to us from the town, into which
had come a small crowd of natives who were eagerly following three or 
four figures, jostling each other to get a better view. It soon became 
plain that a young man led the way, and that after him came three of 
whom I guessed the central person to be Mwezi. I think he was the 
oldest native I have ever seen, bent, shrivelled, and stiff-jointed, but 
with keen dark eyes which, a little later, fixed themselves inquiringly 
on my face and then clouded with acute disappointment. On either side 
his sons helped him with a hand beneath his arm-pits, and he himself 
walked by means of a great stick. The crowd of hangers-on stopped 
respectfully below, but these four climbed up to the dais. A stool was 
brought for the old man, but at first he would not sit. He stood there, 
staring at me and shaking his head. 'It is not he,' he said, 'it is not he. 
Yet he is like, very like. But it is not he.' 
"I was still perplexed at all this, but by this time a little amused. 
Nevertheless I hid that, for the old fellow was so plainly disappointed. 
"'Come, father,' I said. 'I am very sorry, but will you not explain? 
Perhaps it is a brother of mine whom you have seen. Seat yourself and 
tell me about it.' 
"He did not seem at once to comprehend, but when his sons had 
persuaded him to sit, he made a peremptory motion with his stick 
towards the old councillor who had spoken before. This individual 
glanced at the chief for permission, and having received it, told me this 
story at considerable length. 
"He said that, very many years before, in the time of the late king, the 
village had been one day thrown into a state of great excitement by the 
advent of a stranger. This had been Mwezi, at the time a man of middle 
age. He had come from the south and west--from Central Africa, that 
is--and he had said that he was seeking a white man whom it had been 
shown him he should find in that village. Pressed for details, he 
announced that he had come from a town far away by a wide river 
where there were great falls over whose rocks the water thundered 
night and day in a perpetual cloud of spray. One night he had awakened 
in his hut, and had seen a white man standing before him dressed in a 
black robe, a string of beads, and carrying a book. Behind the white
man he could see, as it were, the vision of a town, a river, a 
precipice--in short, what he now saw to have been Mtakatifuni. The 
figure had beckoned him solemnly, and he had sat up in his bed in fear. 
It had beckoned again, and had then pointed north and east, and at that 
the vision had died away before the startled sleeper's eyes. But Mwezi 
understood. In his mind there had been no question as to what he must 
do. In the dawn he had risen, said good-bye to his wife and family, and 
set out. For two years he had journeyed, wandering from place to place, 
scarcely knowing whither he went save that it was always north and 
east. The very wild beasts had respected him, and men, seeing the 
vision in his eyes, had withheld their hands from him. At length, then, 
he had reached Mtakatifuni. There, as always, he had inquired for his 
white man, and, hearing that no white man had ever been there but 
convinced that it was the place of his dream, he sat down to wait. He 
had grown old waiting; had married, and had begotten sons and 
daughters. Now he was too old to move; all but too old to live; but still 
he waited. Still he believed he would see his white man again before he 
died; indeed, he could not die until he had seen. My coming had 
seemed to the whole place the fulfilment of his vision, but I was not the 
man. Mwezi was sure of that and no one doubted him. And maybe, 
now, added the councillor, he would never see him. That was all. 
"Now I had been long enough in Africa to set little store by native 
dreams as a rule. The affair, then, seemed to me pathetic rather than 
interesting. 
"My eyes kept straying to the old fellow while the story was being told 
me, and I marvelled to think of the simplicity of his faith, the weariness 
of his journey into the unknown, and the tenacity with which he had 
clung to his obsession. That this man should have given his whole life 
to such a quest,    
    
		
	
	
	Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
	 	
	
	
	    Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the 
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.