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Benita
Notes
H.Rider Haggard
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       _
       Notes
       It may interest readers of this story to know that its author
       believes it to have a certain foundation in fact.
       It was said about five-and-twenty or thirty years ago that an
       adventurous trader, hearing from some natives in the territory
       that lies at the back of Quilimane, the legend of a great treasure
       buried in or about the sixteenth century by a party of Portuguese
       who were afterwards massacred, as a last resource attempted its
       discovery by the help of a mesmerist. According to this history
       the child who was used as a subject in the experiment, when in a
       state of trance, detailed the adventures and death of the unhappy
       Portuguese men and women, two of whom leapt from the point of a
       high rock into the Zambesi. Although he knew no tongue but
       English, this clairvoyant child is declared to have repeated in
       Portuguese the prayers these unfortunates offered up, and even to
       have sung the very hymns they sang. Moreover, with much other
       detail, he described the burial of the great treasure and its
       exact situation so accurately that the white man and the mesmerist
       were able to dig for and find the place where /it had been/--for
       the bags were gone, swept out by the floods of the river.
       Some gold coins remained, however, one of them a ducat of Aloysius
       Mocenigo, Doge of Venice. Afterwards the boy was again thrown into
       a trance (in all he was mesmerized eight times), and revealed
       where the sacks still lay; but before the white trader could renew
       his search for them, the party was hunted out of the country by
       natives whose superstitious fears were aroused, barely escaping
       with their lives.
       It should be added that, as in the following tale, the chief who
       was ruling there when the tragedy happened, declared the place to
       be sacred, and that if it were entered evil would befall his
       tribe. Thus it came about that for generations it was never
       violated, until at length his descendants were driven farther from
       the river by war, and from one of them the white man heard the
       legend. _