lyu JOUKNEY WITHOUT MAPS like one prolonged flickering illumination. The carriers slept on the floor of the verandah. The sound of their breathing and snores was very companion- able in the pounding electric night, and they kept away the rats. But the storm worried me. The dry season was supposed to last another month, but some- times the rains came early. It would never do to be caught in the interior, for on the lower level below Ganta the ways in the wet season were impassable; Central Liberia between the villages became a swamp, and we had not yet even turned towards the south. Cafe Bar Suddenly in the inconsequent manner of Africa Ganta came dose and we left French Guinea behind us. On the last day the colony proved more fhqn ever French. Djiecke took us by surprise after only two hours' march, a neat native school behind a gate- way, Ecole de Djiecke, in a tidied park-like plain. A small fussy black in a topee and European clothes and pince-nez came to meet our train from the school compound. He was very conceited, very inquisitive and we couldn't understand each other's French, When he learned that we were English he became deeply suspicious. He wanted to know where we had come from and when I said Sierra Leone he was convinced that I was lying. I think his geography was vague, for he couldn't understand that we could have come from Sierra Leone by land. He wanted to know what canton we had just left, but I didn't even know what a canton was. I thought it had some- tiling to do with Switzerland.