<SPAN name="chapter_9"></SPAN><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page95" title="95"> </SPAN>
<h2><span class="chapter_no" title="nine">IX</span><br/>DECORATION DAY IN THE CANNIBAL ISLANDS</h2>
<p class="first_paragraph">“<span class="first_word">Uncle Munch</span>,” said Diavolo as he clambered
up into the old warrior’s lap, “I
don’t suppose you could tell us a story about Decoration
Day could you?”</p>
<p>“I think I might try,” said Mr. Munchausen,
puffing thoughtfully upon his cigar and making a
ring with the smoke for Angelica to catch upon her
little thumb. “I might try—but it will all depend
upon whether you want me to tell you about Decoration
Day as it is celebrated in the United States,
or the way a band of missionaries I once knew in
the Cannibal Islands observed it for twenty years
or more.”</p>
<p>“Why can’t we have both stories?” said Angelica.
“I think that would be the nicest way.
Two stories is twice as good as one.”</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t know,” returned Mr. Munchausen.
“You see the trouble is that in the first instance
I could tell you only what a beautiful thing
it is that every year the people have a day set apart
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page96" title="96"> </SPAN>upon which they especially honour the memory of
the noble fellows who lost their lives in defence of
their country. I’m not much of a poet and it takes
a poet to be able to express how beautiful and
grand it all is, and so I should be afraid to try
it. Besides it might sadden your little hearts to
have me dwell upon the almost countless number
of heroes who let themselves be killed so that their
fellow-citizens might live in peace and happiness.
I’d have to tell you about hundreds and hundreds
of graves scattered over the battle fields that no
one knows about, and which, because no one knows
of them, are not decorated at all, unless Nature
herself is kind enough to let a little dandelion or
a daisy patch into the secret, so that they may grow
on the green grass above these forgotten, unknown
heroes who left their homes, were shot down and
never heard of afterwards.”</p>
<p>“Does all heroes get killed?” asked Angelica.</p>
<p>“No,” said Mr. Munchausen. “I and a great
many others lived through the wars and are living
yet.”</p>
<p>“Well, how about the missionaries?” said Diavolo.
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page97" title="97"> </SPAN>“I didn’t know they had Decoration Day in
the Cannibal Islands.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t either until I got there,” returned the
Baron. “But they have and they have it in July
instead of May. It was one of the most curious
things I ever saw and the natives, the men who
used to be cannibals, like it so much that if the
missionaries were to forget it they’d either remind
them of it or have a celebration of their own. I
don’t know whether I ever told you about my first
experience with the cannibals—did I?”</p>
<p>“I don’t remember it, but if you had I would
have,” said Diavolo.</p>
<p>“So would I,” said Angelica. “I remember
most everything you say, except when I want you
to say it over again, and even then I haven’t forgotten
it.”</p>
<p>“Well, it happened this way,” said the Baron.
“It was when I was nineteen years old. I sort of
thought at that time I’d like to be a sailor, and as
my father believed in letting me try whatever I
wanted to do I took a position as first mate of a
steam brig that plied between San Francisco and
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page98" title="98"> </SPAN>Nepaul, taking San Francisco canned tomatoes to
Nepaul and bringing Nepaul pepper back to San
Francisco, making several dollars both ways. Perhaps
I ought to explain to you that Nepaul pepper
is red, and hot; not as hot as a furnace fire, but
hot enough for your papa and myself when we
order oysters at a club and have them served so cold
that we think they need a little more warmth to
make them palatable and digestible. You are not
yet old enough to know the meaning of such words
as palatable and digestible, but some day you will
be and then you’ll know what your Uncle means.
At any rate it was on the return voyage from
Nepaul that the water tank on the <em>Betsy S.</em> went
stale and we had to stop at the first place we
could to fill it up with fresh water. So we sailed
along until we came in sight of an Island and the
Captain appointed me and two sailors a committee
of three to go ashore and see if there was a spring
anywhere about. We went, and the first thing we
knew we were in the midst of a lot of howling,
hungry savages, who were crazy to eat us. My
companions were eaten, but when it came to my
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page99" title="99"> </SPAN>turn I tried to reason with the chief. ‘Now
see here, my friend,’ said I, ‘I’m perfectly willing
to be served up at your breakfast, if I
can only be convinced that you will enjoy eating
me. What I don’t want is to have my life
wasted!’ ‘That’s reasonable enough,’ said he.
‘Have you got a sample of yourself along for me
to taste?’ ‘I have,’ I replied, taking out a bottle
of Nepaul pepper, that by rare good luck I happened
to have in my pocket. ‘That is a portion of
my left foot powdered. It will give you some idea
of what I taste like,’ I added. ‘If you like that,
you’ll like me. If you don’t, you won’t.’”</p>
<p>“That was fine,” said Diavolo. “You told pretty
near the truth, too, Uncle Munch, because you are
hot stuff yourself, ain’t you?”</p>
<p>“I am so considered, my boy,” said Mr. Munchausen.
“The chief took a teaspoonful of the pepper
down at a gulp, and let me go when he recovered.
He said he guessed I wasn’t quite his style,
and he thought I’d better depart before I set fire to
the town. So I filled up the water bag, got into the
row-boat, and started back to the ship, but the
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page100" title="100"> </SPAN><em>Betsy S.</em> had gone and I was forced to row all the
way to San Francisco, one thousand, five hundred
and sixty-two miles distant. The captain and crew
had given us all up for lost. I covered the distance
in six weeks, living on water and Nepaul
pepper, and when I finally reached home, I told my
father that, after all, I was not so sure that I liked
a sailor’s life. But I never forgot those cannibals
or their island, as you may well imagine. They
and their home always interested me hugely and I
resolved if the fates ever drove me that way again,
I would go ashore and see how the people were getting
on. The fates, however, were a long time in
drawing me that way again, for it was not until
July, ten years ago that I reached there the second
time. I was off on a yachting trip, with an English
friend, when one afternoon we dropped anchor off
that Cannibal Island.</p>
<p>“‘Let’s go ashore,’ said I. ‘What for?’ said
my host; and then I told him the story and we went,
and it was well we did so, for it was then and there
that I discovered the new way the missionaries had
of celebrating Decoration Day.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page101" title="101"> </SPAN>“No sooner had we landed than we noticed that
the Island had become civilised. There were
churches, and instead of tents and mud-hovels,
beautiful residences appeared here and there,
through the trees. ‘I fancy this isn’t the island,’
said my host. ‘There aren’t any cannibals about
here.’ I was about to reply indignantly, for I was
afraid he was doubting the truth of my story, when
from the top of a hill, not far distant, we heard
strains of music. We went to see whence it came,
and what do you suppose we saw? Five hundred
villainous looking cannibals marching ten abreast
along a fine street, and, cheering them from the
balconies of the houses that fronted on the highway,
were the missionaries and their friends and their
children and their wives.</p>
<p>“‘This can’t be the place, after all,’ said my
host again.</p>
<p>“‘Yes it is,’ said I, ‘only it has been converted.
They must be celebrating some native festival.’
Then as I spoke the procession stopped and the
head missionary followed by a band of beautiful
girls, came down from a platform and placed garlands
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page102" title="102"> </SPAN>of flowers and beautiful wreaths on the shoulders
and heads of those reformed cannibals. In
less than an hour every one of the huge black fellows
was covered with roses and pinks and fragrant
flowers of all kinds, and then they started on parade
again. It was a fine sight, but I couldn’t understand
what it was all done for until that night,
when I dined with the head missionary—and what
do you suppose it was?”</p>
<p>“I give it up,” said Diavolo, “maybe the missionaries
thought the cannibals didn’t have enough
clothes on.”</p>
<p>“I guess I can’t guess,” said Angelica.</p>
<p>“They were celebrating Decoration Day,” said
Mr. Munchausen. “They were strewing flowers on
the graves of departed missionaries.”</p>
<div id="illo08" class="illo">
<SPAN href="images/illo08.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/illo08-thumb.jpg" width-obs="300" height-obs="412" alt="A man is putting a flower necklace on a 'savage'" /></SPAN>
<p class="caption">“They were celebrating Decoration Day …
strewing flowers on the graves of departed
missionaries.” <span class="illo_ch">Chapter IX.</span></p>
</div>
<p>“You didn’t tell us about any graves,” said
Diavolo.</p>
<p>“Why certainly I did,” said the Baron. “The
cannibals themselves were the only graves those
poor departed missionaries ever had. Every one of
those five hundred savages was the grave of a missionary,
my dears, and having been converted, and <!-- Original location of illo08 -->
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page103" title="103"> </SPAN>taught that it was not good to eat their fellow-men,
they did all in their power afterwards to show their
repentance, keeping alive the memory of the men
they had treated so badly by decorating themselves
on memorial day—and one old fellow, the savagest
looking, but now the kindest-hearted being in the
world, used always to wear about his neck a huge
sign, upon which he had painted in great black
letters:</p>
<div id="fig01" class="fig">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig01.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="285" alt="" />
<p class="offscreen">HERE LIES<br/>
JOHN THOMAS WILKINS,<br/>
SAILOR.<br/>
DEPARTED THIS LIFE, MAY 24TH, 1861.<br/>
HE WAS A MAN OF SPLENDID TASTE.</p>
</div>
<p>“The old cannibal had eaten Wilkins and later
when he had been converted and realised that he
himself was the grave of a worthy man, as an expiation
he devoted his life to the memory of John
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page104" title="104"> </SPAN>Thomas Wilkins, and as a matter of fact, on the
Cannibal Island Decoration Day he would lie flat
on the floor all the day, groaning under the weight
of a hundred potted plants, which he placed upon
himself in memory of Wilkins.”</p>
<p>Here Mr. Munchausen paused for breath, and
the twins went out into the garden to try to imagine
with the aid of a few practical experiments how a
cannibal would look with a hundred potted plants
adorning his person.</p>
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