登陆注册
33216200000021

第21章 "YAH! YAH! YAH!".(3)

"It was after that that we were very proud. We had fought many times with the strange white men who live upon the sea, and always we had beaten them. A few of us were killed, but what was that compared with the stores of wealth of a thousand thousand kinds that we found on the ships? And then one day, maybe twenty years ago, or twenty-five, there came a schooner right through the passage and into the lagoon. It was a large schooner with three masts. She had five white men and maybe forty boat's crew, black fellows from New Guinea and New Britain; and she had come to fish beche-de-mer. She lay at anchor across the lagoon from here, at Pauloo, and her boats scattered out everywhere, ****** camps on the beaches where they cured the beche-de-mer. This made them weak by dividing them, for those who fished here and those on the schooner at Pauloo were fifty miles apart, and there were others farther away still.

"Our king and headmen held council, and I was one in the canoe that paddled all afternoon and all night across the lagoon, bringing word to the people of Pauloo that in the morning we would attack the fishing camps at the one time and that it was for them to take the schooner. We who brought the word were tired with the paddling, but we took part in the attack. On the schooner were two white men, the skipper and the second mate, with half a dozen black boys.

The skipper with three boys we caught on shore and killed, but first eight of us the skipper killed with his two revolvers. We fought close together, you see, at hand grapples.

"The noise of our fighting told the mate what was happening, and he put food and water and a sail in the small dingy, which was so small that it was no more than twelve feet long. We came down upon the schooner, a thousand men, covering the lagoon with our canoes. Also, we were blowing conch shells, singing war songs, and striking the sides of the canoes with our paddles. What chance had one white man and three black boys against us? No chance at all, and the mate knew it.

"White men are hell. I have watched them much, and I am an old man now, and Iunderstand at last why the white men have taken to themselves all the islands in the sea. It is because they are hell. Here are you in the canoe with me.

You are hardly more than a boy. You are not wise, for each day I tell you many things you do not know. When I was a little pickaninny, I knew more about fish and the ways of fish than you know now. I am an old man, but I swim down to the bottom of the lagoon, and you cannot follow me. What are you good for, anyway? I do not know, except to fight. I have never seen you fight, yet Iknow that you are like your brothers and that you will fight like hell. Also, you are a fool, like your brothers. You do not know when you are beaten. You will fight until you die, and then it will be too late to know that you are beaten.

"Now behold what this mate did. As we came down upon him, covering the sea and blowing our conches, he put off from the schooner in the small boat, along with the three black boys, and rowed for the passage. There again he was a fool, for no wise man would put out to sea in so small a boat. The sides of it were not four inches above the water. Twenty canoes went after him, filled with two hundred young men. We paddled five fathoms while his black boys were rowing one fathom. He had no chance, but he was a fool. He stood up in the boat with a rifle, and he shot many times. He was not a good shot, but as we drew close many of us were wounded and killed. But still he had no chance.

"I remember that all the time he was smoking a cigar. When we were forty feet away and coming fast, he dropped the rifle, lighted a stick of dynamite with the cigar, and threw it at us. He lighted another and another, and threw them at us very rapidly, many of them. I know now that he must have split the ends of the fuses and stuck in match heads, because they lighted so quickly. Also, the fuses were very short. Sometimes the dynamite sticks went off in the air, but most of them went off in the canoes. And each time they went off in a canoe, that canoe was finished. Of the twenty canoes, the half were smashed to pieces. The canoe I was in was so smashed, and likewise the two men who sat next to me. The dynamite fell between them. The other canoes turned and ran away. Then that mate yelled, Yah! Yah! Yah!' at us. Also he went at us again with his rifle, so that many were killed through the back as they fled away.

And all the time the black boys in the boat went on rowing. You see, I told you true, that mate was hell.

"Nor was that all. Before he left the schooner, he set her on fire, and fixed up all the powder and dynamite so that it would go off at one time. There were hundreds of us on board, trying to put out the fire, heaving up water from overside, when the schooner blew up. So that all we had fought for was lost to us, besides many more of us being killed. Sometimes, even now, in my old age, I have bad dreams in which I hear that mate yell, Yah! Yah! Yah!' In a voice of thunder he yells, Yah! Yah! Yah!' But all those in the fishing camps were killed.

"The mate went out of the passage in his little boat, and that was the end of him we made sure, for how could so small a boat, with four men in it, live on the ocean? A month went by, and then, one morning, between two rain squalls, a schooner sailed in through our passage and dropped anchor before the village.

The king and the headmen made big talk, and it was agreed that we would take the schooner in two or three days. In the meantime, as it was our custom always to appear friendly, we went off to her in canoes, bringing strings of cocoanuts, fowls, and pigs, to trade. But when we were alongside, many canoes of us, the men on board began to shoot us with rifles, and as we paddled away I saw the mate who had gone to sea in the little boat spring upon the rail and dance and yell, Yah! Yah! Yah!'

"That afternoon they landed from the schooner in three small boats filled with white men. They went right through the village, shooting every man they saw.

同类推荐
  • Bird Neighbors

    Bird Neighbors

    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。
  • 六门陀罗尼经论

    六门陀罗尼经论

    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。
  • 御猎

    御猎

    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。
  • 罂粟花

    罂粟花

    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。
  • 书指

    书指

    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。
热门推荐
  • 君凰在世

    君凰在世

    九宫之主一朝重生,竟然重生到神界神尊身上了!!幸好这神尊也是修鬼道的。咦~这位祖宗居然不报自己前世的仇,凤小朋友表示先把媳妇追到手再说!
  • 大汉之万邦来朝

    大汉之万邦来朝

    大丈夫生于天地之间,岂能郁郁久居人下!东汉末年孝景帝十九代玄孙刘辰坠落寒潭,偶得天外陨石让他自由穿越两界时空,在日光下能够搬运物资自由穿梭与古今,,开酒楼,种土豆,地瓜,先赚钱再招兵,除黄巾,灭诸侯,守住了大汉四百年的基业,更新革命,他要让大汉成为世界霸主……他发行的货币将通用全世界,他将要全世界通用汉语,让汉语成为国际语言!让大汉成为世界中心!可这颗天外陨石远远没那么简单,偶然的机会,刘辰发现这颗陨石在月光下竟然能…
  • 少年燃烧吧

    少年燃烧吧

    一个少年,是传奇起点,一部故事,是心酸奋斗!和队友一起走上世界的巅峰,为皇,为狂,为自己,也为新的崛起!
  • 一品魔录

    一品魔录

    一都市,一酒馆,一和尚,众多故事谱写一本魔录,……
  • 开挂的中医

    开挂的中医

    当一个中医开了挂,能够得到华佗的医术时,你猜他会怎样?吊打西医?发财致富,走向人生巅峰?都不是!他始终坚守四个字“医者仁心”。
  • 发源地

    发源地

    只有活着才能不断变强,只有变强才能更好的活着!
  • 小说家的故事

    小说家的故事

    生活,生活是什么?这个问题长期困扰着我。我突然地来到这个世界,有一天我也将会突然地离开这个世界;我不能选择我何时来,亦无法决定我何时走,生命对于我而言,有多少事是能随自我控制的呢?晚上,我翻来覆去睡不着觉,我躺在床上,想要睡去,却又无法入睡,想要思考,却总觉得所有的思考都没有什么意义,正当我朦胧欲睡的时候,我突然看到头顶的天花板裂开了一道缝,一道五彩的霞光隐约从缝隙之中射了出来……
  • 总裁的偷心人

    总裁的偷心人

    她只不过是一个孤女,连恋爱都没谈过的她,却想要个儿子,而他就是她看上的优良基因目标,那一夜,他满心疑虑,她失踪五年,再次相遇,假小子般的她身边有了个小萝莉,可疑,该不会是他的种吧?
  • 我听见了爱情

    我听见了爱情

    了解他的人都知道他自私,霸道,占有欲强,笑的的时候笑意总达不到眼底,直到有天,他拉着她回学校,似是被逗笑,那笑直击心底。而她只记得他说“如果是陪你坐公交,我希望是从起点一直到终点,而不是中途上车~~”
  • 错嫁病娇王爷

    错嫁病娇王爷

    本毫无交集的两人,却以狗血的方式相遇,经历生死后,本以为两人不会再有交集,可那想,画风一转,她变成了顾家不受宠的大小姐,而他却变成了病秧子清河王,两人的命运再次交集,一场婚姻,她本该嫁给太子为妻,却被自家妹妹导演了一出上错花轿嫁对郎的戏码……从而引发一场有关风月,逼上梁山的戏码。