“After this, as it was now midday,
and I had killed enough meat, we marched back triumphantly
to camp, where I proceeded to concoct a stew of buffalo
beef and compressed vegetables. When this was
ready we ate the stew, and then I took a nap.
About four o’clock, however, Gobo woke me up,
and told me that the head man of one of Wambe’s
kraals had arrived to see me. I ordered
him to be brought up, and presently he came, a little,
wizened, talkative old man, with a waistcloth round
his middle, and a greasy, frayed kaross made of the
skins of rock rabbits over his shoulders.
“I told him to sit down, and
then abused him roundly. ’What did he mean,’
I asked, ’by disturbing me in this rude way?
How did he dare to cause a person of my quality and
evident importance to be awakened in order to interview
his entirely contemptible self?’
“I spoke thus because I knew
that it would produce an impression on him. Nobody,
except a really great man, he would argue, would dare
to speak to him in that fashion. Most savages
are desperate bullies at heart, and look on insolence
as a sign of power.
“The old man instantly collapsed.
He was utterly overcome, he said; his heart was split
in two, and well realized the extent of his misbehaviour.
But the occasion was very urgent. He heard that
a mighty hunter was in the neighbourhood, a beautiful
white man, how beautiful he could not have imagined
had he not seen (this to me!), and he came to beg
his assistance. The truth was, that three bull
elephants such as no man ever saw had for years been
the terror of their kraal, which was but a small
place a cattle kraal of the great chief
Wambe’s, where they lived to keep the cattle.
And now of late these elephants had done them much
damage; but last night they had destroyed a whole patch
of mealie land, and he feared that if they came back
they would all starve next season for want of food.
Would the mighty white man then be pleased to come
and kill the elephants? It would be easy for him
to do oh, most easy! It was only necessary
that he should hide himself in a tree, for there was
a full moon, and then when the elephants appeared he
would speak to them with the gun, and they would fall
down dead, and there would be an end of their troubling.
“Of course I hummed and hawed,
and made a great favour of consenting to his proposal,
though really I was delighted to have such a chance.
One of the conditions that I made was that a messenger
should at once be despatched to Wambe, whose kraal
was two days’ journey from where I was, telling
him that I proposed to come and pay my respects to
him in a few days, and to ask his formal permission
to shoot in his country. Also I intimated that
I was prepared to present him with ‘hongo,’
that is, blackmail, and that I hoped to do a little
trade with him in ivory, of which I heard he had a
great quantity.
“This message the old gentleman
promised to despatch at once, though there was something
about his manner which showed me that he was doubtful
as to how it would be received. After that we
struck our camp and moved on to the kraal, which
we reached about an hour before sunset. This
kraal was a collection of huts surrounded by a
slight thorn-fence, perhaps there were ten of them
in all. It was situated in a kloof of the mountain
down which a rivulet flowed. The kloof was densely
wooded, but for some distance above the kraal
it was free from bush, and here on the rich deep ground
brought down by the rivulet were the cultivated lands,
in extent somewhere about twenty or twenty-five acres.
On the kraal side of these lands stood a single
hut, that served for a mealie store, which at the
moment was used as a dwelling-place by an old woman,
the first wife of our friend the head man.
“It appears that this lady,
having had some difference of opinion with her husband
about the extent of authority allowed to a younger
and more amiable wife, had refused to dwell in the
kraal any more, and, by way of marking her displeasure,
had taken up her abode among the mealies. As
the issue will show, she was, it happened, cutting
off her nose to spite her face.
“Close by this hut grew a large
baobab tree. A glance at the mealie grounds showed
me that the old head man had not exaggerated the mischief
done by the elephants to his crops, which were now
getting ripe. Nearly half of the entire patch
was destroyed. The great brutes had eaten all
they could, and the rest they had trampled down.
I went up to their spoor and started back in amazement never
had I seen such a spoor before. It was simply
enormous, more especially that of one old bull, that
carried, so said the natives, but a single tusk.
One might have used any of the footprints for a hip-bath.
“Having taken stock of the position,
my next step was to make arrangements for the fray.
The three bulls, according to the natives, had been
spoored into the dense patch of bush above the kloof.
Now it seemed to me very probable that they would
return to-night to feed on the remainder of the ripening
mealies. If so, there was a bright moon, and
it struck me that by the exercise of a little ingenuity
I might bag one or more of them without exposing myself
to any risk, which, having the highest respect for
the aggressive powers of bull elephants, was a great
consideration to me.
“This then was my plan.
To the right of the huts as you look up the kloof,
and commanding the mealie lands, stands the baobab
tree that I have mentioned. Into that baobab
tree I made up my mind to go. Then if the elephants
appeared I should get a shot at them. I announced
my intentions to the head man of the kraal, who
was delighted. ‘Now,’ he said, ’his
people might sleep in peace, for while the mighty white
hunter sat aloft like a spirit watching over the welfare
of his kraal what was there to fear?’
“I told him that he was an ungrateful
brute to think of sleeping in peace while, perched
like a wounded vulture on a tree, I watched for his
welfare in wakeful sorrow; and once more he collapsed,
and owned that my words were ‘sharp but just.’
“However, as I have said, confidence
was completely restored; and that evening everybody
in the kraal, including the superannuated victim
of jealousy in the little hut where the mealie cobs
were stored, went to bed with a sense of sweet security
from elephants and all other animals that prowl by
night.
“For my part, I pitched my camp
below the kraal; and then, having procured a
beam of wood from the head man rather a
rotten one, by the way I set it across
two boughs that ran out laterally from the baobab
tree, at a height of about twenty-five feet from the
ground, in such fashion that I and another man could
sit upon it with our legs hanging down, and rest our
backs against the bole of the tree. This done
I went back to the camp and ate my supper. About
nine o’clock, half-an-hour before the moon-rise,
I summoned Gobo, who, thinking that he had seen about
enough of the delights of big game hunting for that
day, did not altogether relish the job; and, despite
his remonstrances, gave him my eight-bore to carry,
I having the .570-express. Then we set out for
the tree. It was very dark, but we found it without
difficulty, though climbing it was a more complicated
matter. However, at last we got up and sat down,
like two little boys on a form that is too high for
them, and waited. I did not dare to smoke, because
I remembered the rhinoceros, and feared that the elephants
might wind the tobacco if they should come my way,
and this made the business more wearisome, so I fell
to thinking and wondering at the completeness of the
silence.
“At last the moon came up, and
with it a moaning wind, at the breath of which the
silence began to whisper mysteriously. Lonely
enough in the newborn light looked the wide expanse
of mountain, plain, and forest, more like some vision
of a dream, some reflection from a fair world of peace
beyond our ken, than the mere face of garish earth
made soft with sleep. Indeed, had it not been
for the fact that I was beginning to find the log
on which I sat very hard, I should have grown quite
sentimental over the beautiful sight; but I will defy
anybody to become sentimental when seated in the damp,
on a very rough beam of wood, and half-way up a tree.
So I merely made a mental note that it was a particularly
lovely night, and turned my attention to the prospect
of elephants. But no elephants came, and after
waiting for another hour or so, I think that what
between weariness and disgust, I must have dropped
into a gentle doze. Presently I awoke with a
start. Gobo, who was perched close to me, but
as far off as the beam would allow for neither
white man nor black like the aroma which each vows
is the peculiar and disagreeable property of the other was
faintly, very faintly clicking his forefinger against
his thumb. I knew by this signal, a very favourite
one among native hunters and gun-bearers, that he
must have seen or heard something. I looked at
his face, and saw that he was staring excitedly towards
the dim edge of the bush beyond the deep green line
of mealies. I stared too, and listened.
Presently I heard a soft large sound as though a giant
were gently stretching out his hands and pressing back
the ears of standing corn. Then came a pause,
and then, out into the open majestically stalked the
largest elephant I ever saw or ever shall see.
Heavens! what a monster he was; and how the moonlight
gleamed upon his one splendid tusk for
the other was missing as he stood among
the mealies gently moving his enormous ears to and
fro, and testing the wind with his trunk. While
I was still marvelling at his girth, and speculating
upon the weight of that huge tusk, which I swore should
be my tusk before very long, out stepped a second
bull and stood beside him. He was not quite so
tall, but he seemed to me to be almost thicker-set
than the first; and even in that light I could see
that both his tusks were perfect. Another pause,
and the third emerged. He was shorter than either
of the others, but higher in the shoulder than N; and when I tell you, as I afterwards learnt from
actual measurement, that the smallest of these mighty
bulls measured twelve feet one and a half inches at
the shoulder, it will give you some idea of their size.
The three formed into line and stood still for a minute,
the one-tusked bull gently caressing the elephant
on the left with his trunk.
“Then they began to feed, walking
forward and slightly to the right as they gathered
great bunches of the sweet mealies and thrust them
into their mouths. All this time they were more
than a hundred and twenty yards away from me (this
I knew, because I had paced the distances from the
tree to various points), much too far to allow of my
attempting a shot at them in that uncertain light.
They fed in a semicircle, gradually drawing round
towards the hut near my tree, in which the corn was
stored and the old woman slept.
“This went on for between an
hour and an hour and a half, till, what between excitement
and hope, that maketh the heart sick, I grew so weary
that I was actually contemplating a descent from the
tree and a moonlight stalk. Such an act in ground
so open would have been that of a stark staring lunatic,
and that I should even have been contemplating it
will show you the condition of my mind. But everything
comes to him who knows how to wait, and sometimes
too to him who doesn’t, and so at last those
elephants, or rather one of them, came to me.
“After they had fed their fill,
which was a very large one, the noble three stood
once more in line some seventy yards to the left of
the hut, and on the edge of the cultivated lands,
or in all about eighty-five yards from where I was
perched. Then at last the one with a single tusk
made a peculiar rattling noise in his trunk, just as
though he were blowing his nose, and without more
ado began to walk deliberately toward the hut where
the old woman slept. I made my rifle ready and
glanced up at the moon, only to discover that a new
complication was looming in the immediate future.
I have said that a wind rose with the moon. Well,
the wind brought rain-clouds along its track.
Several light ones had already lessened the light
for a little while, though without obscuring it, and
now two more were coming up rapidly, both of them very
black and dense. The first cloud was small and
long, and the one behind big and broad. I remember
noticing that the pair of them bore a most comical
resemblance to a dray drawn by a very long raw-boned
horse. As luck would have it, just as the elephant
arrived within twenty-five yards or so of me, the
head of the horse-cloud floated over the face of the
moon, rendering it impossible for me to fire.
In the faint twilight which remained, however, I could
just make out the gray mass of the great brute still
advancing towards the hut. Then the light went
altogether and I had to trust to my ears. I heard
him fumbling with his trunk, apparently at the roof
of the hut; next came a sound as of straw being drawn
out, and then for a little while there was complete
silence.
“The cloud began to pass; I
could see the outline of the elephant; he was standing
with his head quite over the top of the hut. But
I could not see his trunk, and no wonder, for it was
inside the hut. He had thrust it through
the roof, and, attracted no doubt by the smell of the
mealies, was groping about with it inside. It
was growing light now, and I got my rifle ready, when
suddenly there was a most awful yell, and I saw the
trunk reappear, and in its mighty fold the old woman
who had been sleeping in the hut. Out she came
through the hole like a periwinkle on the point of
a pin, still wrapped up in her blanket, and with her
skinny arms and legs stretched to the four points of
the compass, and as she did so, gave that most alarming
screech. I really don’t know who was the
most frightened, she, or I, or the elephant. At
any rate the last was considerably startled; he had
been fishing for mealies the old woman
was a mere accident, and one that greatly discomposed
his nerves. He gave a sort of trumpet, and threw
her away from him right into the crown of a low mimosa
tree, where she stuck shrieking like a metropolitan
engine. The old bull lifted his tail, and flapping
his great ears prepared for flight. I put up my
eight-bore, and aiming hastily at the point of his
shoulder (for he was broadside on), I fired.
The report rang out like thunder, making a thousand
echoes in the quiet hills. I saw him go down
all of a heap as though he were stone dead. Then,
alas! whether it was the kick of the heavy rifle, or
the excited bump of that idiot Gobo, or both together,
or merely an unhappy coincidence, I do not know, but
the rotten beam broke and I went down too, landing
flat at the foot of the tree upon a certain humble
portion of the human frame. The shock was so
severe that I felt as though all my teeth were flying
through the roof of my mouth, but although I sat slightly
stunned for a few seconds, luckily for me I fell light,
and was not in any way injured.
“Meanwhile the elephant began
to scream with fear and fury, and, attracted by his
cries, the other two charged up. I felt for my
rifle; it was not there. Then I remembered that
I had rested it on a fork of the bough in order to
fire, and doubtless there it remained. My position
was now very unpleasant. I did not dare to try
and climb the tree again, which, shaken as I was,
would have been a task of some difficulty, because
the elephants would certainly see me, and Gobo, who
had clung to a bough, was still aloft with the other
rifle. I could not run because there was no shelter
near. Under these circumstances I did the only
thing feasible, clambered round the trunk as softly
as possible, and keeping one eye on the elephants,
whispered to Gobo to bring down the rifle, and awaited
the development of the situation. I knew that
if the elephants did not see me which,
luckily, they were too enraged to do they
would not smell me, for I was up-wind. Gobo, however,
either did not, or, preferring the safety of the tree,
would not hear me. He said the former, but I
believed the latter, for I knew that he was not enough
of a sportsman to really enjoy shooting elephants by
moonlight in the open. So there I was behind
my tree, dismayed, unarmed, but highly interested,
for I was witnessing a remarkable performance.
“When the two other bulls arrived
the wounded elephant on the ground ceased to scream,
but began to make a low moaning noise, and to gently
touch the wound near his shoulder, from which the blood
was literally spouting. The other two seemed
to understand; at any rate, they did this. Kneeling
down on either side, they placed their trunks and tusks
underneath him, and, aided by his own efforts, with
one great lift got him on to his feet. Then leaning
against him on either side to support him, they marched
off at a walk in the direction of the village. It
was a pitiful sight, and even then it made me feel
a brute.
The Editor would have been inclined
to think that in relating this incident Mr. Quatermain
was making himself interesting at the expense
of the exact truth, did it not happen that a
similar incident has come within his knowledge. Editor.
“Presently, from a walk, as
the wounded elephant gathered himself together a little,
they broke into a trot, and after that I could follow
them no longer with my eyes, for the second black cloud
came up over the moon and put her out, as an extinguisher
puts out a dip. I say with my eyes, but my ears
gave me a very fair notion of what was going on.
When the cloud came up the three terrified animals
were heading directly for the kraal, probably
because the way was open and the path easy. I
fancy that they grew confused in the darkness, for
when they came to the kraal fence they did not
turn aside, but crashed straight through it. Then
there were ‘times,’ as the Irish servant-girl
says in the American book. Having taken the fence,
they thought that they might as well take the kraal
also, so they just ran over it. One hive-shaped
hut was turned quite over on to its top, and when
I arrived upon the scene the people who had been sleeping
there were bumbling about inside like bees disturbed
at night, while two more were crushed flat, and a third
had all its side torn out. Oddly enough, however,
nobody was hurt, though several people had a narrow
escape of being trodden to death.
“On arrival I found the old
head man in a state painfully like that favoured by
Greek art, dancing about in front of his ruined abodes
as vigorously as though he had just been stung by
a scorpion.
“I asked him what ailed him,
and he burst out into a flood of abuse. He called
me a Wizard, a Sham, a Fraud, a Bringer of bad luck!
I had promised to kill the elephants, and I had so
arranged things that the elephants had nearly killed
him, etc.
“This, still smarting, or rather
aching, as I was from that most terrific bump, was
too much for my feelings, so I just made a rush at
my friend, and getting him by the ear, I banged his
head against the doorway of his own hut, which was
all that was left of it.
“‘You wicked old scoundrel,’
I said, ’you dare to complain about your own
trifling inconveniences, when you gave me a rotten
beam to sit on, and thereby delivered me to the fury
of the elephant’ (bump! bump! bump!),
‘when your own wife’ (bump!) ’has
just been dragged out of her hut’ (bump!)
’like a snail from its shell, and thrown by the
Earth-shaker into a tree’ (bump! bump!).
“‘Mercy, my father, mercy!’
gasped the old fellow. ’Truly I have done
amiss my heart tells me so.’
“‘I should hope it did, you old villain’
(bump!).
“’Mercy, great white man!
I thought the log was sound. But what says the
unequalled chief is the old woman, my wife,
indeed dead? Ah, if she is dead all may yet prove
to have been for the very best;’ and he clasped
his hands and looked up piously to heaven, in which
the moon was once more shining brightly.
“I let go his ear and burst
out laughing, the whole scene and his devout aspirations
for the decease of the partner of his joys, or rather
woes, were so intensely ridiculous.
“‘No, you old iniquity,’
I answered; ’I left her in the top of a thorn-tree,
screaming like a thousand bluejays. The elephant
put her there.’
“‘Alas! alas!’ he
said, ’surely the back of the ox is shaped to
the burden. Doubtless, my father, she will come
down when she is tired;’ and without troubling
himself further about the matter, he began to blow
at the smouldering embers of the fire.
“And, as a matter of fact, she
did appear a few minutes later, considerably scratched
and startled, but none the worse.
“After that I made my way to
my little camp, which, fortunately, the elephants
had not walked over, and wrapping myself up in a blanket,
was soon fast asleep.
“And so ended my first round with those three
elephants.”