登陆注册
5620700000090

第90章

THE STAMPING OF THE FIRE

On the morrow the impi awoke refreshed with sleep, and, after they had eaten, Umslopogaas mustered them. Alas! nearly half of those who had seen the sun of yesterday would wake no more forever. The Slaughterer mustered them and thanked them for that which they had done, winning fame and cattle. They were merry, recking little of those who were dead, and sang his praises and the praises of Galazi in a loud song.

When the song was ended Umslopogaas spoke to them again, saying that the victory was great, and the cattle they had won were countless. Yet something was lacking--she was lacking whom he came to seek to be a gift to Dingaan the king, and for whose sake this war was made. Where now was the Lily? Yesterday she had been here, clad in a moocha like a man and bearing a shield; this he knew from the captives. Where, then, was she now?

Then all the soldiers said that they had seen nothing of her. When they had done, Galazi spoke a word, as was agreed between him and Umslopogaas. He said that when they stormed the cave he had seen a man run at a warrior in the cave to kill him. Then as he came, he who was about to be slain threw down the shield and cried for mercy, and Galazi knew that this was no warrior of the Halakazi, but a very beautiful girl. So he called to the man to let her alone and not to touch her, for the order was that no women should be killed. But the soldier, being made with the lust of fight, shouted that maid or man she should die, and slew her. Thereon, he--Galazi--in his wrath ran up and smote the man with the Watcher and killed him also, and he prayed that he had done no wrong.

"You have done well, my brother," said Umslopogaas. "Come now, some of you, and let us look at this dead girl. Perhaps it is the Lily, and if so that is unlucky for us, for I do not know what tale we shall tell to Dingaan of the matter."So the captains went with Umslopogaas and Galazi, and came to the spot where the girl had been laid, and by her the man of the People of the Axe.

"All is as the Wolf, my brother, has told," said Umslopogaas, waving the torch in his hand over the two who lay dead. "Here, without a doubt, lies she who was named the Lily, whom we came to win, and by her that fool who slew her, slain himself by the blow of the Watcher.

An ill sight to see, and an ill tale for me to tell at the kraal of Dingaan. Still, what is is, and cannot be altered; and this maid who was the fairest of the fair is now none to lovely to look on. Let us away!" And he turned swiftly, then spoke again, saying:--"Bind up this dead girl in ox hides, cover her with salt, and let her be brought with us." And they did so.

Then the captains said: "Surely it is so, my father; now it cannot be altered, and Dingaan must miss his bride." So said they all except that man who had been captain of the guard when Umslopogaas and Galazi and another passed through the archway. This man, indeed, said nothing, yet he was not without his thoughts. For it seemed to him that he had seen three pass through the archway, and not two. It seemed to him, moreover, that the kaross which the third wore had slipped aside as she pressed past him, and that beneath it he had seen the shape of a beautiful woman, and above it had caught the glint of a woman's eye--an eye full and dark, like a buck's.

Also, this captain noted that Bulalio called none of the captives to swear to the body of the Lily maid, and that he shook the torch to and fro as he held it over her--he whose hand was of the steadiest. All of this he kept in his mind, forgetting nothing.

Now it chanced afterwards, on the homeward march, my father, that Umslopogaas had cause to speak angrily to this man, because he tried to rob another of his share of the spoil of the Halakazi. He spoke sharply to him, degrading him from his rank, and setting another over him. Also he took cattle from the man, and gave them to him whom he would have robbed.

And thereafter, though he was justly served, this man thought more and more of the third who had passed through the arch of the cave and had not returned, and who seemed to him to have a fair woman's shape, and eyes which gleamed like those of a woman.

On that day, then, Umslopogaas began his march to the kraal Umgugundhlovu, where Dingaan sat. But before he set his face homewards, in the presence of the soldiers, he asked Galazi the Wolf if he would come back with him, or if he desired to stay to be chief of the Halakazi, as he was by right of birth and war. Then the Wolf laughed, and answered that he had come out to seek for vengeance, and not for the place of a chief, also that there were few of the Halakazi people left over whom he might rule if he wished. Moreover, he added this: that, like twin trees, they two blood-brethren had grown up side by side till their roots were matted together, and that, were one of them dug up and planted in Swazi soil, he feared lest both should wither, or, at the last, that he, Galazi, would wither, who loved but one man and certain wolves.

So Umslopogaas said no more of the chieftainship, but began his journey. With him he brought a great number of cattle, to be a gift for Dingaan, and a multitude of captives, young women and children, for he would appease the heart of Dingaan, because he did not bring her whom he sought--the Lily, flower of flowers. Yet, because he was cautious and put little faith in the kindness of kings, Umslopogaas, so soon as he reached the borders of Zululand, sent the best of the cattle and the fairest of the maids and children on to the kraal of the People of the Axe by the Ghost Mountain. And he who had been captain of the guard but now was a common soldier noticed this also.

Now it chanced that on a certain morning I, Mopo, sat in the kraal Umgugundhlovu in attendance on Dingaan. For still I waited on the king, though he had spoken no word to me, good or bad, since the yesterday, when I foretold to him that in the blood of the white men whom he had betrayed grew the flower of his own death. For, my father, it was on the morrow of the slaying of the Amaboona that Umslopogaas came to the kraal Umgugundhlovu.

同类推荐
  • 杂病广要

    杂病广要

    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。
  • 太上洞玄灵宝无量度人上品妙经法

    太上洞玄灵宝无量度人上品妙经法

    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。
  • 明伦汇编人事典十九岁部

    明伦汇编人事典十九岁部

    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。
  • 宋俘记

    宋俘记

    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。
  • Essays and Tales

    Essays and Tales

    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
  • 隐婚:高冷老公不要跑

    隐婚:高冷老公不要跑

    她本是叶家千金,因受继母算计,被迫流落在外。而他是景城的主宰者,权势滔天,杀伐果断。偏生,两人自小订了婚约,可他家人瞧不上她,逼迫她退婚。叶星辰潇洒挥手,“没问题,这婚约,我本来也没想要。”谁料,他霸气出场,壁咚她,“女人,这婚约由不得你不要,既然是我未婚妻,没我同意,你敢取消?”叶星辰表示,没什么不敢。谁知道,三言两语就被他拐去民政局领了证,盖了章。
  • 离家日

    离家日

    生而为人,离家的那天,我们总会为值得而奋斗
  • 最简单的教子说明书

    最简单的教子说明书

    本书撷取了孩子最常见的82个问题,分析了每个问题产生的原因,着重讲解直接解决问题的具体方案,是最具操作性、最具实用性的教子方案。《最简单的教子说明书:孩子最常见的82个问题怎么办(永久珍藏版)》贴近生活,通俗易懂,是父母全方位、立体式解决孩子问题的好帮手。
  • 傻王悍妃

    傻王悍妃

    "她是南宫王朝众人皆知的痴傻笨挫,奇丑无比之人。但却天降鸿福,被当今圣上不顾她的缺陷许配给了当今太子殿下。如此让人羡慕嫉妒的事情,却成为了她的灾难。为了彻底的摆脱她,太子南宫宿将她骗入结冰的湖面,害她险些丢的性命。再次醒来,她不再是原来的那个痴傻女,她只是一缕魂归的幻影。为了完成一个心愿外加小小的惩罚那个害她的男人,却不料被他反将一军,让她成为了一个傻子的女人。一时间从未来的太子妃,变成了傻王的傻妃,她却丝毫的不在意,因为这时她自己的选择。
  • 西游归记

    西游归记

    小说以《西游记》为蓝本,以唐玄奘西天取经的真实历史为线索,以护送经书回归东土大唐为主线,生动描写了护送经书回归东土大唐过程中的一系列故事。阿傩、迦叶两位尊者感到唐僧师徒没送“好处”,还轻易拿走5048卷真经,感到愤愤不平,便去找佛祖评理。佛祖认为阿傩、迦叶所言不无道理,便命二人火速前往陈家庄召回八大金刚,不再护送唐僧一行东归回唐;又命观音再设八十一难,并暗中保护唐僧一行护经返唐。《西游归记》的故事便由此开始了。全书共二十六章。作者运用夸张、比喻、讽刺等创作技巧,通过荒诞、魔幻的故事情节,间接地反映了唐朝的社会现实。
  • 如果你在如果我来

    如果你在如果我来

    我从来没有想过,会以这种方式再与苏棫朴相见——他站在楼上,俯着身子看着下面。而我便是楼下众多安装工的一员。清一色的男人中间就我一个女的,穿着公司统一配发的帽子与绿色工作服。直到他从楼上下来,一副不咸不淡的语气:“没想到,你竟然做了组装工。”我才知道,我与他是真的分道扬镳了。我说:“是啊,做组装工有什么不好,锻炼身体又能挣钱。”看着他的脸色一青一百,我知道我终于赢了一局。他说:“你开心就好。”如果我没听错,他的话里好像有种恨铁不成钢的意味。这不禁让我想到,如果拿我现在的情况写篇文章,可以这么取名《惊!某名牌大学女学生毕业竟去做组装工!》,应该能获得不错的浏览量。想到这里,我忍不住自嘲了一下,抬头就对上他凌厉的目光。我知道他的目光是什么意思,他肯定在想,桑黎阳你怎么变成这样了。
  • 桑田娇女有点甜

    桑田娇女有点甜

    醒来到了古代,还是个农家女,好在家里是村中的地主。可是,谁能告诉她这位傲娇又高冷的小正太是哪里来的?什么?是给她冲喜的!这感情好啊。金手指在手,做做生意,斗斗极品,不时的“欺负”一下傲娇的小相公,这生活真是美哉。岂料小相公来历不凡,时不时被追杀一下,这可要命了!只是,小相公也会有变成大相公的一天:“疯丫头,小时候你可是经常“欺负”我,如今我想讨回来。”
  • 流年里的星光

    流年里的星光

    青春是任性的岁月,是悸动的开始。最初让你不舍的人,未必就是陪你走过一生的人。偶尔想想那些年,就像嘴里含了一颗糖,微甜中带着一丝苦涩。他们的故事,似乎象征着大多数人的青春。白衬衫,山地车,耳机里的流行乐,背上的吉他,手里的哲理书以及树下那个让你曾心动的少年。
  • 末日之雾

    末日之雾

    某一天,含有大量未知病毒的迷雾爆发了,吸入的人都变成了嗜血如命的丧尸,开始攻击幸存的人类,部分免疫病毒的人不仅要抵御丧尸的进攻,还要提防同为幸存者的人……
  • 丹武仙帝

    丹武仙帝

    妖孽养子坠落凡尘,神秘血脉注定他的无法沉沦;一步步带领家族走上巅峰,却惨遭背叛,修为尽失,真相何在?九死一生觉醒血脉,以丹融身证道巅峰,为红颜、为亲缘,走上一条逆天不归路;证道丹武仙帝,破万世劫难,震无边邪魔,只为守护这一方安宁!