POSTSCRIPT IN MONROVIA 297 taining shower baths and running water and electric light, with a wireless station, tennis courts and a bathing pool, and a new neat hospital in the middle of plantations which smell all the day through of latex, as it drips into little cups tied beneath incisions in the trunks. They, more than the English or the French, are the official Enemy, and no story of whipping post, smuggled arms or burnt villages is too wild to be circulated and believed among Liberians of both parties. Politics We arrived in Monrovia when the political cam- paign was getting under way; those politicians embracing each other on the jetty were only a fore- taste of the excitement. For the curious thing about a Liberian election campaign, which goes on for more than two months if there's enough money in hand, is that, although the result is always a fore- gone conclusion, everyone behaves as if the votes and the speeches and the pamphlets matter. The Govern- ment prints the ballot papers, the Government owns both the newspapers, the Government polices the polling booths, but no one assumes beforehand that the Government will win, or if it is the turn of the Opposition, the Opposition. A curious fiction is kept up even among die foreign representatives. There are excited conversations at dinner parties; bets are always on the point of being laid. But the fiction, of course, stops short of losing money. Perhaps to an American, who is used to his state elections, the conditions seem less odd.