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Child of Storm | H. Rider Haggard | |
X. The Smelling-Out |
Page 9 of 13 |
Here the audience began to show signs of great apprehension. "But," looking down at the dust and turning his head sideways, "what do you say, what do you say? Speak more plainly, Little Voices, for you know I grow deaf. Oh! now I understand. The matter is even smaller than I thought. Just of one wizard--" "Izwa!" (loudly). "--just of a few deaths and some sicknesses." "Izwa!" "Just of one death, one principal death." "Izwa!" (very loudly). "Ah! So we have it--one death. Now, was it a man?" "Izwa!" (very coldly). "A woman?" "Izwa!" (still more coldly). "Then a child? It must be a child, unless indeed it is the death of a spirit. But what do you people know of spirits? A child! A child! Ah! you hear me--a child. A male child, I think. Do you not say so, O Dust?" "Izwa!" (emphatically). "A common child? A bastard? The son of nobody?" "Izwa!" (very low). "A well-born child? One who would have been great? O Dust, I hear, I hear; a royal child, a child in whom ran the blood of the Father of the Zulus, he who was my friend? The blood of Senzangakona, the blood of the 'Black One,' the blood of Panda." He stopped, while both from the chorus and from the thousands of the circle gathered around went up one roar of "Izwa!" emphasised by a mighty movement of outstretched arms and down-pointing thumbs. Then silence, during which Zikali stamped upon all the remaining markings, saying: |
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Child of Storm H. Rider Haggard |
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