rest, and eat the nut.
At the end of the wood we came to a plain which gave us a clear view
of the place. Fritz, who was on the look out, ran off with Turk to some
strange trees that he saw on the right.
When I got up to him, it gave me no small joy to find that it was a
gourd tree.
"Try," said I, "if you can get hold of one of those queer lumps that
grow on it."
With that he brought one down, and we had a look at it.
"Now, of this," said I, "we can make a plate, a dish, or a flask. Wild
men set great store by its shell, which they use to hold their food and
drink."
We then set to work to make plates of the gourds. When we had made
some eight or ten bowls, and some flat ones for plates, we laid them out
in the sun to dry, and then went on our way.
We could see, not far off, a grove of fine palm trees, but to reach them
we should have to pass through reeds and long grass. I knew this was
just the place to find snakes, so we each cut a cane, that we might beat
them off should we meet with any. As I took hold of my staff, I felt a
gum or juice ooze out of the end. I put my tongue to it, and found it of a
sweet taste. This led me to suck the reed, and I then knew that we had
met with the SUG-AR CANE. By this time Fritz had done the same,
for I could see that he held his cane to his mouth.
"Do not suck too much of it," said I, "or it will make you ill; but let us
cut some of the best and take them back with us, for those at home will
prize so great a treat."
It did not take us long to reach the place where the palms grew, and
then we sat down in the shade to eat the food we had brought with us.
"Do you see those nuts at the top of the trees, Fritz ?" said I.
"To be sure I do; but they are far too high to reach. Look, look!" he
cried, "there are some MON-KEYS; let me have a shot at them." "Do
not do that," I said, and held his arm; "it will do us no good to kill them,
and I think I can make use of them." With that I threw some stones up
at the tree where they were, though they had got safe out of my reach.
They then made a loud noise, took hold of the nuts that were near, and
flung them straight at us. The trick made Fritz laugh, who soon had
hard work to pick up the nuts that were thrown at him.
We broke some of the nuts, and put the juice of the canes in the thick
white cream which forms close to the shell; and this made us a dish that
Fritz said was fit for a king.
Fritz and I then made fast some nuts to a string, which I tied round my
waist, while he took up his canes, and we both set off on our road
home.
CHAPTER IV.
ON our way back we took up the gourd bowls and plates, which we
found quite dry and hard as bone, and put them in our bags. We had
scarce got through the wood, when Turk made a dart in front of us, and
we saw a troop of apes rush out of the way. But he gave a leap and
brought down one that could not climb so fast as the rest, for she had a
young one in her arms. Turk made short work of the poor thing, for ere
Fritz could call the dog off, the ape was dead. The young one, as soon
as it saw Fritz, sprang on his back, put its paws in his curls, and would
not let go. I at length got the ape from Fritz's back, and took it up in my
arms like a child. We found that it was too young to seek its own food,
and, as Fritz said he should like to take it home, we put it on Turk's
back. Turk did not at first like this, but we soon got him to bear the ape,
which held so tight by the hair on the dog's neck that it could not well
fall off. Fritz then led Turk with a string, that he might not stray out of
sight, or throw off his charge, which I think he would
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