CHAPTER X - KARI IN THE LUMBER YARD
Not long after this Kari was sent
to the lumber yards. It was very interesting
to see that he learned all the tricks of the lumber
trade in a few days. He would pull heavy logs
out of the forest into the open, lift the lighter
ones with his trunk and pile them up, one on top of
the other. He had such a good sense of symmetry
that his piles were always extremely neat.
Soon an older elephant came to help
him. Whenever there was a log which was too heavy
for Kari to lift, they would each take one end of
it and lift it on the lumber wagon. An elephant,
as you see, can do the work of a truck.
We had reached a stage in the history
of the world when motor engines did a large part of
the work of the jungle. The elephants would bring
the lumber from the forest and deposit it near these
engines where it would be cut into proper lengths and
then thrown out again to be piled up by the elephants.
The mechanics who ran these engines
ate meat and drank liquor. It is very strange
that when Western people come to the East, they do
not give up their expensive ways of living. Drinking
wine and eating meat is one thing in cold climates,
where one has to keep warm, but in a hot climate a
man is sure to go to pieces if he eats and drinks much.
Kari had no objection to wine drinking, but he did
not like meat-eating men any more than he liked meat-eating
tigers. He never hated them or feared them, simply
he somehow did not enjoy their company. But these
white engineers who came from afar did not know that
an elephant had a soul.
Kari always woke up at half past five
and then went to work. Toward noon I would bathe
him and put him in his shed. Early in the afternoon
he would begin to work again. Later on he ate
lots of rice of which he was very fond. In the
evening I would tie him up in his shed while I went
to sleep on a hammock outside.
One night, I heard a terrible trumpeting.
I jumped down from my hammock and went into Kari’s
shed, where I found two drunken engineers lighting
matches and throwing them at him. Kari, who was
afraid of fire, as all animals are, was trumpeting
angrily. I protested to the men, but they were
so drunk that they only swore at me and went on flinging
matches. Seeing that there was nothing else to
do, I loosened all his chains except one, and let him
stay there tied to the ground by one foot only.
An elephant’s chain is generally
driven about five or six feet into the ground and
is then covered with cement and earth. An elephant
can rarely break this kind of chain, but I was afraid
that the matches might set the shed on fire, and I
trusted Kari more than drunken men. I knew that
if the shed caught fire the elephant could break one
chain if he tried hard to escape. The night passed
without any further incident, however.
I must explain why animals are afraid
of fire. Fire, you see, is the one thing that
they can never fight. They are not afraid of
water, as most of them can swim, but if they are caught
in fire, they are generally burned to death.
For this reason they have built up a protective instinct
against fire. Whenever there is fire of any sort,
they run. As they have seen the jungle set on
fire from time to time for generations and generations,
the sight of fire frightens them more than anything
else. As long as they have inherited this fear
from their ancestors, it is very wise not to play
with fire in the presence of animals. If an animal
as powerful as an elephant were frightened by fire,
he would run mad and do the greatest amount of mischief.
One noon when we had suspended work
for the day, I tied Kari in his shed and lay down
in my hammock to rest. Toward late afternoon,
I heard the same terrible trumpeting that I had heard
before. The same thing had happened again.
The two engineers, being idle, had drunk liquor and
were trying to tease the animals nearby. The
shed had a thatched roof of straw. The walls were
of clay, but there was a lot of bamboo lying on the
floor. Kari was eating twigs, some of which happened
to have dry leaves.
I came up to the elephant, and seeing
what was going on, told the white men to stop teasing
him. They would not hear of it, however.
Just then I saw a flame rising from the leaves.
Kari raised his trunk and trumpeted fiercely.
As I was afraid that he would be burned to death,
I hastened to loosen his chain and with one terrible
trumpet he rushed out of the shed, trampling down
one of the drunken men and killing him instantly.
Kari then trumpeted more and more loudly, waving his
trunk and rushing madly around.
Realizing the danger we were in, I
went up a very heavy banyan tree out of Kari’s
reach and lay among the leaves. The first thing
he did was to go and put his foot on the automobile
of the chief engineer, which happened to be standing
outside of the shed. In a few minutes there was
nothing but a mass of twisted steel on the ground,
over which the elephant danced in anger. Then
he saw the chief engineer and two other men standing
on the porch of a bungalow. He rushed at them,
but they knew what it meant to have a mad elephant
about, and ran into the house. Kari then pulled
down part of the thatched roof of the bungalow with
his trunk, and finding no one there made straight for
two new trucks that had only been in use a fortnight
and broke them to pieces. Then he rushed at a
bull which was grazing in a field, and wound his trunk
around his neck. The bull dropped dead. In
a few moments Kari was out of sight.
For a fortnight no one heard anything
of him. I expected him to return to me, but he
never came back. Even to this day no one knows
what happened to him. Evidently those miserable
engineers had driven him out of his mind. In
his madness he must have gone back to the jungle and
by the time he recovered his senses was so lost in
its depths that he could not come back. When his
mind returns to him, an elephant can never remember
the road that he took in his insanity, and if he runs
very far into the jungle he may never come back because
the Spirit of the jungle seizes him. Kari’s
last impression of human beings must have been so terrible
that when the Spirit of the jungle asserted itself
in him, he allowed it to lure him away forever from
the habitations of men.
That is how it came about that I lost
my friend and brother, the elephant. Though as
an animal Kari is lost to me, my soul belongs to his
soul and we shall never forget each other.