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 62 WITH NATIVES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC
 
 shrewd eyes and a big mouth, apparently quite happy
 in civilization, and devoted to George. He was one
 of the few natives who openly admitted his liking for
 human flesh, and rapturously described its incom-
 parable tenderness, whiteness and delicacy. A year
 ago, when visiting his village, he had been incon-
 solable because he had come a day late for a cannibal
 feast, and had blamed his father bitterly for not having
 saved a piece for him. Aside from this ghoulish pro-
 pensity, Bourbaki was a thoroughly nice fellow, oblig-
 ing, reliable and as happy as a child at the prospect
 of seeing his father again. We expected good service
 and help in recruiting from him, and promised him
 ample head-money.
 
 Bourbaki had run away without the permission of
 his chief, who was furious at the loss of his best man,
 and had given orders to kill the recruiter, a brother-
 in-la'w of George. Some natives had ambushed and
 shot at them while entering the whale-boat; the white
 had received several wounds, and a native woman
 had been killed. The boat pulled away rapidly.
 Bourbaki laughed, and, indeed, by this time the little
 incident was quite forgotten, as its only victim had
 been a woman.
 
 The morning was damp and dull. The hills came
 down to the sea in slopes of grey-green, the shore
 was a soft brown, and the rocks lay in dark patches on
 the beach, separated from the greyish-green of the
 sea by the white line of the breakers. The hollow
 sound of the dynamite explosions glided along the
 slopes and was swallowed in distant space.
 
 
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