answer. It was proposed to fire upon her
ere she drew near. And at last, whether on his
own suggestion or that of Seumanu, Klein hailed her
in English, and in terms of unnecessary melodrama.
“Do not try to land here,” he cried.
“If you do, your blood will be upon your head.”
Spengler, who had never the least intention to touch
at the Fuisa, put up the head of the praam to her true
course and continued to move up the lagoon with an
offing of some seventy or eighty yards. Along
all the irregularities and obstructions of the beach,
across the mouth of the Vaivasa, and through the startled
village of Matafangatele, Seumanu, Klein, and seven
or eight others raced to keep up, spreading the alarm
and rousing reinforcements as they went. Presently
a man on horse-back made his appearance on the opposite
beach of Fangalii. Klein and the natives distinctly
saw him signal with a lantern; which is the more strange,
as the horseman (Captain Hufnagel, plantation manager
of Vailele) had never a lantern to signal with.
The praam kept in. Many men in white were seen
to stand up, step overboard, and wade to shore.
At the same time the eye of panic descried a breastwork
of “foreign stone” (brick) upon the beach.
Samoans are prepared to-day to swear to its existence,
I believe conscientiously, although no such thing
was ever made or ever intended in that place.
The hour is doubtful. “It was the hour
when the streak of dawn is seen, the hour known in
the warfare of heathen times as the hour of the night
attack,” says the Mataafa official account.
A native whom I met on the field declared it was
at cock-crow. Captain Hufnagel, on the other
hand, is sure it was long before the day. It
was dark at least, and the moon down. Darkness
made the Samoans bold; uncertainty as to the composition
and purpose of the landing-party made them desperate.
Fire was opened on the Germans, one of whom was here
killed. The Germans returned it, and effected
a lodgment on the beach; and the skirmish died again
to silence. It was at this time, if not earlier,
that Klein returned to Apia.
Here, then, were Spengler and the
ninety men of the praam, landed on the beach in no
very enviable posture, the woods in front filled with
unnumbered enemies, but for the time successful.
Meanwhile, Jaeckel and the boats had gone outside
the reef, and were to land on the other side of the
Vailele promontory, at Sunga, by the buildings of the
plantation. It was Hufnagel’s part to go
and meet them. His way led straight into the
woods and through the midst of the Samoans, who had
but now ceased firing. He went in the saddle
and at a foot’s pace, feeling speed and concealment
to be equally helpless, and that if he were to fall
at all, he had best fall with dignity. Not a
shot was fired at him; no effort made to arrest him
on his errand. As he went, he spoke and even
jested with the Samoans, and they answered in good
part. One fellow was leaping, yelling, and tossing
his axe in the air, after the way of an excited islander.
“Faimalosi! go it!” said Hufnagel,
and the fellow laughed and redoubled his exertions.
As soon as the boats entered the lagoon, fire was
again opened from the woods. The fifty blue-jackets
jumped overboard, hove down the boats to be a shield,
and dragged them towards the landing-place.
In this way, their rations, and (what was more unfortunate)
some of their miserable provision of forty rounds got
wetted; but the men came to shore and garrisoned the
plantation house without a casualty. Meanwhile
the sound of the firing from Sunga immediately renewed
the hostilities at Fangalii. The civilians on
shore decided that Spengler must be at once guided
to the house, and Haideln, the surveyor, accepted
the dangerous errand. Like Hufnagel, he was
suffered to pass without question through the midst
of these platonic enemies. He found Spengler
some way inland on a knoll, disastrously engaged,
the woods around him filled with Samoans, who were
continuously reinforced. In three successive
charges, cheering as they ran, the blue-jackets burst
through their scattered opponents, and made good their
junction with Jaeckel. Four men only remained
upon the field, the other wounded being helped by
their comrades or dragging themselves painfully along.
The force was now concentrated in
the house and its immediate patch of garden.
Their rear, to the seaward, was unmolested; but on
three sides they were beleaguered. On the left,
the Samoans occupied and fired from some of the plantation
offices. In front, a long rising crest of land
in the horse-pasture commanded the house, and was
lined with the assailants. And on the right,
the hedge of the same paddock afforded them a dangerous
cover. It was in this place that a Samoan sharpshooter
was knocked over by Jaeckel with his own hand.
The fire was maintained by the Samoans in the usual
wasteful style. The roof was made a sieve; the
balls passed clean through the house; Lieutenant Sieger,
as he lay, already dying, on Hufnagel’s bed,
was despatched with a fresh wound. The Samoans
showed themselves extremely enterprising: pushed
their lines forward, ventured beyond cover, and continually
threatened to envelop the garden. Thrice, at
least, it was necessary to repel them by a sally.
The men were brought into the house from the rear,
the front doors were thrown suddenly open, and the
gallant blue-jackets issued cheering: necessary,
successful, but extremely costly sorties. Neither
could these be pushed far. The foes were undaunted;
so soon as the sailors advanced at all deep in the
horse-pasture, the Samoans began to close in upon both
flanks; and the sally had to be recalled. To
add to the dangers of the German situation, ammunition
began to run low; and the cartridge-boxes of the wounded
and the dead had been already brought into use before,
at about eight o’clock, the Eber steamed
into the bay. Her commander, Wallis, threw some
shells into Letongo, one of which killed five men
about their cooking-pot. The Samoans began immediately
to withdraw; their movements were hastened by a sortie,
and the remains of the landing-party brought on board.
This was an unfortunate movement; it gave an irremediable
air of defeat to what might have been else claimed
for a moderate success. The blue-jackets numbered
a hundred and forty all told; they were engaged separately
and fought under the worst conditions, in the dark
and among woods; their position in the house was scarce
tenable; they lost in killed and wounded fifty-six, forty
per cent.; and their spirit to the end was above question.
Whether we think of the poor sailor lads, always
so pleasantly behaved in times of peace, or whether
we call to mind the behaviour of the two civilians,
Haideln and Hufnagel, we can only regret that brave
men should stand to be exposed upon so poor a quarrel,
or lives cast away upon an enterprise so hopeless.
News of the affair reached Apia early,
and Moors, always curious of these spectacles of war,
was immediately in the saddle. Near Matafangatele
he met a Manono chief, whom he asked if there were
any German dead. “I think there are about
thirty of them knocked over,” said he.
“Have you taken their heads?” asked Moors.
“Yes,” said the chief. “Some
foolish people did it, but I have stopped them.
We ought not to cut off their heads when they do
not cut off ours.” He was asked what had
been done with the heads. “Two have gone
to Mataafa,” he replied, “and one is buried
right under where your horse is standing, in a basket
wrapped in tapa.” This was afterwards
dug up, and I am told on native authority that, besides
the three heads, two ears were taken. Moors next
asked the Manono man how he came to be going away.
“The man-of-war is throwing shells,”
said he. “When they stopped firing out
of the house, we stopped firing also; so it was as
well to scatter when the shells began. We could
have killed all the white men. I wish they had
been Tamaseses.” This is an ex parte
statement, and I give it for such; but the course
of the affair, and in particular the adventures of
Haideln and Hufnagel, testify to a surprising lack
of animosity against the Germans. About the
same time or but a little earlier than this conversation,
the same spirit was being displayed. Hufnagel,
with a party of labour, had gone out to bring in the
German dead, when he was surprised to be suddenly fired
on from the wood. The boys he had with him were
not negritos, but Polynesians from the Gilbert Islands;
and he suddenly remembered that these might be easily
mistaken for a detachment of Tamaseses. Bidding
his boys conceal themselves in a thicket, this brave
man walked into the open. So soon as he was
recognised, the firing ceased, and the labourers followed
him in safety. This is chivalrous war; but there
was a side to it less chivalrous. As Moors drew
nearer to Vailele, he began to meet Samoans with hats,
guns, and even shirts, taken from the German sailors.
With one of these who had a hat and a gun he stopped
and spoke. The hat was handed up for him to
look at; it had the late owner’s name on the
inside. “Where is he?” asked Moors.
“He is dead; I cut his head off.”
“You shot him?” “No, somebody else
shot him in the hip. When I came, he put up
his hands, and cried: ‘Don’t kill
me; I am a Malietoa man.’ I did not believe
him, and I cut his head off...... Have you any
ammunition to fit that gun?” “I do not
know.” “What has become of the cartridge-belt?”
“Another fellow grabbed that and the cartridges,
and he won’t give them to me.” A
dreadful and silly picture of barbaric war. The
words of the German sailor must be regarded as imaginary:
how was the poor lad to speak native, or the Samoan
to understand German? When Moors came as far
as Sunga, the Eber was yet in the bay, the smoke
of battle still lingered among the trees, which were
themselves marked with a thousand bullet-wounds.
But the affair was over, the combatants, German and
Samoan, were all gone, and only a couple of negrito
labour boys lurked on the scene. The village
of Letongo beyond was equally silent; part of it was
wrecked by the shells of the Eber, and still
smoked; the inhabitants had fled. On the beach
were the native boats, perhaps five thousand dollars’
worth, deserted by the Mataafas and overlooked by the
Germans, in their common hurry to escape. Still
Moors held eastward by the sea-paths. It was
his hope to get a view from the other side of the
promontory, towards Laulii. In the way he found
a house hidden in the wood and among rocks, where
an aged and sick woman was being tended by her elderly
daughter. Last lingerers in that deserted piece
of coast, they seemed indifferent to the events which
had thus left them solitary, and, as the daughter
said, did not know where Mataafa was, nor where Tamasese.
It is the official Samoan pretension
that the Germans fired first at Fangalii. In
view of all German and some native testimony, the text
of Fritze’s orders, and the probabilities of
the case, no honest mind will believe it for a moment.
Certainly the Samoans fired first. As certainly
they were betrayed into the engagement in the agitation
of the moment, and it was not till afterwards that
they understood what they had done. Then, indeed,
all Samoa drew a breath of wonder and delight.
The invincible had fallen; the men of the vaunted
war-ships had been met in the field by the braves
of Mataafa: a superstition was no more.
Conceive this people steadily as schoolboys; and conceive
the elation in any school if the head boy should suddenly
arise and drive the rector from the schoolhouse.
I have received one instance of the feeling instantly
aroused. There lay at the time in the consular
hospital an old chief who was a pet of the colonel’s.
News reached him of the glorious event; he was sick,
he thought himself sinking, sent for the colonel, and
gave him his gun. “Don’t let the
Germans get it,” said the old gentleman, and
having received a promise, was at peace.