登陆注册
5234800000021

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
  • Three Men on the Bummel

    Three Men on the Bummel

    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。
  • 百字碑注

    百字碑注

    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。
  • 上清河图内玄经

    上清河图内玄经

    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。
  • 太清金液神气经

    太清金液神气经

    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。
  • 鸣鹤余音

    鸣鹤余音

    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
  • 渴水的星球

    渴水的星球

    2121年,摩希·莱德博士九死一生越过加拿大逃离了残忍的敌人之手。此时,气候的变化正摧毁着人类文明。那些失去人性的流民成群结伙地在地球上四处漫游,为了夺取珍贵的饮用水而猎杀同类。莱德所拥有的一台时间机器,将成为地球恢复昔日繁荣的关键。莱德最大的敌人R·法罗·布拉德肖伙同他贪婪的政治密友一起控制淡水在黑市的买卖。他们担心莱德拯救地球的计划会毁掉他们崇高的地位,联手阻挠莱德。莱德和他由各大宗教教徒组成的私人军队与布拉德肖的手下展开了激烈的对抗。在底特律河底古老的公路隧道上,一场史诗级的战斗随之展开。莱德在战斗中受伤了,而后在他漂亮的助手兼布拉德肖旧情人的帮助下逃得性命。
  • 佛说尊那经

    佛说尊那经

    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。
  • 摆渡人

    摆渡人

    人有情欲无法逃避,鬼有执念不可超脱。若想逃避,必遭天谴。若想超脱,必寻因果。天降灵魂摆渡系统,令秦昊从此开启摆渡鬼魂的逆袭生活……
  • 建文皇帝遗迹

    建文皇帝遗迹

    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。
  • 古龙文集:月异星邪

    古龙文集:月异星邪

    十年前,卓长卿眼睁睁看着父母被温如玉和尹凡杀害,一夜之间,这个幼小的孩子尝尽了人间的悲伤和仇恨。十年后,卓长卿艺成下山,欲报亲仇,一次天目山之会将当年那场悲剧的所有当事人和目击者聚集一地。而此时,“丑人”温如玉的唯一弟子温瑾,却意外得知自己的亲生父母实为恩师温如玉所杀……最终,两个年轻人——卓长卿和温瑾,在面对自己杀亲仇人时,会做出什么样的选择?在丑人“温如玉”的背后,究竟隐藏着多少未说出口的爱与真相?
  • 红血女王1:血红黎明

    红血女王1:血红黎明

    如果不是逃难,梅儿不会遇见卡尔;如果不是选妃大典出了意外,梅儿不会被许配给梅温。在危机四伏的王宫里,在兄弟二人之间,她只有彻底抹掉过去,才有可能在权力争斗中抓住一线生机。
  • 千年约:璎珞坠

    千年约:璎珞坠

    【穿越】【萌】【欢脱】【江湖武林朝廷】【傲娇男二货女】【打滚求收藏!戳我咩!2241520703记得敲门砖!】三个好朋友相继以诡异的方式穿越到了一个不知名的朝代,这个世界存在着美好而又危机重重的江湖武林,也有电视剧中的书院赶考、朝廷纷争。少女的小小梦想、情窦初开的懵懂爱恋在这里悄悄绽放……江湖人士、青离山庄、玉峰书院……处处都有惊喜,处处危机四伏,究竟是谁在背后操纵这一切?她们的感情又将如何归属?而成长,就在这一天天惊喜又美妙的生活中慢慢绽放出最靓丽的色彩……
  • 原生协奏曲

    原生协奏曲

    “只有那些准备好面对死亡的人才有资格获得永生”因为科技的发展,吸血鬼不再是传说中的生物。但是,长期处于统治地位的人类会允许吸血鬼这种强大的生物存在吗?作为仅存的原生种之一,曾经带领着吸血鬼对人类进行屠杀的爱德莱德在沉睡了几百年之后,这次能否带领两个种族走向和平?一首宏伟的协奏曲已经在两个种族之间响起。
  • 海公案(中国古典公案小说精品书库)

    海公案(中国古典公案小说精品书库)

    本书为清代小说。前六十回为《海公大红袍全传》;六十一回至末一百零二回为《海公小红袍全传》,今存道光十二(1832)壬辰年厦门文德堂刋本。叙述一位无私无畏的清官海瑞一生的故事。海瑞其人其事《明史》有载,是历史上有名的清官,号称“南包公”。本书文笔粗疏,情节离史实颇远。
  • 太上洞玄宝元上经

    太上洞玄宝元上经

    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。