登陆注册
5255500000044

第44章 XV. THE LION DANCE

We took our hot baths and sat down to supper most gratefully, for we were tired. The long string of men, bearing each a log of wood, filed in from the darkness to add to our pile of fuel.

Saa-sita and Shamba knelt and built the night fire. In a moment the little flame licked up through the carefully arranged structure. We finished the meal, and the boys whisked away the table.

Then out in the blackness beyond our little globe of light we became aware of a dull confusion, a rustling to and fro. Through the shadows the eye could guess at movement. The confusion steadied to a kind of rhythm, and into the circle of the fire came the group of Monumwezis. Again they were gathered together in a compact little mass; but now they were bent nearly double, and were stripped to the red blankets about their waists. Before them writhed Sulimani, close to earth, darting irregularly now to right, now to left, wriggling, spreading his arms abroad. He was repeating over and over two phrases; or rather the same phrase in two such different intonations that they seemed to convey quite separate meanings.

"Ka soompeele?" he cried with a strongly appealing interrogation.

"Ka soompeele!" he repeated with the downward inflection of decided affirmation.

And the bent men, their dark bodies gleaming in the firelight, stamping in rhythm every third step, chorused in a deep rumbling bass:

"Goom zoop! goom zoop!"

Thus they advanced; circled between us and the fire, and withdrew to the half darkness, where tirelessly they continued the same reiterations.

Hardly had they withdrawn when another group danced forward in their places. These were the Kikuyus. They had discarded completely their safari clothes, and now came forth dressed out in skins, in strips of white cloth, with feathers, shells and various ornaments. They carried white wands to represent spears, and they sang their tribal lion song. A soloist delivered the main argument in a high wavering minor and was followed by a deep rumbling emphatic chorus of repetition, strongly accented so that the sheer rhythm of it was most pronounced:

"An-gee a Ka ga An-gee a Ka ga An-gee a Ka ga Ki ya Ka ga Ka ga an gee ya!"Solemnly and loftily, their eyes fixed straight before them they made the circle of the fire, passed before our chairs, and withdrew to the half light. There, a few paces from the stamping, crouching Monumwezis, they continued their performance.

The next to appear were the Wakambas. These were more histrionic. They too were unrecognizable as our porters, for they too had for the lion discarded their work-a-day garments in favour of savage. They produced a pantomime of the day's doings, very realistic indeed, ending with a half dozen of dark swaying bodies swinging and shuddering in the long grass as lions, while the "horses" wove in and out among the crouching forms, all done to the beat of rhythm. Past us swept the hunt, and in its turn melted into the half light.

The Kavirondos next appeared, the most fantastically caparisoned of the lot, fine big black men, their eyes rolling with excitement. They had captured our flag from its place before the big tent, and were rallied close about this, dancing fantastically. Before us they leaped and stamped and shook their spears and shouted out their full-voiced song, while the other three tribes danced each its specialty dimly in the background.

The dance thus begun lasted for fully two hours. Each tribe took a turn before us, only to give way to the next. We had leisure to notice minutiae, such as the ingenious tail one of the "lions"had constructed from a sweater. As time went on, the men worked themselves to a frenzy. From the serried ranks every once in a while one would break forth with a shriek to rush headlong into the fire, to beat the earth about him with his club, to rush over to shake one of us violently by the hand, or even to seize one of our feet between his two palms. Then with equal abruptness back he darted to regain his place among the dancers. Wilder and wilder became the movements, higher rose the voices. The mock lion hunt grew more realistic, and the slaughter on both sides something tremendous. Lower and lower crouched the Monumwezi, drawing apart with their deep "goom"; drawing suddenly to a common centre with the sharp "zoop!" Only the Kikuyus held their lofty bearing as they rolled forth their chant, but the mounting excitement showed in their tense muscles and the rolling of their eyes. The sweat glistened on naked black and bronze bodies. Among the Monumwezi to my astonishment I saw Memba Sasa, stripped like the rest, and dancing with all abandon. The firelight leaped high among the logs that eager hands cast on it; and the shadows it threw from the swirling, leaping figures wavered out into a great, calm darkness.

The night guard understood a little of the native languages, so he stood behind our chairs and told us in Swahili the meaning of some of the repeated phrases.

"This has been a glorious day; few safaris have had so glorious a day.""The masters looked upon the fierce lions and did not run away.""Brave men without other weapons will nevertheless kill with a knife.""The masters' mothers must be brave women, the masters are so brave.""The white woman went hunting, and so were many lions killed."The last one pleased Billy. She felt that at last she was appreciated.

We sat there spellbound by the weird savagery of the spectacle-the great licking fire, the dancing, barbaric figures, the rise and fall of the rhythm, the dust and shuffle, the ebb and flow of the dance, the dim, half-guessed groups swaying in the darkness-and overhead the calm tropic night.

At last, fairly exhausted, they stopped. Some one gave a signal.

The men all gathered in one group, uttered a final yell, very like a cheer, and dispersed.

We called up the heroes of the day-Fundi and his companion-and made a little speech, and bestowed appropriate reward. Then we turned in.

同类推荐
  • 金碧五相类参同契

    金碧五相类参同契

    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。
  • 独立

    独立

    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。
  • 梵网经菩萨戒本疏

    梵网经菩萨戒本疏

    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。
  • 长安亲故

    长安亲故

    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。
  • 成唯识论

    成唯识论

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 劝行乐

    劝行乐

    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。
  • 诸天临道

    诸天临道

    风云之中,他是剑圣弟子,助剑圣改命,也曾风光无限,可,再次回来却得知剑圣死讯。大话西游之中,他弥补遗憾,让那个人,不在像一条狗!七界武神之中,与叶天等绝代天骄争锋,复活千古第一女皇!西游之中,他夺天地杀伐本源,立下三杀大阵,阻西游,对抗佛门,不问佛对错善恶,只问你可有私心?他只是一个凡人,拥有的这一切,本是系统赐于他,他为什么要怀疑系统?
  • 镖动天下

    镖动天下

    金龙镖局的一趟镖半路遭劫,镖局大部分镖师遇难,唯有总镖头高金龙一人劫后余生,得以活命。却不料这里面竟然隐藏着一个天大的秘密,高金龙命运如何?历经劫难的高金龙该如何面对官府的追杀呢?书中自然会一一道来……。
  • 唐宋词的魅力:基于古典诗词曲之比较研究

    唐宋词的魅力:基于古典诗词曲之比较研究

    以唐宋词为审美观照,从中国古典诗、 词、曲中选取大量的名篇佳作,通过比较研究,着重论述了唐宋词人的创作 心态、审美情趣和个性特征,深入探析优秀词作的内容题材、情感基调、艺术境界、语言风格,以及词坛上出现的不同于诗、文领域的奇特现象和词体 的演变过程,是唐宋词研究的一部力作。在研究过程中,作者把社会学、文化学、美学、文学理论与创作实践有机结合起来,结合宏观考察与微观探索,揭示了唐宋词独有的艺术特征和美感特质。
  • 刑事诉讼与辩护代理

    刑事诉讼与辩护代理

    本书是中华人民共和国重要基本法律知识宣讲系列丛书之一,具体内容是宣讲和普及我国刑事诉讼辩护与代理中对广大群众最为重要的相关制度和规范,涉及的法律主要包括《中华人民共和国刑事诉讼法》、最高人民法院《关于适用<中华人民共和国刑事诉讼法>的解释》、《人民检察院刑事诉讼规则(试行)》和《中华人民共和国刑法》。
  • 酒店营销一本通

    酒店营销一本通

    《酒店营销一本通》不仅介绍了阐述了酒店营销工作的岗位职责、岗位要求、管理技能,还通过25个经典案例,34个经验提醒,32个核心问题,19个工具表单,分享了作者多年来总结的实操技巧,让读者拥有酒店营销的真本领,从而实现酒店利润倍增。
  • 樱满集的无限综漫

    樱满集的无限综漫

    新书《这就是我想要的重生吗》已发布,日常系二次元文
  • 墨法集要

    墨法集要

    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。
  • 大魔王的无敌小狂妃

    大魔王的无敌小狂妃

    末世女王被同父异母的妹妹和未婚夫害死,重生到了异世界。????凤欣月的人生目标:虐渣、打怪、带着儿子小团子走自己不一样的强者之路。至于男人有多远滚多远,姐姐不需要。????沈倾爵的人生目标:追媳妇、宠媳妇、带着媳妇笑傲江湖,至于儿子那个碍事儿精,可不可以送人啊,不然老是在关键时刻出来捣乱,还让不让人活了??????萌宝小团子:闲着也是闲着,给老爹添添乱挺好玩儿的。小团子的自我定位,我就是一个打酱油路过的。1V1甜宠双洁无虐
  • 糖尿病的保健细节和养生(现代健康丛书)

    糖尿病的保健细节和养生(现代健康丛书)

    随着社会文明的发展,生活节奏的加快。精神压力日益增大我们更要关爱自己的身体,密切注意自己身体发出各种疾病信号。糖尿病是病因和发病机理尚未完全阐明的的内分泌代谢性疾病,而以高血糖为其共同主要标志。因胰岛素分泌绝对或相对不稳及删细胞对胰岛素敏感性降低,引起糖,蛋白质,脂肪和继发的水、电解质代谢紊,糖尿病严重威协着我们的生命、健康怎样合理治疗和预防糖尿病的并发症,让更多的人掌握糖尿病的知识就显得十分紧迫。为此我们编写了《糖尿病的保健细节和养生》一书。本书从糖尿病的基础知识,日常生活细节,糖尿病的保健养生和防治几个方面入手。让更多的人对糖尿病有更加深入的了解。力求贴进生活,科学实用。