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Nat the Naturalist: A Boy’s Adventures in the Eastern Seas
Chapter 27. Fresh Treasures
George Manville Fenn
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       _ CHAPTER TWENTY SEVEN. FRESH TREASURES
       Ebo set to work earnestly to finish the hut, binding down the palm leaves of the thatch with more long canes, which he cleverly threaded in and out, and afterwards secured their ends. Then he cut off the long ends of the bamboos so as to leave all tidy before commencing the sides.
       My uncle was as anxious as I was to go upon some expedition; but as there was no shelter to be obtained here, and it became more and more evident that we were upon an uninhabited island, he saw the necessity for having our boxes and stores under a roof.
       So we set manfully to work helping the black, cutting bamboos, bringing large palm leaves, fetching long rattan canes, and handing them to him; while, saving when he left off for meals, Ebo toiled like a slave, working with an industry that we should not have expected to find in an inhabitant of one of these sleepy isles.
       At last, though, he finished, and his childish delight seemed to know no bounds. He danced and shouted, ran in and out, walked round the hut, and then strutted up to us full of self-satisfaction, his tongue going all the while, and evidently feeling highly delighted at our smiles and words of praise.
       No time was lost in transferring our boxes and stores beneath the roof; and then, as it wanted quite three hours to sunset, my uncle proposed, by way of recompense for all our drudgery, that we should take our guns and see if we could not obtain a few specimens.
       Ebo looked delighted, and, without being told, obtained a short piece of bamboo ready for carrying the birds we shot.
       Then, taking his spear out of the canoe, he smiled to show how ready he was; but Uncle Dick took him by the arm and led him up to the door of the hut.
       "Put your spear there, as you did before, to keep off all visitors, Master Ebo," he said; and he accompanied his request with signs to express what he wished.
       Ebo understood him at once, and made as if to stick the spear in the ground before the door, but he stopped short and shook his head, ran a few yards, and peered in amongst the trees; turned round and shook his head again; ran in another direction and peeped about, coming back shaking his head again.
       Ebo's motions said as plainly as could be:
       "There is nobody here but ourselves," and as if to satisfy us he led the way to a high hill about a mile away, from whence we had a splendid view all but in one direction, where there lay a clump of mountains. Look which way we would there was nothing but rich plain and dense jungle, with occasional patches of park-like land. Not a sign was there of huts, and once more Ebo looked at us and shook his head, counting us afterwards in his own way--one, two, three, and then tossing his arms in the air.
       "We are in luck, Nat," said my uncle. "This island must swarm with natural history specimens, and he has brought us here because he thought it a good place; so now to make the best use of our time. Look out!"
       As he spoke he raised his gun and fired at a bird darting down a narrow rift between two rocks that looked as if they had been riven asunder.
       I thought he had missed it, but Ebo ran ahead and returned directly with a most lovely kingfisher in glorious plumage.
       "If we get nothing more in this island, Nat, I shall be satisfied," said my uncle as we gazed at the lovely creature which Ebo had brought; and seeing the satisfaction in our faces he indulged in another dance.
       "Yes," continued my uncle, patting Ebo's black shoulder, "you are a treasure, Ebo, and I see we shall be greatly in your debt. Now, Nat, we must not have a feather of that bird spoiled. I feel ready to go back on purpose to prepare it."
       It was indeed a lovely creature; but as I gazed upon its delicately beautiful tints I felt puzzled. It was of rich purple on the back, with azure-blue shoulders dashed and speckled with a lighter blue, while all the under parts were of a pure white, which seemed to throw out the rich colours of the back. But the great beauty of the specimen was its tail, which was long and had the two centre feathers continued almost without any plumes till the end, where they spread out like a couple of racket bats, making the little bird in all about a foot and a half long.
       I felt as if I should never tire of gazing at the beautiful specimen, and quite understood my uncle's feeling about wishing to make sure of it by preserving it at once.
       Just then, though, a large bird flew across, at which I fired, but it was too far distant, and the shots did no more than rattle about its feathers.
       "Did you see its great beak, uncle?" I said.
       "Yes, Nat, a hornbill. I daresay we shall find plenty of them here. They take the places in the East of the toucans of the West. But now, Nat, there is an easy shot for you--look! Ebo is pointing to it. There, seated on that twig. Now see he darts off after a fly and is back again. No, he is off once more. We have scared him."
       But by this time I had seen the bird, and taking quick aim as it hovered and snatched at a fly of some kind, I fired and brought it down, to find that I too had got a prize in the shape of a lovely little bee-eater, with plumage rich in green and blue, brown and black, while its tail was also rendered more beautiful by the extension of its central feathers in two long thin points.
       My uncle's gun spoke out again the next moment, the second barrel following quickly, and Ebo ran and picked up another of the lovely kingfishers, and one of a different kind with a rich coral-red beak, short tail, and its back beautifully barred with blue and black like the ornamental feathers in the wings of a jay.
       "That is a bee-eater you have shot, Nat, and a lovely thing too. Mine are all kingfishers."
       "There must be a little stream down in that hollow between those rocks, uncle," I replied.
       "No, Nat, I don't suppose there is," he said, smiling. "But why do you say that?"
       "Because of those kingfishers, uncle. There must be a stream or pool somewhere near."
       "I daresay there is, Nat; but not on account of these birds, my lad. They are dry kingfishers, Nat. They do not live upon fish, but upon beetles, butterflies, and moths, darting down and picking them off the ground without wetting a feather."
       "Why, how curious!" I said. "They have beaks just like the kingfishers at home."
       "Very much like them, Nat," he said; "but they catch no fish. But come, we must get back to the hut, or we shall never get our birds turned into skins before dark. Look out!"
       We fired so closely together that it sounded like one shot, and three more of the great pigeons fell heavily to the ground--part of a little flock that was passing over our head.
       Ebo seized them with a grin of delight, for he knew that these meant larder, and then hastening back we had just time to strip and prepare our skins before night fell, when, work being ended, the fire was relit, the kettle boiled, and a sort of tea-supper by moonlight, with the dark forest behind and the silvery sea before us, ended a very busy day. _
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本书目录

Chapter 1. Why I Went To My Uncle's
Chapter 2. First Thoughts Of Hunting
Chapter 3. How I Hunted The Lion In No-Man's-Land And What Followed
Chapter 4. The Remains Of Poor Polly
Chapter 5. How My Uncle And I Put Humpty Dumpty Together Again
Chapter 6. A Piece Of Deceit That Was Not Carried Out
Chapter 7. The Return Of The Wanderer
Chapter 8. I Find Myself A Brother Naturalist
Chapter 9. Uncle Dick's Boxes
Chapter 10. All Amongst The Bird Skins
Chapter 11. My Hopes
Chapter 12. Uncle Dick Says "Yes!"
Chapter 13. How I Learned To Shoot
Chapter 14. How To Manage A Boat
Chapter 15. Saying "Good-Bye!"
Chapter 16. Out On The Blue Water
Chapter 17. The Malay Kris In Strange Lands
Chapter 18. I Find The Black Ways Strange
Chapter 19. Our Very Black Friend
Chapter 20. Amongst Nature's Treasures
Chapter 21. Feeding In The Wilderness
Chapter 22. Company To Dinner
Chapter 23. How To Prepare Skins, And Go Fishing
Chapter 24. A Butterfly Hunt
Chapter 25. Why Ebony Would Not Say Good-Bye
Chapter 26. An Unknown Island
Chapter 27. Fresh Treasures
Chapter 28. A Bit Of A Scare
Chapter 29. A Strange Cry In The Woods
Chapter 30. A Curious Married Couple
Chapter 31. Lost In The Forest
Chapter 32. Another Night Horror
Chapter 33. My Earthquake
Chapter 34. Many Feet Of Unpleasantry
Chapter 35. Another Fishing Trip
Chapter 36. Ebo Satisfies Our Wants
Chapter 37. Beauties In Plume
Chapter 38. Ebo Does Not Approve Of New Guinea For Reasons That Appear
Chapter 39. Ebo's Song Of Triumph
Chapter 40. We Secure Fresh Treasures
Chapter 41. Our Terrible Losses
Chapter 42. An Experiment In Boat-Building
Chapter 43. Farewell To A Friend
Chapter 44. Home Again