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 CHAPTER XIII
 
 AOBA
 
 NEXT day I landed in Aoba, at “Albert’s.” He was
 an American negro, who, after having been a stoker
 and sailor, had settled here as a coprah trader. His
 language was of the strangest, a mixture of biche la
 mar, negro French and English, and was very hard
 to understand. With the help of two native women
 he kept his house in good order, and he was
 decidedly one of the most decent colonists of the
 group, and tried to behave like a gentleman, which is
 more than can be said of some whites. He seemed
 to confirm the theory that the African is superior to
 the Melanesian. Albert sheltered me to the best of
 his ability, although I had to sleep in the open, under
 a straw roof, and his bill of fare included items which
 neither my teeth nor my stomach could manage, such
 as an octopus. There were several other negroes
 in Aoba; one was Marmaduke, an enormous
 Senegalese, who had grown somewhat simple, and
 lived like the natives, joining the Suque and dancing
 at their festivals. He occasionally came to dinner at
 Albert’s; this was always amusing, 'as Albert thought
 himself far superior to Marmaduke, and corrected
 his mistakes with still more comical impossibilities.
 
 Both were most polite and perfectly sober. The
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