CHAPTER VIII - KARI AND THE QUICK-SAND
Though elephants are very unselfish
animals, they behave like human beings when brought
to the last extremity. The following adventure
will show you what I mean.
One day, Kari and Kopee and I went
to the river bank to help pull a big barge up the
river. The towmen could not pull the ropes hard
enough to make progress against the current. All
that they could do was to stand still without getting
ahead at all. So word was sent on to us and we
three went to help out. I harnessed Kari with
the tow rope. It was very amusing, as he had never
pulled a weight in his life. At first he pulled
very hard. The rope almost broke and the barge
swayed in the water, almost toppled, and then drifted
to its previous position. The swift current was
going against it and the people in the barge were shaking
their hands and swearing at us as they were afraid
that the vessel would capsize.
Kari did not care. After he had
pulled the barge about two hundred yards he stopped;
the rope slackened and then the current pulled against
us. The rope became taut again and the men shrieked
from the barge. When you tug a boat, you must
not jerk at the rope but pull it gently, so I urged
Kari to pull it smoothly. In the course of an
hour, he had actually drawn the boat in, and at the
end of our journey he had learned to pull evenly.
After that we went on playing on the
river bank. Kopee jumped off the elephant’s
back and ran along the shore. I urged Kari to
follow him, and as we kept on going, I lost all sense
of direction and trusted to the intelligence of the
animals. The monkey, however, had led us into
a trap. We had run into quick-sand and Kari began
to sink. Every time he tried to lift his feet
he seemed to go deeper into the mud and he was so
frightened that he tried to take hold of the monkey
with his trunk and step on him as something solid,
but Kopee chattered and rushed up a tree.
Then Kari swung his trunk around,
pulled down the mattress from his back, and putting
it on the ground tried to step on it. That did
not help, so he curled up his trunk behind to try to
get me to step on. Each time he made an effort
like that, however, he sank deeper into the mud.
I saw the trunk curling back and creeping up to me
like a python crawling up a hillside to coil around
its prey. There was no more trumpeting or calling
from the elephant, but a sinister silence through
which he was trying to reach me. He had come
to the end of his unselfishness. In order to
save himself, he was willing to step on me.
The monkey screamed from the tree-top
and I, jumping off the elephant’s back, fell
on the ground and ran. Kari kept on trumpeting
and calling for help, and by this time he was chest
deep in the mud. The rear of him had not sunk
so far, so he was on a slant which made it all the
more difficult for him to lift himself.
I ran off to the village and called
for help. By the time we got back with ropes
and planks, he was holding his trunk up in order to
breathe, as the mud was up to his chin. There
was only one thing to do, and that was to lift Kari
by his own weight, so we tied the rope to the tree
and flung it to him. He got it with his trunk
and pulled. The rope throbbed and sang like an
electric wire and the tree groaned with the tension,
but all that happened was that the elephant slipped
forward a little and his hind legs fell deeper into
the mud.
Now he was perfectly flat in quick-sand.
But something very interesting had taken place.
Now that he was holding on to the rope with all his
mortal strength we knew that he would not let go of
it, so it was easy to go near him and put planks under
him, as the hind part of his belly had not yet sunk
to the level of the mud. At last he stopped sinking,
but as we could not put the planks under his feet
it only meant that he would not go further down and
smother to death.
Now that his head was lifted and there
was an opening between him and the mud, the question
was how to lift the front part of his body so that
he could drag the rest of it out. Another elephant
had to be called in. It turned out to be Kari’s
mother who had been given to the neighboring king.
By the time she arrived, however, dusk had fallen
and nothing could be done. We trusted to God
and left him to his quick-sand for the night.
The next morning we found Kari in
the same position as the previous evening. He
had relaxed his hold on the rope but had not sunk
deeper. We had to put more planks all around him
but he now knew that he should not attack anyone because
we were trying to save him. After the planks
had been tested, his mother went up to him. She
put her trunk around his neck and started to lift him,
but he groaned with pain for he was being smothered.
He began to sink again and we just had time to put
some more planks between his chest and the mud.
We had also slipped a rope under him,
which some men in a boat near the river bank came
up and threw over his back. The hawser was made
into a loop around his body and the other end was tied
around the mother. Then she pulled with all her
might, and her strength was so great that his fore-quarters
were lifted up and his small legs dangled in the air.
He was pulled forward quite a distance, when the hawser
broke and his fore-legs fell on the plank. His
hind legs now were sinking and we were terribly frightened.
We felt as if we had lost him again.
The situation was not so bad as we
thought, however, as it was very easy to slip another
hawser under him. This time we made a double
loop around him, and also made him hold on to the rope
around the tree with his trunk. He was very tired,
but I urged him to obey me. And now with the
aid of his mother, he managed to lift the rear half
of his body and put first one leg and then the other
on the plank. A great shout of joy went through
the crowd as Kari walked on to solid ground.
That instant the monkey jumped down from the tree
and fell on Kari’s neck; he was very glad to
see his friend safe again. But Kari was in no
humor for anyone’s caresses and he shook Kopee
off. The first thing I did was to pull some branches
from a tree which Kari devoured hungrily. A hungry
elephant is not to be bothered by anyone.
I had learned my lesson. I would
no longer take my elephant anywhere and everywhere
at the behest of the monkey, for monkeys have no judgment.