10 AFRICAN GAME TRAILS 



the interior where ordinary white settlers cannot live, in 

 which it would be wise to settle immigrants from India, and 

 there are many positions in other regions which it is to the 

 advantage of everybody that the Indians should hold, be- 

 cause there is as yet no sign that sufficient numbers of white 

 men are willing to hold them, while the native blacks, 

 although many of them do fairly well in unskilled labor, are 

 not yet competent to do the higher tasks which now fall to 

 the share of the Goanese, and Moslem and non-Moslem 

 Indians. The small merchants who deal with the natives, 

 for instance, and most of the minor railroad officials, belong 

 to these latter classes. I was amused, by the way, at one 

 bit of native nomenclature in connection with the Goanese. 

 Many of the Goanese are now as dark as most of the other 

 Indians; but they are descended in the male line from the 

 early Portuguese adventurers and conquerors, who were the 

 first white men ever seen by the natives of this coast. Ac- 

 cordingly to this day some of the natives speak even of the 

 dark-skinned descendants of the subjects of King Henry the 

 Navigator as "the whites," designating the Europeans spe- 

 cifically as English, Germans, or the like; just as in out-of- 

 the-way nooks in the far Northwest one of our own red men 

 will occasionally be found who still speaks of Americans and 

 Englishmen as "Boston men" and "King George's men." 



One of the government farms was being run by an edu- 

 cated colored man from Jamaica; and we were shown much 

 courtesy by a colored man from our own country who was 

 practising as a doctor. No one could fail to be impressed 

 with the immense advance these men represented as com- 

 pared with the native negro; and indeed to an American, 

 who must necessarily think much of the race problem at 

 home, it is pleasant to be made to realize in vivid fashion 

 the progress the American negro has made, by comparing 

 him with the negro who dwells in Africa untouched, or but 

 lightly touched, by white influence. 



In such a community as one finds in Mombasa or Nairobi 

 one continually runs across quiet, modest men whose lives 



