"CIVILISED MAN" 229 the place loitered at the edge of the dark, haling us, hating the young drunk chief. We returned and pre- sently I went to bed. After an hour or two someone moved in my hut. It was Amedoo come to tell me that the carriers had received no chop at all and had gone hungry to their beds. The Tax-gatherer The dry weather was breaking: in a few weeks the way to Grand Bassa would be impossible. When I woke at half-past five the rain was pouring down, the empty compound was lit by green lightning. The chiefs cows, great cream-coloured beasts with curled horns and velvet eyes, were standing close against the women's huts for shelter. It looked as if we shouldn't get away till late. There was no sign of the carriers: it was not until half-past six when the rain had stopped, though the lightning flickered on, that they drifted into the compound, wet and hungry and miserable. I called Vande, gave him half a crown to buy a goat with whenever he chose, and told them to cook the little rice we had with us and eat it before start- ing. Then the young chief appeared in the com- pound; he had an aching head and a dry mouth, and he was embarrassed and ashamed. I pretended not to notice him until he climbed on to my verandah, and then I didn't offer him a chair, I waited until my carriers were close and then I cursed him. I was very Imperialist, very pref ectorial as I told him that a chief must be judged by his discipline, that he ought not to allow his headman to disobey him. He couldn't t^ll