BLACK MONTPARNASSE 193 one possesses a friend or a lover, but this forest had never belonged in that way to anyone. Perhaps it was even wrong to think of it as dead, for it had never been alive. But it was only fair, I suppose, that the moments of extraordinary happiness, the sense that one was nearer than one had ever been to the racial source, to satisfying the desire for an instinctive way of life, the sense of release, as when in the course of psycho- analysis one uncovers by one's own effort a root, a primal memory, should have been counterbalanced by the boredom of childhood too, that agonising boredom of 'apartness' which came before one had learnt the fatal trick of transferring emotion, of flash- ing back enchantingly all day long one's own image, a period when other people were as distinct from one- self as this Liberian forest. I sometimes wonder whether, if one had stayed longer, if one had not been driven out again by tiredness and fear, one might have relearned the way to live without transference, with a lost objectivity. Rain in the Air The chief from Galaye acted as our guide back from the plateau into the forest, wearing for the occa- sion a black tail coat and a green beret, with one of his men to follow him and carry his sword. At a large village, Pala, they told us that the next town was Bamou, a long way off; we should certainly not reach it until six, and we had started the march at seven. There was nowhere in between where we could sleep. The men were grumbling already^as