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Specimens Of African Love
A Slave Coast Love-Story
Henry Theophilus Finck
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       _ Travelling a short distance northwest from Kamerun we reach the Slave Coast of West Africa, to which A.B. Ellis has devoted two interesting books, including chapters in the folklore of the Yoruba and Ewe-speaking peoples of this region. Among the tales recorded are two which illustrate African ideas regarding love. I copy the first verbatim from Ellis's book on the Yoruba:
       "There was a young maiden named Buje, the slender, whom
       all the men wanted. The rich wanted her, but she
       refused. Chiefs wanted her, and she refused. The King
       wanted her, and she still refused.
       "Tortoise came to the King and said to him, 'She whom
       you all want and cannot get, I will get. I will have
       her, I.' And the King said, 'If you succeed in having
       her, I will divide my palace into two halves and will
       give you one-half.'
       "One day Buje, the slender, took an earthen pot and
       went to fetch water. Tortoise, seeing this, took his
       hoe, and cleared the path that led to the spring. He
       found a snake in the grass, and killed it. Then he put
       the snake in the middle of the path.
       "When Buje, the slender, had filled her pot, she came
       back. She saw the snake in the path, and called out,
       'Hi! hi! Come and kill this snake.'
       "Tortoise ran up with his cutlass in his hand. He
       struck at the snake and wounded himself in the leg.
       "Then he cried out, 'Buje the slender, has killed me. I
       was cutting the bush, I was clearing the path for her.
       She called to me to kill the snake, but I have wounded
       myself in the leg. O Buje, the slender, Buje, the
       slender, take me upon your back and hold me close.'
       "He cried this many times, and at last Buje, the
       slender, took Tortoise and put him on her back. And
       then he slipped his legs down over her hips....
       "Next day, as soon as it was light, Tortoise went to
       the King. He said, 'Did I not tell you I should have
       Buje, the slender? Call all the people of the town to
       assemble on the fifth day, and you will hear what I
       have to say.'
       "When it was the fifth day, the King sent out his crier
       to call all the people together. The people came.
       Tortoise cried out, 'Everybody wanted Buje, the
       slender, and Buje refused everybody, but I have had
       her.'
       "The King sent a messenger, with his stick, to summon
       Buje, the slender. When she came the King said, 'We
       have heard that Tortoise is your husband; is it so?'
       "Buje, the slender, was ashamed, and could not answer.
       She covered her head with her cloth, and ran away into
       the bush.
       "And there she was changed into the plant called Buje." _