Read Allan and the Ice Gods Online
Authors: H. Rider Haggard
rock. “Now tell me, O People—what is your will with me and mine?”
Then out of the shadows answered the piping voice of N’gae the
Diviner, the Priest, the Weaver of spells, saying:
“This is our will, Chief: That you choose for sacrifice one of your
household that the gods of our fathers may smell the blood and lift
from off us the curse that has been brought upon us by Laleela, the
Witch-from-the-Sea, whom against your oath you have taken to wife.”
“On that matter I have answered you already,” cried Wi across the
gulf, “but let it be. Now do you, O People, put up your prayer to your
gods, and when that prayer is finished, if to it no answer comes, I
will name the sacrifice.”
Then N’gae in his thin, piping voice began to pray to the gods out of
the shadows:
“O Ice-dwellers,” he said, “ye whom our fathers have worshipped from
of old, hearken to our tale. A while ago, he who is our chief made new
laws, and because the women among us were very few, decreed that no
man should take more than one wife. Also he swore that he himself
would keep his own law, and should he break it, he called down your
curse upon his head and upon those of all the tribe.
“O ye ancient gods, there rose out of the sea a very fair witch whom
this chief of ours has taken to wife, breaking his oath. Therefore the
curse that he created in your names is fallen upon us; therefore the
seasons have changed, the seals and the fish do not come, there are no
fowl and no deer in the woods, and where there should be grass and
flowers, there is naught but ice and snow. Therefore, too, we starve
and die and must fill ourselves with the flesh of our own children
because you, O gods, are wroth with us.
“Now hearken, O ye gods. It has come to us from the former days,
father telling the tale to son through many generations, that in the
far past such evils have happened to those who begat us, and are now
forgotten. For then, too, you were wroth with us because of the
wickedness of those who ruled over us, turning their backs on you, ye
gods. Yet afterward that wrath of yours was appeased by a sacrifice
chosen from among the household of the chief, and thus the curse was
lifted from us, and again we were full of food. But never did any
chief of ours sin so greatly against you as does this Wi who rules
over us to-day and who is so mighty a man that none of us may stand
against him to fight and kill him. Thus has he sinned, O ye gods from
of old. Not only has he broken his oath, but, led of the Witch-from-the-Sea, he has rejected you and reviled you, saying that ye are no
gods, but devils, and that he worships another power without a name,
to whose feet he has been led by the magic of the Witch-from-the-Sea.
Therefore we, your servants from the beginning, have made known and
declared to him that no common sacrifice will satisfy his sin, but
that the blood to be shed must be that of one of his own family, aye,
the blood of a wife, or that of his son. Such is the case that we lay
before ye, O ye gods, we, your servants of old. Now let Wi the mighty
man, our chief who rejects you, make answer to it if he is able. And
then let the sacrifice be offered that your curse may be lifted from
off us, and that we who perish with cold and hunger, may live again.”
The piping voice of N’gae died and for a while there was silence.
Then, standing on a rock, Wi made answer:
“O ye Ice-dwellers whom once I worshipped as good gods, but whom now I
know to be devils and bearers of evil, hear my words. Your priest said
that I have sworn an oath, and it is so. Yet he is a liar, for that
oath I have not broken. True it is that a curse has fallen upon us
because the seasons have changed their course, yet that curse began to
fall ere ever the woman whom they name Witch-from-the-Sea set foot
upon our shore. Now the tribe demands a sacrifice of blood to be named
by me from among my household, believing that, by virtue of this shed
blood, the curse will be lifted from them and spring and summer will
return as aforetime, bringing plenty.
“O ye Ice-dwellers, that sacrifice is ready to be offered. /I, Wi, am
that sacrifice!/ I, Wi, name myself as the victim whose blood must
flow. Yet first, ere I fall upon my spear, or stretch out my throat to
the Priest, I make prayer to that which is above both you and me. Hear
me now, O Power without a name, O Power in whom I have learned to
trust, is it your will that I should die as an offering to these
devils, the Dwellers in the ice? Answer, for I am ready. The people
are in misery; they are mad. I blame them not, I into whose hand they
were given to feed and guide. If by the shedding of my blood their
woes can be washed away, then let it be outpoured. Judge then, O
Power, between me and the people, for whom I have laboured vainly, and
the evil gods they worship who rejoice in misery and desire death.
Judge, O Power without a name. Turn the hearts of these men, if they
can be turned, and break the bonds that bind them. But if this may not
be, if, having heard me, still the people desire sacrifice, or by my
blood their miseries can be washed away, then let me die for them.”
Thus prayed Wi to the Strength that dwelt above and to the folk whom
he had cherished here upon the earth, asking for no sign nor for any
vengeance, putting up no plea for pity, yet hoping that this Strength
might find a way to turn them from their bloody purpose, so that no
longer in the name of their gods they should demand the life of him or
his. As he prayed, the light of the dying sun faded from him standing
there in the bay of the cliff, so that his last words were spoken out
of the deep gloom, while the light of the rising moon grew and
gathered upon the glacier’s face and upon the savage horde beneath who
stared up toward him upon the rock.
He ceased, and for a while there was a great silence, and through that
silence there came home to the heart of Wi the Hunter, Wi the wild
man, knowledge that he played his part in a war of gods, yes, in the
eternal fight between the Evil and the Good. Suddenly he knew that
those Ice-dwellers whom the people worshipped, as once he had done,
were naught but the evil in their own hearts given form and name, and
that the Unknown One whom now he worshipped was the Good in their
hearts, and his heart of which Laleela had opened the doors so that it
might enter there, the Good which now he saw and felt but which as yet
they did not understand. Which, then, would prevail, he wondered to
himself—yes, wondered calmly, even coldly, as though he judged
another’s case, and in that great wonder all fear left him, and with
it the thought of the agony of death and of the loves that he must
leave behind.
He looked down upon the people and, by the shimmering moonlight,
watched their faces. They were disturbed; they began to whisper one to
another, they grew sad-eyed and some of the women wept. He caught
snatches of their talk.
“He has been kind to us,” they said; “he has done all that man can do;
he is not the Lord of the seasons, he does not cause the birds to fly
or the seals to swim. Why should he not take another wife if it
pleases him? Can the gods demand his blood or that of his wives or
son? Why should he be sacrificed, leaving us leaderless?”
Such were the words that they murmured one to another.
“The Good conquers, the Ill goes down,” thought Wi, still judging of
the case as though it were not his own.
But N’gae, the Weaver of Spells, who hated him, also saw and heard. He
ran out from among them, he stood facing them with his back to the ice
slope; he cried in his thin, piercing voice:
“Hear me, the priest of the Ice-gods, as were my fathers before me;
hear me, ye people. Wi, the oath-breaker, Wi through whom the curse
has fallen on you, pleads with you for his life. If he is afraid to
die, then let him give another to the gods. Let him give Aaka the
proud, or the white Witch-from-the-Sea, or Foh his son. Did we ask for
his blood? Would we kill him, the chief? Not so. If he dies, it is by
his own choice and of his own will. Therefore, let not your hearts be
softened by his pleadings. Remember what he is. Out of his own mouth
he has declared himself a reviler of the gods. He has set up another
god and in their very presence makes prayer to it, naming them devils.
Surely for this he is worthy of death. Surely because of this
blasphemy the gods will be avenged. Yet we seek not his life. Let him
give to us one of the others; let him give to us that white Witch-from-the-Sea that we may bind her and cause her to die, here and now.
I tell you, People, I who am the priest and to whom the gods talk,
that if you go hence having robbed them of their sacrifice, you shall
starve. Yes, you shall die as many of us have died already, of
sickness and want and cold. More, you shall eat one another and kill
one another till at last none is left. Will you starve? Will you see
your children devoured? Look!” and he turned, pointing behind him at
the shadows which the moonlight caused to appear in the deep clear
ice, “The gods are moving; they gather, waiting for their feast. Will
you dare to rob them of their feast? Do so and you shall become, every
one of you, like that dead one who flies before the Sleeper. Do you
not see them moving?”
Now a groaning cry went up from the people.
“We see them! We see them!”
“And will you rob them of their feast?” asked the fierce-faced N’gae
again.
“Nay,” they shouted, taking fire. “Let the sacrifice be sacrificed.
Let us see the red blood flow! Let the Ice-gods whom our fathers
worshipped smell the red blood!”
“Wi, you have your answer,” piped N’gae, as the shouting died. “Now
come hither and die if you dare. Or, if you dare not, then send us one
of your household.”
Aaka, holding Foh by the hand, Laleela, Pag, Moananga and his wife
clustered together as though to take counsel. Wi prepared to descend
from his rock, perchance to fall upon his spear, perchance to give
himself up to be butchered by the people and their priest.
Then it was that something, at first none knew what, began to happen
that caused all to stand silent, each in his place, like men that had
been smitten to stone. From high up in the air, although no wind blew,
there came a moaning sound, as if out of sight countless great-winged
birds were flying. The air seemed to change; it grew more icy cold,
men’s breath froze upon it. The shadows in the ice shrank and grew in
the wavering moonbeams. They advanced; they flitted back quickly and
departed, only to appear again here and there, high above where they
had been.
The hairy man who stood before the Sleeper seemed to move a little.
Surely they saw him move!
The earth trembled as though it were filled with dread, and deeper and
deeper grew the silence, till, suddenly, it was broken by an awful
crack like to that of the fiercest thunder. As its echoes died away,
out of the bowels of the ice rushed the Sleeper and he whom it
appeared to hunt. Yea, the white-tusked Sleeper rushed like a charging
bull; it sped forward like a stone from a sling. The frozen man was
thrown far and vanished, but the mighty Sleeper fell full on N’gae the
priest who still stood staring upward, crushing him to powder, and
passing on, ploughed a red path through the folk beyond.
Again for a moment there was silence, and in that silence Wi said,
speaking out of the darkness as one who dreams:
“It would seem that the Ice-gods have taken their sacrifice!”
As the words died upon his lips, with an awful rending sound,
companioned by whirlwinds, the great glacier moved forward in a slow
and deadly march. It advanced down the valley, thrusting rocks in
front of it, heaving itself into waves like a tumultuous sea, digging
up the solid ground while before it great boulders leapt and danced.
The boulders danced through the people, and ice flowed over them. Yes,
as they turned to fly, it flowed over them, so that presently, where
they had been, there was nothing but a deep sea of tumbled, heaving
ice that travelled toward the beach.
Wi leapt from his rock. With those of his house, he huddled further
back into the little bay of the mountain side, and there, protected by
the walls of the cliff, watched the river of ice grind and thunder
past them. How long did they watch? None ever knew. They saw it flow.
They saw it creep into the sea and there break off in sharp-topped
hills of ice. Then, as suddenly as it had begun to move, it stopped
and the night was as the night had been, only now the valley of the
gods was a valley of ice, and where the glacier had been were slopes
and walls of smooth black rock.
When all was over, Wi spoke to the little company who clung to him,
saying:
“The Ice-gods have given birth. The old devil-gods have taken a great
sacrifice of all who served them, but that which I and another worship
has heard our prayer and preserved us alive. Let us go back to the