登陆注册
37829100000021

第21章 THE MEN OF ZANZIBAR(1)

When his hunting trip in Uganda was over, Hemingway shipped his specimens and weapons direct from Mombasa to New York, but he himself journeyed south over the few miles that stretched to Zanzibar.

On the outward trip the steamer had touched there, and the little he saw of the place had so charmed him that all the time he was on safari he promised himself he would not return home without revisiting it. On the morning he arrived he had called upon Harris, his consul, to inquire about the hotel; and that evening Harris had returned his call and introduced him at the club.

One of the men there asked Hemingway what brought him to Africa, and when he answered simply and truthfully that he had come to shoot big game, it was as though he had said something clever, and every one smiled. On the way back to the hotel, as they felt their way through the narrow slits in the wall that served as streets, he asked the consul why every one had smiled.

The consul laughed evasively.

"It's a local joke," he explained. "A lot of men come here for reasons best kept to themselves, and they all say what you said, that they've come to shoot big game. It's grown to be a polite way of telling a man it is none of his business.""But I didn't mean it that way," protested Hemingway. "I really have been after big game for the last eight months."In the tone one uses to quiet a drunken man or a child, the consul answered soothingly.

"Of course," he assented-- "of course you have." But to show he was not hopelessly credulous, and to keep Hemingway from involving himself deeper, he hinted tactfully: "Maybe they noticed you came ashore with only one steamer trunk and no gun-cases.""Oh, that's easily explained," laughed Hemingway. "My heavy luggage--"The consul had reached his house and his "boy" was pounding upon it with his heavy staff.

"Please don't explain to me," he begged. "It's quite unnecessary.

Down here we're so darned glad to see any white man that we don't ask anything of him except that he won't hurry away. We judge them as they behave themselves here; we don't care what they are at home or why they left it."Hemingway was highly amused. To find that he, a respectable, sport-loving Hemingway of Massachusetts, should be mistaken for a gun-runner, slave-dealer, or escaping cashier greatly delighted him.

"All right!" he exclaimed. "I'll promise not to bore you with my past, and I agree to be judged by Zanzibar standards. I only hope I can live up to them, for I see I am going to like the place very much."Hemingway kept his promise. He bored no one with confidences as to his ancestors. Of his past he made a point never to speak. He preferred that the little community into which he had dropped should remain unenlightened, should take him as they found him.

Of the fact that a college was named after his grandfather and that on his father's railroad he could travel through many States, he was discreetly silent.

The men of Zanzibar asked no questions. That Hemingway could play a stiff game of tennis, a stiffer game of poker, and, on the piano, songs from home was to them sufficient recommendation. In a week he had become one of the most popular members of Zanzibar society. It was as though he had lived there always. Hemingway found himself reaching out to grasp the warmth of the place as a flower turns to the sun. He discovered that for thirty years something in him had been cheated.

For thirty years he had believed that completely to satisfy his soul all he needed was the gray stone walls and the gray-shingled cabins under the gray skies of New England, that what in nature he most loved was the pine forests and the fields of goldenrod on the rock-bound coast of the North Shore. But now, like a man escaped from prison, he leaped and danced in the glaring sunlight of the equator, he revelled in the reckless generosity of nature, in the glorious confusion of colors, in the "blooming blue" of the Indian Ocean, in the Arabian nights spent upon the housetops under the purple sky, and beneath silver stars so near that he could touch them with his hand.

He found it like being perpetually in a comic opera and playing a part in one. For only the scenic artist would dare to paint houses in such yellow, pink, and cobalt-blue; only a "producer" who had never ventured farther from Broadway than the Atlantic City boardwalk would have conceived costumes so mad and so magnificent. Instinctively he cast the people of Zanzibar in the conventional roles of musical comedy.

His choruses were already in waiting. There was the Sultan's body-guard in gold-laced turbans, the merchants of the bazaars in red fezzes and gowns of flowing silk, the Malay sailors in blue, the black native police in scarlet, the ladies of the harems closely veiled and cloaked, the market women in a single garment of orange, or scarlet, or purple, or of all three, and the happy, hilarious Zanzibari boys in the color God gave them.

For hours he would sit under the yellow-and-green awning of the Greek hotel and watch the procession pass, or he would lie under an umbrella on the beach and laugh as the boatmen lifted their passengers to their shoulders and with them splash through the breakers, or in the bazaars for hours he would bargain with the Indian merchants, or in the great mahogany hall of the Ivory House, to the whisper of a punka and the tinkle of ice in a tall glass, listen to tales of Arab raids, of elephant poachers, of the trade in white and black ivory, of the great explorers who had sat in that same room--of Emin Pasha, of Livingstone, of Stanley. His comic opera lacked only a heroine and the love interest.

同类推荐
  • John Jacob Astor

    John Jacob Astor

    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。
  • 张畹香医案

    张畹香医案

    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。
  • 石经考异

    石经考异

    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。
  • 靖乱录

    靖乱录

    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。
  • 吴三桂考

    吴三桂考

    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
  • 逆天仙祖

    逆天仙祖

    玄界天才少年重伤来到凡俗界,养伤数月年,巧破金丹,入元婴,引来九转雷劫,步入元婴。从凡俗界打通所有位面强者,君临万界
  • 笑忘恩仇录

    笑忘恩仇录

    根据明朝野史为基础,以明永乐年间为历史背景的一段江湖侠义英雄传。
  • 风过留鸿

    风过留鸿

    这是个奇怪的世界,女生彩虹有着不为人知的神奇魔法,她孤傲不训,却单纯天真。在高中经历了最为美好的岁月,遇见了美好的人……
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 末日之最后的黎明

    末日之最后的黎明

    既然黑暗降临在冬日的黎明,那我便做这死冬最后的黎明。“我在哪里,哪里便是黎明”
  • 法宝搜集狂人

    法宝搜集狂人

    抢人,抢钱,算什么?穿越,重生,夺舍的又能有什么?有本事你抢个法宝来!很多人问:“小草包,除了喜欢搜集法宝你还有什么本事?”曹苞:“我有本事在极短的时间内用气运和能量合成强大的修为,用你不敢想的速度提升实力,,,不过你要记得,无论在地球还是在仙侠世界。我,不叫草包也不是草包,我是曹苞,曹操的曹,赵苞的苞,曹苞!……至于你说我囤积法宝,那只是个人兴趣。”_____灵墨作者1群:12414423(加群写‘冰灯’)
  • 惊龙变

    惊龙变

    在人间,他带领众兽横扫千军;在天界,他败尽各路高手,神威无敌。让我们一起见识一代王者,欣赏一段神龙崛起的神话。
  • 空间农女:山里汉,撩一个

    空间农女:山里汉,撩一个

    一朝穿越,她成了又黑又丑的受气包,家人欺负,婆婆不待见...没事,白得一个好相公,这波赚大发了。娘家来剥削,婆家来压榨,哼,有理说不通,那就用拳头来说话。极品渣渣?蛮力在身,打得他们满地找牙!家穷人丑?灵泉在手,美容大计不容错过!种田,开店赚钱,撩撩山里汉子,一样都不能少...可素,日子越过越红火的时候,情敌找上门了,要求老娘退位让贤?What?一朝不发火,当她是HelloKity吗?打退情敌后,却当头迎来一个“晴天霹雳”,她家的山里汉,神秘身份被揭开了...
  • 呆萌女友:只为与你相依相伴

    呆萌女友:只为与你相依相伴

    她是天之娇女,他是霸道校草。两个火球相撞,迁出一段心酸往事。爱情在他们之间油然而生。她错过了七个好男人,只为等待爱她的人。然而,他却不知道她是一个勾心斗角家庭出生的女子。当爱情再次到来,她选择放手,放弃这个男子。(我是作者昔日的记忆,这个故事是真实的。)
  • 第十纪元之创新

    第十纪元之创新

    涣生瞳中幻身世,观音镇里住仙生,双眼井出泛神明,司马桥下诛神乡。身过无数带名胜古迹,未知的记忆又将飘向何方?