264 JOURNEY WITHOUT MAPS be able to strengthen myself with the intellects idea that once in Zigi's Town I had been complete!) convinced of the beauty and desirability of the mere act of living. The Edge of 'Civilisation* It was supposed to be a seven-hour trek from Zigi's Town to Bassa Town, the first stop inside Bassa terri- tory. I was doubtful if I could make it without some help from a hammock, so I took on two extra carriers and my men hacked a pole to take the place of the one I had discarded. I was feeling very weak, but I hadn't enough carriers to let myself be carried all the way, so I walked the first two hours and then had ten minutes in the hammock and walked again. I didn't like being carried. A two-man hammock puts a great strain on the carriers and my men were already tired by the long trek. One heard the ham- mock strings grinding on the pole and saw the shoul- der muscles strain under the weight. It was too dose to using men as animals for me to be happy. The villages we passed were all deserted except for a few women. An elephant had been killed some- where in the bush, I suppose with the poisoned spears the natives in these parts shoot from ancient guns, and all the men for miles around had gathered to strip its flesh. To our surprise we arrived, in less than four hours, at Bassa Town. I was glad, save that it made the Coast seem farther away than ever. We were two days now from Tapee, but the young native sub-Commissioner here still spoke of Grand Bassa as seyen days away. He was the only man in the place,