登陆注册
25515500000070

第70章

"It is not needful, King," answered Zikali, "since I know what all know, neither more nor less. The winds whisper the demands of the white men, the birds sing them, the hyenas howl them at night. Let us see how the matter stands. When your father died Sompseu (Sir T. Shepstone), the great white chief, came from the English Government to name you king. This he could not do according to our law, since how can a stranger name the King of the Zulus? Therefore the Council of the Nation and the doctors--I was not among them, King--moved the spirit of Chaka the Lion into the body of Sompseu and made him as Chaka was and gave him power to name you to rule over the Zulus. So it came about that to the English Queen through the spirit of Chaka you swore certain things; that slaying for witchcraft should be abolished; that no man should die without fair and open trial, and other matters."

He paused a while, then went on, "These oaths you have broken, O King, as being of the blood you are and what you are, you must do."

Here there was disturbance among the Council and Cetewayo half rose from his seat, then sat down again. Zikali, gazing at the sky, waited till it had died away, then went on--"Do any question my words? If so, then let them ask of the white men whether they be true or no. Let them ask also of the spirits of those who have died for witchcraft, and of the spirits of the women who have been slain and whose bodies were laid at the cross-roads because they married the men they chose and not the soldiers to whom the king gave them."

"How can I ask the white men who are far away?" broke out Cetewayo, ignoring the rest.

"Are the white men so far away, King? It is true that I see none and hear none, yet I seem to smell one of them close at hand."

Here he took up the skull which he had laid down and whispered to it. "Ah! I thank you, my child. It seems, King, that there is a white man here hidden in this kloof, he who is named Macumazahn, a good man and a truthful, known to many of us from of old, who can tell you what his people think, though he is not one of their indunas. If you question my words, ask him."

"We know what the white men think," said Cetewayo, "so there is no need to ask Macumazahn to sing us an old song. The question is--what must the Zulus do? Must they swallow their spears and, ceasing to be a nation, become servants, or must they strike with them and drive the English into the sea, and after them the Boers?"

"Tell me first, King, who dwell far away and alone, knowing little of what passes in the land of Life, what the Zulus desire to do. Before me sits the Great Council of the Nation. Let it speak."

Then one by one the members of the Council uttered their opinions in order of rank or seniority. I do not remember the names of all who were present, or what each of them said. I recall, however, that Sigananda, a very old chief--he must have been over ninety--spoke the first. He told them that he had been friend of Chaka and one of his captains, and had fought in most of his battles. That afterwards he had been a general of Dingaan's until that king killed the Boers under Retief, when he left him and finally sided with Panda in the civil war in which Dingaan was killed with the help of the Boers. That he had been present at the battle of the Tugela, though he took no actual part in the fighting, and afterwards became a councillor of Panda's and then of Cetewayo his son. It was a long and interesting historical recital covering the whole period of the Zulu monarchy which ended suddenly with these words--"I have noted, O King and Councillors, that whenever the black vulture of the Zulus was content to attack birds of his own feather, he has conquered. But when it has met the grey eagles of the white men, which come from over the sea, he has been conquered, and my heart tells me that as it was in the past, so it shall be in the future. Chaka was a friend of the English, so was Panda, and so has Cetewayo been until this hour. I say, therefore, let not the King tear the hand which fed him because it seems weak, lest it should grow strong and clutch him by the throat and choke him."

Next spoke Undabuko, Dabulamanzi and Magwenga, brothers of the king, who all favoured war, though the two last were guarded in their speech. After these came Uhamu, the king's uncle--he who was said to be the son of a Spirit--who was strong for peace, urging that the king should submit to the demands of the English, ****** the best terms he could, that he "should bend like a reed before the storm, so that after the storm had swept by, he might stand up straight again, and with him all the other reeds of the people of the Zulus."

So, too, said Seketwayo, chief of the Umdhlalosi, and more whom I cannot recall, six or seven of them. But Usibebu and the induna Untshingwayo, who afterwards commanded at Isandhlwana, were for fighting, as were Sirayo, the husband of the two women who had been taken on English territory and killed, and Umbilini, the chief of Swazi blood whose surrender was demanded by Sir Bartle Frere and who afterwards commanded the Zulus in the battle at Ihlobane. Last of all spoke the Prime Minister, Umnyamana, who declared fiercely that if the Zulu buffalo hid itself in the swamp like a timid calf when the white bull challenged it on the hills, the spirits of Chaka and all his forefathers would thrust its head into the mud and choke it.

When all had finished Cetewayo spoke, saying--"That is a bad council which has two voices, for to which of them must the Captain listen when the impis of the foe gather in front of him? Here I have sat while the moon climbs high and counted, and what do I find? That one half of you, men of wisdom and renown, say Yes, and that the other half of you, men of wisdom and renown, say No. Which then is it to be, Yes or No? Are we to fight the English, or are we to sit still?"

"That is for the king to decide," said a voice.

"See what it is to be a king," went on Cetewayo with passion.

"If I declare for war and we win, shall I be greater than I am?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 逆天废材,绝世小萌龙

    逆天废材,绝世小萌龙

    呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐呐……
  • 我的24岁老板娘

    我的24岁老板娘

    看这里,看这里,这里才是简介,胸弟们可不要被书名误导哦^_^此书并不是纯种的都市暧昧,反而暧昧的桥段不是很多,是典型的奇葩流巨作,小二的口号就是“搞笑,我是认真的!”
  • 穿越异界的游戏玩家

    穿越异界的游戏玩家

    新世纪三不愁四没有的死宅被召唤到了异界。这情节怎么看着挺眼熟的?不对不对~李辉看着眼前的漫画女主角似的的美少女问:“你把我召唤过来的?”美少女点头。“你跟我有契约,一死两命?”美女又点头。“这不科学,缔结契约的办法为什么不是接吻?”
  • 满清外史

    满清外史

    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。
  • 火影之刀锋

    火影之刀锋

    被黑涩会头头追杀来到某座寺庙,在如来座下求上帝,于是……PS:本书会上瘾,大大请小心!
  • 末日幽影

    末日幽影

    陈轲没想到末日来临前自己居然会点背到被陨石砸到,但是这颗陨石的奇异能量却和他电脑中的一款游戏融合成了一个无良的系统,不过还好陈轲的职业是个刺客,跑路隐身就好!丧尸群中容我七进七出先!
  • 誓爱碎片

    誓爱碎片

    一个起始就高大上的主角,一个热血而感人的故事,一个本源神帝的爱恨情仇~这是一个为了爱的故事,为了寻找她的灵魂晶石,枫桦寻找万千星河
  • 阴阳先生之大神棍

    阴阳先生之大神棍

    我靠!老子就是一个跳大神的,靠自己实力吃饭,咳咳,好吧,靠坑蒙拐骗偷…
  • 钻石豪门:腹黑男配求逆袭

    钻石豪门:腹黑男配求逆袭

    四年前,他设计陷害她与挚爱的男人反目成仇,酿成了一场惊天的车祸;四年后,死去之人华丽归来,他却无意中失手害死她腹中的孩子,逼得她孤立无援的爬上了银河大厦的顶楼。孑然单薄的身影立在大厦顶楼的边缘,风吹起她如丝般的长发,她转过身,眸光冷冽而绝望,“云起,你配说爱我吗?你根本不配……”在苏阡陌的世界里,他永远是个男配角。一场腹黑男配的逆袭之路,他走的有多艰难,只有自己知道。
  • 把你的人脉做足

    把你的人脉做足

    本书通过大量的故事生动地阐述了现代人如何才能做足自己的人脉以及培养良好的人际关系网络应当掌握的技巧和策略,完全可以成为广大读者朋友社交和处世的指南。细细地品读你手中的这本《把你的人脉做足》吧!它会为你的人生提供丰富的精神营养,让你成为一个在人际交往中游刃有余,左右逢源的人,获得越来越多的朋友,在事业和工作中得到越来越多的支持,不断走向新的高度!