POSTSCRIPT IN MONROVIA 283 delegate was convinced that England was behind them. There was to be a Convention in Monrovia of the Unit True Whig Party to elect a Presidential Candidate to oppose President Barclay and the True Whig Party. All is fair during a Liberian election and the Government agent at Cape Palmas had tried to arrest the owner of the boat and hold it up till the Convention was over. Some of the delegates were supporters of a Mr. Cooper, some of ex-President King, so though they all belonged to the same party, they had plenty to argue about, and the arguments got fiercer after midday, after the tin basins of cassava roots had been handed round (for meals were in- cluded in the tariff) and the bottles of cane juice. The cane juice in the midday heal: worked quickly; almost immediately half the hundred and fifty politicians were roaring drunk. They couldn't do anything about it, because if they moved more than a foot the boat heeled over, and once there was a panic on board at a loud crash which reminded them of the rock they had hit the night before. Some tried to stand up and others shouted to them to be still as the boat heeled towards the glassy sea and the captain was heard shouting that he would put any man who moved in irons. I couldn't move because the Methodist minister was asleep on my shoulder, and the panic soon subsided. We hadn't hit a rock, some- body had passed out under the cane juice and his head had hit the deck. The owner of the boat said to me, "These men: they are quiet and gentle now, but you wait till they get ashore. They are thirsting for blood. They would rather kill Barclay than see him elected."