THE DICTATOR OF GRAND BASSA 253 enemies in Monrovia, who were jealous of his position, had pretended to believe in these atrocities, and even his mother, back in America, had read about them; but she knew him better, she'd dandled him on her knee, and she didn't believe. Colonel Davis said, "If you want to know the truth of that story------" Apparently one evening he had heard children cry- ing and had sent soldiers from the camp who found two babies in the swamps. They had been hidden there when Nimley's tribe took to the bush. The next day he sent more soldiers to search the neighbourhood, and they brought in four more children. He was a mother to those children. He had made the soldiers wash them, had given up his own porridge and the last of his own vaseline; then next day he had sent men to capture a few women to look after them. These were the very children he had been accused of having burnt alive. His cook again appeared and said that chop was getting cold. Davis snapped at him, but he had no control over his servants. He was very smart, very astute, but I think it was this which was wrong with him. He came over to my verandah and drank whisky and told us all about his first marriage to a teetotaller and how he had cured her by guile of her prejudice, and his servant kept on popping up at intervals to remind him of chop, while Davis stub- bornly sat on, just to show who was master. It is the simplest explanation of the facts contained in Blue Book, cmd. 4614: the woman just delivered of twins shot in her bed and her children burnt; children cut down with cutlasses; the heads aud