finding the boot too loose, he took it off and
filled the toe with sand; but as the sand ran out of a gap between the
upper leather and the sole close to the toe and as fast as he put it in, he
had to look out for something else, which he found in the shape of
some coarse dry grass. With this he half filled the boot, and then, with a
good deal of difficulty, managed to wriggle in his toes, after which he
drew the boot above his ankle, rose up with a smile of gratified pride
upon his countenance, and began to strut up and down before his
companion.
There was something very laughable in the scene, for it did not seem to
occur to the Zulu boy that he required anything else to add to his
costume. He had on one English boot, the same as the white men wore,
and that seemed to him sufficient, as he stuck his arms akimbo, then
folded them as he walked with head erect, and ended by standing on
one leg and holding out the booted foot before his admiring companion.
This was too much for the other boy, whose eyes glittered as he made a
snatch at the boot, dragged it off, and was about to leap up and run
away; but his victim was too quick, for, lithe and active as a serpent, he
dashed upon the would-be robber, and a fierce struggle ensued for the
possession of the boot.
John Rogers, otherwise Jack, a frank English lad of about sixteen,
sprang forward to separate the combatants, but Dinny, his father's
servant, who had been groom and gardener at home, restrained him.
"No, no, Masther Jack," he cried, "let the young haythens fight it out.
It'll make them behave betther by-an'-by."
"I won't; I don't like to see them fight," cried Jack, slipping himself free,
and seemingly joining in the fray.
"Don't, Masther Jack," cried Dinny; "they'll come off black on your
hands. Masther Dick, sir, tell him to lave them alone."
The lad appealed to, a pale delicate-looking youth, clenched his fists
and sprang forward to help his brother. But he stopped directly and
began to laugh, as, after a short scuffle, Jack Rogers separated the
combatants, and stood between them with the boot in dispute.
For a moment it seemed as if the two Zulu lads were about to make a
combined attack, but there was something about the English lad which
restrained them, and they stood chattering away in their native tongue,
protesting against his interference, and each laying claim to the boot.
"Speak English," cried Jack. "And now you two have got to shake
hands like Englishmen, and make friends."
"Want a boot! want a boot! want a boot!" the Zulu lads kept repeating.
"Well, you do as I tell you, and you shall each have a pair of boots."
"Two boot? Two boot?" cried the boy who had lost his treasure.
"Yes; two boots," said Jack. "You've got an old pair, haven't you,
Dick?"
"Yes; they can have my old ones," was the reply. "Go and get them,
Dinny."
"And my old lace-ups too," said Jack.
"Ugh!" ejaculated Dinny, spitting on the ground in token of disgust.
"Ye'll both repint being such friends with cannibal savages like them,
young gentlemen. They'll turn round on ye some day, and rend and ate
ye both."
"Not they, Dinny," laughed Jack. "They'd prefer Irishmen, so we should
be safe if you were there."
"Ah, ye may laugh," said Dinny, "but they're a dangerous lot, them
savages, and I wouldn't trust 'em the length of my fut."
Dinny went towards the back door of Mr Rogers' roomy,
verandah-surrounded cottage farm, high up in the slopes of the
Drakensberg, and looking a perfect bower with its flowers, creepers,
and fruit-trees, many being old English friends; and Jack proceeded to
make peace between the two Zulu boys.
"Now look here, Sepopo, you've got to shake hands with your brother,"
he cried.
"No!" cried the Zulu boy who had been lying down when he snatched
the boot, and he threw himself in a monkey-like attitude on all fours.
"Now you, Bechele, you've got to make friends and shake hands,"
continued Jack, paying no heed to Sepopo's defiant attitude.
"No!" cried the last-addressed, emphatically. "'Tole a boot! 'Tole a
boot!" And he too plumped himself down upon all fours and stared at
the ground.
"I say yes!" cried Jack; when, as if moved by the same influence, the
two Zulu boys leaped up, ran a few yards, and picked up each his
"kiri," a short stick with a knob at the end nearly as big as the fist, ran
back to where the English lads were standing, and with flashing eyes
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