THE DICTATOR OF GRAND BASSA 251 stop the soldiers from coming here.' I stood with my back to the wall and they flourished their spears in my face. My derk said, "Colonel, I will not leave you. I will die here with you/ I said to him, 'There is no point in dying. Obey orders/") But the facts were undisputed. He had been a prisoner and he had escaped. He said that when his clerk had gone, he left the wall and walked very slowly to the door. They made gestures of stabbing, but no one would stab first. Then an old man appeared with a great staff and beat them back and cleared a way for Davis through the village. "Afterwards Nimley killed the old man/' His cook appeared on the verandah behind us and said that dinner was served, but the Colonel wouldn't let me go: he had an audience for a story which had probably become rather stale on the Coast. 'That night I was sitting on my verandah, as it might be to-night; it was ten o'clock, and there, just where the sentry is, I saw a big warrior dressed in war paint with little bells tied under his knees. He came up and said, 'Who's the big man around here?' I said, *I guess I'm the biggest man here. What do you want?' He said, 'Chief Nimley send me to tell you he's coming up here at five o'clock in the morn- ing to collect his tax money/ So I said, Tou tell Chief Nimley that I'll be waiting for him/ "And at eleven o'clock I looked up and there was another warrior, a small man, all in war paint. He came up to the verandah and said, 'Are you the big man here?' *Waal,' I said, fl guess you won't find anyone bigger around this place. What do you want?' He said, 'Chief Nimley send me to tell yqu