[Typee by Herman Melville]@TWC D-Link bookTypee CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR 29/39
There he was, all by himself, seated upon the broken canoe--the natives grouped around him at a distance, and eyeing him more and more fixedly.
'It is getting late: said Jimmy, who was standing behind the rest.
'Nukuheva is far off, and I cannot cross the Happar country by night.
You see how it is;--if you come along with me, all will be well; if you do not, depend upon it, neither of you will ever escape.' 'There is no help for it,' said Toby, at last, with a heavy heart, 'I will have to trust you,' and he came out from the shadow of the little shrine, and cast a long look up the valley. 'Now keep close to my side,' said the sailor, 'and let us be moving quickly.' Tinor and Fayaway here appeared; the kindhearted old woman embracing Toby's knees, and giving way to a flood of tears; while Fayaway, hardly less moved, spoke some few words of English she had learned, and held up three fingers before him--in so many days he would return. At last Jimmy pulled Toby out of the crowd, and after calling to a young Typee who was standing by with a young pig in his arms, all three started for the mountains. 'I have told them that you are coming back again,' said the old fellow, laughing, as they began the ascent, 'but they'll have to wait a long time.' Toby turned, and saw the natives all in motion--the girls waving their tappas in adieu, and the men their spears.
As the last figure entered the grove with one arm raised, and the three fingers spread, his heart smote him. As the natives had at last consented to his going, it might have been, that some of them, at least, really counted upon his speedy return; probably supposing, as indeed he had told them when they were coming down the valley, that his only object in leaving them was to procure the medicines I needed.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|