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 I 52 WITH NATIVES IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC
 
 informed me that the boys were unwilling to go
 on, that they were afraid to go farther inland and
 were ready to throw their loads away. Later on I
 learned that two of the boys had tried to bribe
 some natives to show them the road back to the
 coast and leave me alone with the moli. I assembled
 the boys and made them a speech, saying that their
 loads were not too heavy nor the marches too long,
 that they were all free to return home, but would
 have to take the consequences, and that I and the
 moli would go on without them. If they liked, I
 said, they could throw away their tinned meats, I
 did not care, and the two bottles of grog were not
 meant for me, and we could easily spare those. I
 grasped the bottles and offered to smash them, but
 that was too much for the boys; half crying, they
 begged me not to do that: the bottles were not too
 heavy, and they would gladly carry them as far as
 I liked. Hesitatingly I allowed myself to be per-
 suaded, and kindly desisted from the work of de-
 struction. I had won, but I had lost confidence in
 my boys, and was careful not to put their patience
 and fidelity to any more tests, conscious as I was of
 how much depended on their goodwill. After this
 episode they accomplished a long and tiresome march,
 up and down through thick bush on slippery clay,
 quite willingly. In the evening we reached a few
 huts in a clearing at a height of about 1200 feet,
 and went into camp for the night.
 
 While cooking, we heard dismal howling and
 weeping from a neighbouring hut; it was a woman
 
 
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