One day it was about a
week after Allan Quatermain told me his story of the
“Three Lions,” and of the moving death
of Jim-Jim he and I were walking home together
on the termination of a day’s shooting.
He owned about two thousand acres of shooting round
the place he had bought in Yorkshire, over a hundred
of which were wood. It was the second year of
his occupation of the estate, and already he had reared
a very fair head of pheasants, for he was an all-round
sportsman, and as fond of shooting with a shot-gun
as with an eight-bore rifle. We were three guns
that day, Sir Henry Curtis, Old Quatermain, and myself;
but Sir Henry was obliged to leave in the middle of
the afternoon in order to meet his agent, and inspect
an outlying farm where a new shed was wanted.
However, he was coming back to dinner, and going to
bring Captain Good with him, for Brayley Hall was
not more than two miles from the Grange.
We had met with very fair sport, considering
that we were only going through outlying cover for
cocks. I think that we had killed twenty-seven,
a woodcock and a leash of partridges which we secured
out of a driven covey. On our way home there lay
a long narrow spinney, which was a very favourite
“lie” for woodcocks, and generally held
a pheasant or two as well.
“Well, what do you say?”
said old Quatermain, “shall we beat through
this for a finish?”
I assented, and he called to the keeper
who was following with a little knot of beaters, and
told him to beat the spinney.
“Very well, sir,” answered
the man, “but it’s getting wonderful dark,
and the wind’s rising a gale. It will take
you all your time to hit a woodcock if the spinney
holds one.”
“You show us the woodcocks,
Jeffries,” answered Quatermain quickly, for
he never liked being crossed in anything to do with
sport, “and we will look after shooting them.”
The man turned and went rather sulkily.
I heard him say to the under-keeper, “He’s
pretty good, the master is, I’m not saying he
isn’t, but if he kills a woodcock in this light
and wind, I’m a Dutchman.”
I think that Quatermain heard him
too, though he said nothing. The wind was rising
every minute, and by the time the beat begun it blew
big guns. I stood at the right-hand corner of
the spinney, which curved round somewhat, and Quatermain
stood at the left, about forty paces from me.
Presently an old cock pheasant came rocketing over
me, looking as though the feathers were being blown
out of his tail. I missed him clean with the
first barrel, and was never more pleased with myself
in my life than when I doubled him up with the second,
for the shot was not an easy one. In the faint
light I could see Quatermain nodding his head in approval,
when through the groaning of the trees I heard the
shouts of the beaters, “Cock forward, cock to
the right.” Then came a whole volley of
shouts, “Woodcock to the right,” “Cock
to the left,” “Cock over.”
I looked up, and presently caught
sight of one of the woodcocks coming down the wind
upon me like a flash. In that dim light I could
not follow all his movements as he zigzagged through
the naked tree-tops; indeed I could see him when his
wings flitted up. Now he was passing me bang,
and a flick of the wing, I had missed him; bang
again. Surely he was down; no, there he went
to my left.
“Cock to you,” I shouted,
stepping forward so as to get Quatermain between me
and the faint angry light of the dying day, for I wanted
to see if he would “wipe my eye.”
I knew him to be a wonderful shot, but I thought that
cock would puzzle him.
I saw him raise his gun ever so little
and bend forward, and at that moment out flashed two
woodcocks into the open, the one I had missed to his
right, and the other to his left.
At the same time a fresh shout arose
of, “Woodcock over,” and looking down
the spinney I saw a third bird high up in the air,
being blown along like a brown and whirling leaf straight
over Quatermain’s head. And then followed
the prettiest little bit of shooting that I ever saw.
The bird to the right was flying low, not ten yards
from the line of a hedgerow, and Quatermain took him
first because he would become invisible the soonest
of any. Indeed, nobody who had not his hawk’s
eyes could have seen to shoot at all. But he
saw the bird well enough to kill it dead as a stone.
Then turning sharply, he pulled on the second bird
at about forty-five yards, and over he went. By
this time the third woodcock was nearly over him,
and flying very high, straight down the wind, a hundred
feet up or more, I should say. I saw him glance
at it as he opened his gun, threw out the right cartridge
and slipped in another, turning round as he did so.
By this time the cock was nearly fifty yards away
from him, and travelling like a flash. Lifting
his gun he fired after it, and, wonderful as the shot
was, killed it dead. A tearing gust of wind caught
the dead bird, and blew it away like a leaf torn from
an oak, so that it fell a hundred and thirty yards
off or more.
“I say, Quatermain,” I
said to him when the beaters were up, “do you
often do this sort of thing?”
“Well,” he answered, with
a dry smile, “the last time I had to load three
shots as quickly as that was at rather larger game.
It was at elephants. I killed them all three
as dead as I killed those woodcocks; but it very nearly
went the other way, I can tell you; I mean that they
very nearly killed me.”
Just at that moment the keeper came
up, “Did you happen to get one of them there
cocks, sir?” he said, with the air of a man who
did not in the least expect an answer in the affirmative.
“Well, yes, Jeffries,”
answered Quatermain; “you will find one of them
by the hedge, and another about fifty yards out by
the plough there to the left ”
The keeper had turned to go, looking
a little astonished, when Quatermain called him back.
“Stop a bit, Jeffries,”
he said. “You see that pollard about one
hundred and forty yards off? Well, there should
be another woodcock down in a line with it, about
sixty paces out in the field.”
“Well, if that bean’t
the very smartest bit of shooting,” murmured
Jeffries, and departed.
After that we went home, and in due
course Sir Henry Curtis and Captain Good arrived for
dinner, the latter arrayed in the tightest and most
ornamental dress-suit I ever saw. I remember that
the waistcoat was adorned with five pink coral buttons.
It was a very pleasant dinner.
Old Quatermain was in an excellent humour; induced,
I think, by the recollection of his triumph over the
doubting Jeffries. Good, too, was full of anecdotes.
He told us a most miraculous story of how he once
went shooting ibex in Kashmir. These ibex, according
to Good, he stalked early and late for four entire
days. At last on the morning of the fifth day
he succeeded in getting within range of the flock,
which consisted of a magnificent old ram with horns
so long that I am afraid to mention their measure,
and five or six females. Good crawled upon his
stomach, painfully taking shelter behind rocks, till
he was within two hundred yards; then he drew a fine
bead upon the old ram. At this moment, however,
a diversion occurred. Some wandering native of
the hills appeared upon a distant mountain top.
The females turned, and rushing over a rock vanished
from Good’s ken. But the old ram took a
bolder course. In front of him stretched a mighty
crevasse at least thirty feet in width. He went
at it with a bound. Whilst he was in mid-air
Good fired, and killed him dead. The ram turned
a complete somersault in space, and fell in such fashion
that his horns hooked themselves upon a big projection
of the opposite cliffs. There he hung, till Good,
after a long and painful detour, gracefully dropped
a lasso over him and fished him up.
This moving tale of wild adventure
was received with undeserved incredulity.
“Well,” said Good, “if
you fellows won’t believe my story when I tell
it a perfectly true story mind perhaps
one of you will give us a better; I’m not particular
if it is true or not.” And he lapsed into
a dignified silence.
“Now, Quatermain,” I said,
“don’t let Good beat you, let us hear how
you killed those elephants you were talking about
this evening just after you shot the woodcocks.”
“Well,” said Quatermain,
dryly, and with something like a twinkle in his brown
eyes, “it is very hard fortune for a man to have
to follow on Good’s ‘spoor.’
Indeed if it were not for that running giraffe which,
as you will remember, Curtis, we saw Good bowl over
with a Martini rifle at three hundred yards, I should
almost have said that this was an impossible tale.”
Here Good looked up with an air of indignant innocence.
“However,” he went on,
rising and lighting his pipe, “if you fellows
like, I will spin you a yarn. I was telling one
of you the other night about those three lions and
how the lioness finished my unfortunate ‘voorlooper,’
Jim-Jim, the boy whom we buried in the bread-bag.
“Well, after this little experience
I thought that I would settle down a bit, so I entered
upon a venture with a man who, being of a speculative
mind, had conceived the idea of running a store at
Pretoria upon strictly cash principles. The arrangement
was that I should find the capital and he the experience.
Our partnership was not of a long duration. The
Boers refused to pay cash, and at the end of four months
my partner had the capital and I had the experience.
After this I came to the conclusion that store-keeping
was not in my line, and having four hundred pounds
left, I sent my boy Harry to a school in Natal, and
buying an outfit with what remained of the money, started
upon a big trip.
“This time I determined to go
further afield than I had ever been before; so I took
a passage for a few pounds in a trading brig that
ran between Durban and Delagoa Bay. From Delagoa
Bay I marched inland accompanied by twenty porters,
with the idea of striking up north, towards the Limpopo,
and keeping parallel to the coast, but at a distance
of about one hundred and fifty miles from it.
For the first twenty days of our journey we suffered
a good deal from fever, that is, my men did, for I
think that I am fever proof. Also I was hard put
to it to keep the camp in meat, for although the country
proved to be very sparsely populated, there was but
little game about. Indeed, during all that time
I hardly killed anything larger than a waterbuck, and,
as you know, waterbuck’s flesh is not very appetising
food. On the twentieth day, however, we came
to the banks of a largish river, the Gonooroo it was
called. This I crossed, and then struck inland
towards a great range of mountains, the blue crests
of which we could see lying on the distant heavens
like a shadow, a continuation, as I believe, of the
Drakensberg range that skirts the coast of Natal.
From this main range a great spur shoots out some
fifty miles or so towards the coast, ending abruptly
in one tremendous peak. This spur I discovered
separated the territories of two chiefs named Nala
and Wambe, Wambe’s territory being to the north,
and Nala’s to the south. Nala ruled a tribe
of bastard Zulus called the Butiana, and Wambe a much
larger tribe, called the Matuku, which presents marked
Bantu characteristics. For instance, they have
doors and verandahs to their huts, work skins perfectly,
and wear a waistcloth and not a moocha. At this
time the Butiana were more or less subject to the
Matuku, having been surprised by them some twenty years
before and mercilessly slaughtered down. The
tribe was now recovering itself, however, and as you
may imagine, it did not love the Matuku.
“Well, I heard as I went along
that elephants were very plentiful in the dense forests
which lie upon the slopes and at the foot of the mountains
that border Wambe’s territory. Also I heard
a very ill report of that worthy himself, who lived
in a kraal upon the side of the mountain, which
was so strongly fortified as to be practically impregnable.
It was said that he was the most cruel chief in this
part of Africa, and that he had murdered in cold blood
an entire party of English gentlemen, who, some seven
years before, had gone into his country to hunt elephants.
They took an old friend of mine with them as guide,
John Every by name, and often had I mourned over his
untimely death. All the same, Wambe or no Wambe,
I determined to hunt elephants in his country.
I never was afraid of natives, and I was not going
to show the white feather now. I am a bit of
a fatalist, as you fellows know, so I came to the conclusion
that if it was fated that Wambe should send me to join
my old friend John Every, I should have to go, and
there was an end of it. Meanwhile, I meant to
hunt elephants with a peaceful heart.
“On the third day from the date
of our sighting the great peak, we found ourselves
beneath its shadow. Still following the course
of the river which wound through the forests at the
base of the peak, we entered the territory of the
redoubtable Wambe. This, however, was not accomplished
without a certain difference of opinion between my
bearers and myself, for when we reached the spot where
Wambe’s boundary was supposed to run, the bearers
sat down and emphatically refused to go a step further.
I sat down too, and argued with them, putting my fatalistic
views before them as well as I was able. But
I could not persuade them to look at the matter in
the same light. ‘At present,’ they
said, ’their skins were whole; if they went
into Wambe’s country without his leave they would
soon be like a water-eaten leaf. It was very well
for me to say that this would be Fate. Fate no
doubt might be walking about in Wambe’s country,
but while they stopped outside they would not meet
him.’
“‘Well,’ I said
to Gobo, my head man, ‘and what do you mean to
do?’
“‘We mean to go back to
the coast, Macumazahn,’ he answered insolently.
“‘Do you?’ I replied,
for my bile was stirred. ’At any rate, Mr.
Gobo, you and one or two others will never get there;
see here, my friend,’ and I took a repeating
rifle and sat myself comfortably down, resting my
back against a tree ’I have just breakfasted,
and I had as soon spend the day here as anywhere else.
Now if you or any of those men walk one step back
from here, and towards the coast, I shall fire at you;
and you know that I don’t miss.’
“The man fingered the spear
he was carrying luckily all my guns were
stacked against the tree and then turned
as though to walk away, the others keeping their eyes
fixed upon him all the while. I rose and covered
him with the rifle, and though he kept up a brave appearance
of unconcern, I saw that he was glancing nervously
at me all the time. When he had gone about twenty
yards I spoke very quietly
“‘Now, Gobo,’ I said, ‘come
back, or I shall fire.’
“Of course this was taking a
very high hand; I had no real right to kill Gobo or
anybody else because they objected to run the risk
of death by entering the territory of a hostile chief.
But I felt that if I wished to keep up any authority
it was absolutely necessary that I should push matters
to the last extremity short of actually shooting him.
So I sat there, looking fierce as a lion, and keeping
the sight of my rifle in a dead line for Gobo’s
ribs. Then Gobo, feeling that the situation was
getting strained, gave in.
“‘Don’t shoot, Boss,’
he shouted, throwing up his hand, ’I will come
with you.’
“‘I thought you would,’
I answered quietly; ’you see Fate walks about
outside Wambe’s country as well as in it.’
“After that I had no more trouble,
for Gobo was the ringleader, and when he collapsed
the others collapsed also. Harmony being thus
restored, we crossed the line, and on the following
morning I began shooting in good earnest.”