By
H. Rider Haggard
Sir Henry Curtis, as everybody acquainted
with him knows, is one of the most hospitable men
on earth. It was in the course of the enjoyment
of his hospitality at his place in Yorkshire the other
day that I heard the hunting story which I am now
about to transcribe. Many of those who read it
will no doubt have heard some of the strange rumours
that are flying about to the effect that Sir Henry
Curtis and his friend Captain Good, R.N., recently
found a vast treasure of diamonds out in the heart
of Africa, supposed to have been hidden by the Egyptians,
or King Solomon, or some other antique people.
I first saw the matter alluded to in a paragraph in
one of the society papers the day before I started
for Yorkshire to pay my visit to Curtis, and arrived,
needless to say, burning with curiosity; for there
is something very fascinating to the mind in the idea
of hidden treasure. When I reached the Hall, I
at once asked Curtis about it, and he did not deny
the truth of the story; but on my pressing him to
tell it he would not, nor would Captain Good, who
was also staying in the house.
“You would not believe me if
I did,” Sir Henry said, with one of the hearty
laughs which seem to come right out of his great lungs.
“You must wait till Hunter Quatermain comes;
he will arrive here from Africa to-night, and I am
not going to say a word about the matter, or Good
either, until he turns up. Quatermain was with
us all through; he has known about the business for
years and years, and if it had not been for him we
should not have been here to-day. I am going to
meet him presently.”
I could not get a word more out of
him, nor could anybody else, though we were all dying
of curiosity, especially some of the ladies. I
shall never forget how they looked in the drawing-room
before dinner when Captain Good produced a great rough
diamond, weighing fifty carats or more, and told
them that he had many larger than that. If ever
I saw curiosity and envy printed on fair faces, I
saw them then.
It was just at this moment that the
door was opened, and Mr. Allan Quatermain announced,
whereupon Good put the diamond into his pocket, and
sprang at a little man who limped shyly into the room,
convoyed by Sir Henry Curtis himself.
“Here he is, Good, safe and
sound,” said Sir Henry, gleefully. “Ladies
and gentlemen, let me introduce you to one of the oldest
hunters and the very best shot in Africa, who has
killed more elephants and lions than any other man
alive.”
Everybody turned and stared politely
at the curious-looking little lame man, and though
his size was insignificant, he was quite worth staring
at. He had short grizzled hair, which stood about
an inch above his head like the bristles of a brush,
gentle brown eyes, that seemed to notice everything,
and a withered face, tanned to the colour of mahogany
from exposure to the weather. He spoke, too, when
he returned Good’s enthusiastic greeting, with
a curious little accent, which made his speech noticeable.
It so happened that I sat next to
Mr. Allan Quatermain at dinner, and, of course, did
my best to draw him; but he was not to be drawn.
He admitted that he had recently been a long journey
into the interior of Africa with Sir Henry Curtis
and Captain Good, and that they had found treasure,
and then politely turned the subject and began to ask
me questions about England, where he had never been
before that is, since he came to years
of discretion. Of course, I did not find this
very interesting, and so cast about for some means
to bring the conversation round again.
Now, we were dining in an oak-panelled
vestibule, and on the wall opposite to me were fixed
two gigantic elephant tusks, and under them a pair
of buffalo horns, very rough and knotted, showing that
they came off an old bull, and having the tip of one
horn split and chipped. I noticed that Hunter
Quatermain’s eyes kept glancing at these trophies,
and took an occasion to ask him if he knew anything
about them.
“I ought to,” he answered,
with a little laugh; “the elephant to which
those tusks belonged tore one of our party right in
two about eighteen months ago, and as for the buffalo
horns, they were nearly my death, and were the end
of a servant of mine to whom I was much attached.
I gave them to Sir Henry when he left Natal some months
ago;” and Mr. Quatermain sighed and turned to
answer a question from the lady whom he had taken
down to dinner, and who, needless to say, was also
employed in trying to pump him about the diamonds.
Indeed, all round the table there
was a simmer of scarcely suppressed excitement, which,
when the servants had left the room, could no longer
be restrained.
“Now, Mr. Quatermain,”
said the lady next him, “we have been kept in
an agony of suspense by Sir Henry and Captain Good,
who have persistently refused to tell us a word of
this story about the hidden treasure till you came,
and we simply can bear it no longer; so, please, begin
at once.”
“Yes,” said everybody, “go on, please.”
Hunter Quatermain glanced round the
table apprehensively; he did not seem to appreciate
finding himself the object of so much curiosity.
“Ladies and gentlemen,”
he said at last, with a shake of his grizzled head,
“I am very sorry to disappoint you, but I cannot
do it. It is this way. At the request of
Sir Henry and Captain Good I have written down a true
and plain account of King Solomon’s Mines and
how we found them, so you will soon be able to learn
all about that wonderful adventure for yourselves;
but until then I will say nothing about it, not from
any wish to disappoint your curiosity, or to make myself
important, but simply because the whole story partakes
so much of the marvellous, that I am afraid to tell
it in a piecemeal, hasty fashion, for fear I should
be set down as one of those common fellows of whom
there are so many in my profession, who are not ashamed
to narrate things they have not seen, and even to
tell wonderful stories about wild animals they have
never killed. And I think that my companions
in adventure, Sir Henry Curtis and Captain Good, will
bear me out in what I say.”
“Yes, Quatermain, I think you
are quite right,” said Sir Henry. “Precisely
the same considerations have forced Good and myself
to hold our tongues. We did not wish to be bracketed
with well, with other famous travellers.”
There was a murmur of disappointment
at these announcements.
“I believe you are all hoaxing
us,” said the young lady next Mr. Quatermain,
rather sharply.
“Believe me,” answered
the old hunter, with a quaint courtesy and a little
bow of his grizzled head; “though I have lived
all my life in the wilderness, and amongst savages,
I have neither the heart, nor the want of manners,
to wish to deceive one so lovely.”
Whereat the young lady, who was pretty, looked appeased.
“This is very dreadful,”
I broke in. “We ask for bread and you give
us a stone, Mr. Quatermain. The least that you
can do is to tell us the story of the tusks opposite
and the buffalo horns underneath. We won’t
let you off with less.”
“I am but a poor story-teller,”
put in the old hunter, “but if you will forgive
my want of skill, I shall be happy to tell you, not
the story of the tusks, for that is part of the history
of our journey to King Solomon’s Mines, but
that of the buffalo horns beneath them, which is now
ten years old.”
“Bravo, Quatermain!” said
Sir Henry. “We shall all be delighted.
Fire away! Fill up your glass first.”
The little man did as he was bid,
took a sip of claret, and began: “About
ten years ago I was hunting up in the far interior
of Africa, at a place called Gatgarra, not a great
way from the Chobe River. I had with me four
native servants, namely, a driver and voorlooper,
or leader, who were natives of Matabeleland, a Hottentot
named Hans, who had once been the slave of a Transvaal
Boer, and a Zulu hunter, who for five years had accompanied
me upon my trips, and whose name was Mashune.
Now near Gatgarra I found a fine piece of healthy,
park-like country, where the grass was very good, considering
the time of year; and here I made a little camp or
head-quarter settlement, from whence I went expeditions
on all sides in search of game, especially elephant.
My luck, however, was bad; I got but little ivory.
I was therefore very glad when some natives brought
me news that a large herd of elephants were feeding
in a valley about thirty miles away. At first
I thought of trekking down to the valley, waggon and
all, but gave up the idea on hearing that it was infested
with the deadly ‘tsetse’ fly, which is
certain death to all animals, except men, donkeys,
and wild game. So I reluctantly determined to
leave the waggon in the charge of the Matabele leader
and driver, and to start on a trip into the thorn
country, accompanied only by the Hottentot Hans, and
Mashune.
“Accordingly on the following
morning we started, and on the evening of the next
day reached the spot where the elephants were reported
to be. But here again we were met by ill luck.
That the elephants had been there was evident enough,
for their spoor was plentiful, and so were other traces
of their presence in the shape of mimosa trees torn
out of the ground, and placed topsy-turvy on their
flat crowns, in order to enable the great beasts to
feed on their sweet roots; but the elephants themselves
were conspicuous by their absence. They had elected
to move on. This being so, there was only one
thing to do, and that was to move after them, which
we did, and a pretty hunt they led us. For a fortnight
or more we dodged about after those elephants, coming
up with them on two occasions, and a splendid herd
they were only, however, to lose them again.
At length we came up with them a third time, and I
managed to shoot one bull, and then they started off
again, where it was useless to try and follow them.
After this I gave it up in disgust, and we made the
best of our way back to the camp, not in the sweetest
of tempers, carrying the tusks of the elephant I had
shot.
“It was on the afternoon of
the fifth day of our tramp that we reached the little
koppie overlooking the spot where the waggon stood,
and I confess that I climbed it with a pleasurable
sense of home-coming, for his waggon is the hunter’s
home, as much as his house is that of the civilized
person. I reached the top of the koppie, and looked
in the direction where the friendly white tent of
the waggon should be, but there was no waggon, only
a black burnt plain stretching away as far as the
eye could reach. I rubbed my eyes, looked again,
and made out on the spot of the camp, not my waggon,
but some charred beams of wood. Half wild with
grief and anxiety, followed by Hans and Mashune, I
ran at full speed down the slope of the koppie, and
across the space of plain below to the spring of water,
where my camp had been. I was soon there, only
to find that my worst suspicions were confirmed.
“The waggon and all its contents,
including my spare guns and ammunition, had been destroyed
by a grass fire.
“Now before I started, I had
left orders with the driver to burn off the grass
round the camp, in order to guard against accidents
of this nature, and here was the reward of my folly:
a very proper illustration of the necessity, especially
where natives are concerned, of doing a thing one’s
self if one wants it done at all. Evidently the
lazy rascals had not burnt round the waggon; most
probably, indeed, they had themselves carelessly fired
the tall and resinous tambouki grass near by; the
wind had driven the flames on to the waggon tent, and
there was quickly an end of the matter. As for
the driver and leader, I know not what became of them:
probably fearing my anger, they bolted, taking the
oxen with them. I have never seen them from that
hour to this.
“I sat down on the black veldt
by the spring, and gazed at the charred axles and
disselboom of my waggon, and I can assure you, ladies
and gentlemen, I felt inclined to weep. As for
Mashune and Hans they cursed away vigorously, one
in Zulu and the other in Dutch. Ours was a pretty
position. We were nearly 300 miles away from Bamangwato,
the capital of Khama’s country, which was the
nearest spot where we could get any help, and our
ammunition, spare guns, clothing, food, and everything
else, were all totally destroyed. I had just
what I stood in, which was a flannel shirt, a pair
of ‘veldt-schoons,’ or shoes of raw hide,
my eight-bore rifle, and a few cartridges. Hans
and Mashune had also each a Martini rifle and some
cartridges, not many. And it was with this equipment
that we had to undertake a journey of 300 miles through
a desolate and almost uninhabited region. I can
assure you that I have rarely been in a worse position,
and I have been in some queer ones. However,
these things are the natural incidents of a hunter’s
life, and the only thing to do was to make the best
of them.
“Accordingly, after passing
a comfortless night by the remains of my waggon, we
started next morning on our long journey towards civilization.
Now if I were to set to work to tell you all the troubles
and incidents of that dreadful journey I should keep
you listening here till midnight; so I will, with
your permission, pass on to the particular adventure
of which the pair of buffalo horns opposite are the
melancholy memento.
“We had been travelling for
about a month, living and getting along as best we
could, when one evening we camped some forty miles
from Bamangwato. By this time we were indeed
in a melancholy plight, footsore, half starved, and
utterly worn out; and, in addition, I was suffering
from a sharp attack of fever, which half blinded me
and made me weak as a babe. Our ammunition, too,
was exhausted; I had only one cartridge left for my
eight-bore rifle, and Hans and Mashune, who were armed
with Martini Henrys, had three between them. It
was about an hour from sundown when we halted and
lit a fire for luckily we had still a few
matches. It was a charming spot to camp, I remember.
Just off the game track we were following was a little
hollow, fringed about with flat-crowned mimosa trees,
and at the bottom of the hollow, a spring of clear
water welled up out of the earth, and formed a pool,
round the edges of which grew an abundance of watercresses
of an exactly similar kind to those which were handed
round the table just now. Now we had no food
of any kind left, having that morning devoured the
last remains of a little oribe antelope, which
I had shot two days previously. Accordingly Hans,
who was a better shot than Mashune, took two of the
three remaining Martini cartridges, and started out
to see if he could not kill a buck for supper.
I was too weak to go myself.
“Meanwhile Mashune employed
himself in dragging together some dead boughs from
the mimosa trees to make a sort of ‘skerm,’
or shelter for us to sleep in, about forty yards from
the edge of the pool of water. We had been greatly
troubled with lions in the course of our long tramp,
and only on the previous night have very nearly been
attacked by them, which made me nervous, especially
in my weak state. Just as we had finished the
skerm, or rather something which did duty for one,
Mashune and I heard a shot apparently fired about
a mile away.
“‘Hark to it!’ sung
out Mashune in Zulu, more, I fancy, by way of keeping
his spirits up than for any other reason for
he was a sort of black Mark Tapley, and very cheerful
under difficulties. ’Hark to the wonderful
sound with which the “Maboona” (the Boers)
shook our fathers to the ground at the Battle of the
Blood River. We are hungry now, my father; our
stomachs are small and withered up like a dried ox’s
paunch, but they will soon be full of good meat.
Hans is a Hottentot, and an “umfagozan,”
that is, a low fellow, but he shoots straight ah!
he certainly shoots straight. Be of a good heart,
my father, there will soon be meat upon the fire,
and we shall rise up men.’
“And so he went on talking nonsense
till I told him to stop, because he made my head ache
with his empty words.
“Shortly after we heard the
shot the sun sank in his red splendour, and there
fell upon earth and sky the great hush of the African
wilderness. The lions were not up as yet, they
would probably wait for the moon, and the birds and
beasts were all at rest. I cannot describe the
intensity of the quiet of the night: to me in
my weak state, and fretting as I was over the non-return
of the Hottentot Hans, it seemed almost ominous as
though Nature were brooding over some tragedy which
was being enacted in her sight.
“It was quiet quiet as death, and
lonely as the grave.
“‘Mashune,’ I said at last, ‘where
is Hans? my heart is heavy for him.’
“’Nay, my father, I know
not; mayhap he is weary, and sleeps, or mayhap he
has lost his way.’
“‘Mashune, art thou a
boy to talk folly to me?’ I answered. ’Tell
me, in all the years thou hast hunted by my side,
didst thou ever know a Hottentot to lose his path
or to sleep upon the way to camp?’
“‘Nay, Macumazahn’
(that, ladies, is my native name, and means the man
who ‘gets up by night,’ or who ’is
always awake’), ’I know not where he is.’
“But though we talked thus,
we neither of us liked to hint at what was in both
our minds, namely, that misfortunate had overtaken
the poor Hottentot.
“‘Mashune,’ I said
at last, ’go down to the water and bring me of
those green herbs that grow there. I am hungered,
and must eat something.’
“’Nay, my father; surely
the ghosts are there; they come out of the water at
night, and sit upon the banks to dry themselves.
An Isanusi told it me.’
Isanusi,
witch-finder.
“Mashune was, I think, one of
the bravest men I ever knew in the daytime, but he
had a more than civilized dread of the supernatural.
“‘Must I go myself, thou fool?’
I said, sternly.
“’Nay, Macumazahn, if
thy heart yearns for strange things like a sick woman,
I go, even if the ghosts devour me.’
“And accordingly he went, and
soon returned with a large bundle of watercresses,
of which I ate greedily.
“‘Art thou not hungry?’
I asked the great Zulu presently, as he sat eyeing
me eating.
“‘Never was I hungrier, my father.’
“‘Then eat,’ and I pointed to the
watercresses.
“‘Nay, Macumazahn, I cannot eat those
herbs.’
“‘If thou dost not eat thou wilt starve:
eat, Mashune.’
“He stared at the watercresses
doubtfully for a while, and at last seized a handful
and crammed them into his mouth, crying out as he did
so, ’Oh, why was I born that I should live to
feed on green weeds like an ox? Surely if my
mother could have known it she would have killed me
when I was born!’ and so he went on lamenting
between each fistful of watercresses till all were
finished, when he declared that he was full indeed
of stuff, but it lay very cold on his stomach, ’like
snow upon a mountain.’ At any other time
I should have laughed, for it must be admitted he
had a ludicrous way of putting things. Zulus do
not like green food.
“Just after Mashune had finished
his watercress, we heard the loud ‘woof! woof!’
of a lion, who was evidently promenading much nearer
to our little skerm than was pleasant. Indeed,
on looking into the darkness and listening intently,
I could hear his snoring breath, and catch the light
of his great yellow eyes. We shouted loudly, and
Mashune threw some sticks on the fire to frighten
him, which apparently had the desired effect, for
we saw no more of him for a while.
“Just after we had had this
fright from the lion, the moon rose in her fullest
splendour, throwing a robe of silver light over all
the earth. I have rarely seen a more beautiful
moonrise. I remember that sitting in the skerm
I could with ease read faint pencil notes in my pocket-book.
As soon as the moon was up game began to trek down
to the water just below us. I could, from where
I sat, see all sorts of them passing along a little
ridge that ran to our right, on their way to the drinking
place. Indeed, one buck a large eland came
within twenty yards of the skerm, and stood at gaze,
staring at it suspiciously, his beautiful head and
twisted horns standing out clearly against the sky.
I had, I recollect, every mind to have a pull at him
on the chance of providing ourselves with a good supply
of beef; but remembering that we had but two cartridges
left, and the extreme uncertainty of a shot by moonlight,
I at length decided to refrain. The eland presently
moved on to the water, and a minute or two afterwards
there arose a great sound of splashing, followed by
the quick fall of galloping hoofs.
“‘What’s that, Mashune?’ I
asked.
“‘That dam lion; buck
smell him,’ replied the Zulu in English, of which
he had a very superficial knowledge.
“Scarcely were the words out
of his mouth before we heard a sort of whine over
the other side of the pool, which was instantly answered
by a loud coughing roar close to us.
“‘By Jove!’ I said,
’there are two of them. They have lost the
buck; we must look out they don’t catch us.’
And again we made up the fire, and shouted, with the
result that the lions moved off.
“‘Mashune,’ I said,
’do you watch till the moon gets over that tree,
when it will be the middle of the night. Then
wake me. Watch well, now, or the lions will be
picking those worthless bones of yours before you
are three hours older. I must rest a little, or
I shall die.’
“‘Koos!’ (chief),
answered the Zulu. ’Sleep, my father, sleep
in peace; my eyes shall be open as the stars; and
like the stars watch over you.’
“Although I was so weak, I could
not at once follow his advice. To begin with,
my head ached with fever, and I was torn with anxiety
as to the fate of the Hottentot Hans; and, indeed,
as to our own fate, left with sore feet, empty stomachs,
and two cartridges, to find our way to Bamangwato,
forty miles off. Then the mere sensation of knowing
that there are one or more hungry lions prowling round
you somewhere in the dark is disquieting, however
well one may be used to it, and, by keeping the attention
on the stretch, tends to prevent one from sleeping.
In addition to all these troubles, too, I was, I remember,
seized with a dreadful longing for a pipe of tobacco,
whereas, under the circumstances, I might as well
have longed for the moon.
“At last, however, I fell into
an uneasy sleep as full of bad dreams as a prickly
pear is of points, one of which, I recollect, was that
I was setting my naked foot upon a cobra which rose
upon its tail and hissed my name, ‘Macumazahn,’
into my ear. Indeed, the cobra hissed with such
persistency that at last I roused myself.
“‘Macumazahn, nanzia,
nanzia!’ (there, there!) whispered Mashune’s
voice into my drowsy ears. Raising myself, I opened
my eyes, and I saw Mashune kneeling by my side and
pointing towards the water. Following the line
of his outstretched hand, my eyes fell upon a sight
that made me jump, old hunter as I was even in those
days. About twenty paces from the little skerm
was a large ant-heap, and on the summit of the ant-heap,
her four feet rather close together, so as to find
standing space, stood the massive form of a big lioness.
Her head was towards the skerm, and in the bright
moonlight I saw her lower it and lick her paws.
“Mashune thrust the Martini
rifle into my hands, whispering that it was loaded.
I lifted it and covered the lioness, but found that
even in that light I could not make out the foresight
of the Martini. As it would be madness to fire
without doing so, for the result would probably be
that I should wound the lioness, if, indeed, I did
not miss her altogether, I lowered the rifle; and,
hastily tearing a fragment of paper from one of the
leaves of my pocket-book, which I had been consulting
just before I went to sleep, I proceeded to fix it
on to the front sight. But all this took a little
time, and before the paper was satisfactorily arranged,
Mashune again gripped me by the arm, and pointed to
a dark heap under the shade of a small mimosa tree
which grew not more than ten paces from the skerm.
“‘Well, what is it?’ I whispered;
‘I can see nothing.’
“‘It is another lion,’ he answered.
“‘Nonsense! thy heart
is dead with fear, thou seest double;’ and I
bent forward over the edge of the surrounding fence,
and stared at the heap.
“Even as I said the words, the
dark mass rose and stalked out into the moonlight.
It was a magnificent, black-maned lion, one of the
largest I had ever seen. When he had gone two
or three steps he caught sight of me, halted, and
stood there gazing straight towards us; he
was so close that I could see the firelight reflected
in his wicked, greenish eyes.
“‘Shoot, shoot!’
said Mashune. ’The devil is coming he
is going to spring!’
“I raised the rifle, and got
the bit of paper on the foresight, straight on to
a little path of white hair just where the throat is
set into the chest and shoulders. As I did so,
the lion glanced back over his shoulder, as, according
to my experience, a lion nearly always does before
he springs. Then he dropped his body a little,
and I saw his big paws spread out upon the ground
as he put his weight on them to gather purchase.
In haste I pressed the trigger of the Martini, and
not a moment too soon; for, as I did so, he was in
the act of springing. The report of the rifle
rang out sharp and clear on the intense silence of
the night, and in another second the great brute had
landed on his head within four feet of us, and rolling
over and over towards us, was sending the bushes which
composed our little fence flying with convulsive strokes
of his great paws. We sprang out of the other
side of the ‘skerm,’ and he rolled on
to it and into it and then right through the fire.
Next he raised himself and sat upon his haunches like
a great dog, and began to roar. Heavens! how
he roared! I never heard anything like it before
or since. He kept filling his lungs with air,
and then emitting it in the most heart-shaking volumes
of sound. Suddenly, in the middle of one of the
loudest roars, he rolled over on to his side and lay
still, and I knew that he was dead. A lion generally
dies upon his side.
“With a sigh of relief I looked
up towards his mate upon the ant-heap. She was
standing there apparently petrified with astonishment,
looking over her shoulder, and lashing her tail; but
to our intense joy, when the dying beast ceased roaring,
she turned, and, with one enormous bound, vanished
into the night.
“Then we advanced cautiously
towards the prostrate brute, Mashune droning an improvised
Zulu song as he went, about how Macumazahn, the hunter
of hunters, whose eyes are open by night as well as
by day, put his hand down the lion’s stomach
when it came to devour him and pulled out his heart
by the roots, &c., &c., by way of expressing his satisfaction,
in his hyperbolical Zulu way, at the turn events had
taken.
“There was no need for caution;
the lion was as dead as though he had already been
stuffed with straw. The Martini bullet had entered
within an inch of the white spot I had aimed at, and
travelled right through him, passing out at the right
buttock, near the root of the tail. The Martini
has wonderful driving power, though the shock it gives
to the system is, comparatively speaking, slight,
owing to the smallness of the hole it makes.
But fortunately the lion is an easy beast to kill.
“I passed the rest of that night
in a profound slumber, my head reposing upon the deceased
lion’s flank, a position that had, I thought,
a beautiful touch of irony about it, though the smell
of his singed hair was disagreeable. When I woke
again the faint primrose lights of dawn were flushing
in the eastern sky. For a moment I could not understand
the chill sense of anxiety that lay like a lump of
ice at my heart, till the feel and smell of the skin
of the dead lion beneath my head recalled the circumstances
in which we were placed. I rose, and eagerly looked
round to see if I could discover any signs of Hans,
who, if he had escaped accident, would surely return
to us at dawn, but there were none. Then hope
grew faint, and I felt that it was not well with the
poor fellow. Setting Mashune to build up the fire
I hastily removed the hide from the flank of the lion,
which was indeed a splendid beast, and cutting off
some lumps of flesh, we toasted and ate them greedily.
Lions’ flesh, strange as it may seem, is very
good eating, and tastes more like veal than anything
else.
“By the time we had finished
our much-needed meal the sun was getting up, and after
a drink of water and a wash at the pool, we started
to try and find Hans, leaving the dead lion to the
tender mercies of the hyaenas. Both Mashune and
myself were, by constant practice, pretty good hands
at tracking, and we had not much difficulty in following
the Hottentot’s spoor, faint as it was.
We had gone on in this way for half-an-hour or so,
and were, perhaps, a mile or more from the site of
our camping-place, when we discovered the spoor of
a solitary bull buffalo mixed up with the spoor of
Hans, and were able, from various indications, to
make out that he had been tracking the buffalo.
At length we reached a little glade in which there
grew a stunted old mimosa thorn, with a peculiar and
overhanging formation of root, under which a porcupine,
or an ant-bear, or some such animal, had hollowed
out a wide-lipped hole. About ten or fifteen paces
from this thorn-tree there was a thick patch of bush.
“‘See, Macumazahn! see!’
said Mashune, excitedly, as we drew near the thorn;
’the buffalo has charged him. Look, here
he stood to fire at him; see how firmly he planted
his feet upon the earth; there is the mark of his
crooked toe (Hans had one bent toe). Look! here
the bull came like a boulder down the hill, his hoofs
turning up the earth like a hoe. Hans had hit
him: he bled as he came; there are the blood spots.
It is all written down there, my father there
upon the earth.’
“‘Yes,’ I said; ‘yes; but
where is Hans?’
“Even as I said it Mashune clutched
my arm, and pointed to the stunted thorn just by us.
Even now, gentlemen, it makes me feel sick when I
think of what I saw.
“For fixed in a stout fork of
the tree some eight feet from the ground was Hans
himself, or rather his dead body, evidently tossed
there by the furious buffalo. One leg was twisted
round the fork, probably in a dying convulsion.
In the side, just beneath the ribs, was a great hole,
from which the entrails protruded. But this was
not all. The other leg hung down to within five
feet of the ground. The skin and most of the flesh
were gone from it. For a moment we stood aghast,
and gazed at this horrifying sight. Then I understood
what had happened. The buffalo, with that devilish
cruelty which distinguishes the animal, had, after
his enemy was dead, stood underneath his body, and
licked the flesh off the pendant leg with his file-like
tongue. I had heard of such a thing before, but
had always treated the stories as hunters’ yarns;
but I had no doubt about it now. Poor Hans’
skeleton foot and ankle were an ample proof.
“We stood aghast under the tree,
and stared and stared at this awful sight, when suddenly
our cogitations were interrupted in a painful
manner. The thick bush about fifteen paces off
burst asunder with a crashing sound, and uttering
a series of ferocious pig-like grunts, the bull buffalo
himself came charging out straight at us. Even
as he came I saw the blood mark on his side where
poor Hans’ bullet had struck him, and also,
as is often the case with particularly savage buffaloes,
that his flanks had recently been terribly torn in
an encounter with a lion.
“On he came, his head well up
(a buffalo does not generally lower his head till
he does so to strike); those great black horns as
I look at them before me, gentlemen, I seem to see
them come charging at me as I did ten years ago, silhouetted
against the green bush behind; on, on!”
“With a shout Mashune bolted
off sideways towards the bush. I had instinctively
lifted my eight-bore, which I had in my hand.
It would have been useless to fire at the buffalo’s
head, for the dense horns must have turned the bullet;
but as Mashune bolted, the bull slewed a little, with
the momentary idea of following him, and as this gave
me a ghost of a chance, I let drive my only cartridge
at his shoulder. The bullet struck the shoulder-blade
and smashed it up, and then travelled on under the
skin into his flank; but it did not stop him, though
for a second he staggered.
“Throwing myself on to the ground
with the energy of despair, I rolled under the shelter
of the projecting root of the thorn, crushing myself
as far into the mouth of the ant-bear hole as I could.
In a single instant the buffalo was after me.
Kneeling down on his uninjured knee for
one leg, that of which I had broken the shoulder, was
swinging helplessly to and fro he set to
work to try and hook me out of the hole with his crooked
horn. At first he struck at me furiously, and
it was one of the blows against the base of the tree
which splintered the tip of the horn in the way that
you see. Then he grew more cunning, and pushed
his head as far under the root as possible, made long
semicircular sweeps at me, grunting furiously, and
blowing saliva and hot steamy breath all over me.
I was just out of reach of the horn, though every
stroke, by widening the hole and making more room for
his head, brought it closer to me, but every now and
again I received heavy blows in the ribs from his
muzzle. Feeling that I was being knocked silly,
I made an effort and seizing his rough tongue, which
was hanging from his jaws, I twisted it with all my
force. The great brute bellowed with pain and
fury, and jerked himself backwards so strongly, that
he dragged me some inches further from the mouth of
the hole, and again made a sweep at me, catching me
this time round the shoulder-joint in the hook of
his horn.
“I felt that it was all up now, and began to
holloa.
“‘He has got me!’
I shouted in mortal terror. ‘Gwasa, Mashune,
gwasa!’ (’Stab, Mashune, stab!’).
“One hoist of the great head,
and out of the hole I came like a periwinkle out of
his shell. But even as I did so, I caught sight
of Mashune’s stalwart form advancing with his
‘bangwan,’ or broad stabbing assegai,
raised above his head. In another quarter of a
second I had fallen from the horn, and heard the blow
of the spear, followed by the indescribable sound
of steel shearing its way through flesh. I had
fallen on my back, and, looking up, I saw that the
gallant Mashune had driven the assegai a foot or more
into the carcass of the buffalo, and was turning to
fly.
“Alas! it was too late.
Bellowing madly, and spouting blood from mouth and
nostrils, the devilish brute was on him, and had thrown
him up like a feather, and then gored him twice as
he lay. I struggled up with some wild idea of
affording help, but before I had gone a step the buffalo
gave one long sighing bellow, and rolled over dead
by the side of his victim.
“Mashune was still living, but
a single glance at him told me that his hour had come.
The buffalo’s horn had driven a great hole in
his right lung, and inflicted other injuries.
“I knelt down beside him in
the uttermost distress, and took his hand.
“‘Is he dead, Macumazahn?’
he whispered. ’My eyes are blind; I cannot
see.’
“‘Yes, he is dead.’
“‘Did the black devil hurt thee, Macumazahn?’
“‘No, my poor fellow, I am not much hurt.’
“‘Ow! I am glad.’
“Then came a long silence, broken
only by the sound of the air whistling through the
hole in his lung as he breathed.
“‘Macumazahn, art thou there? I cannot
feel thee.’
“‘I am here, Mashune.’
“’I die, Macumazahn the
world flies round and round. I go I
go out into the dark! Surely, my father, at times
in days to come thou wilt think of Mashune
who stood by thy side when thou killest
elephants, as we used as we used ’
“They were his last words, his
brave spirit passed with him. I dragged his body
to the hole under the tree, and pushed it in, placing
his broad assegai by him, according to the custom
of his people, that he might not go defenceless on
his long journey; and then, ladies I am
not ashamed to confess I stood alone there
before it, and wept like a woman.”