“On the morrow I woke up full
of painful recollections, and not without a certain
feeling of gratitude to the Powers above that I was
there to wake up. Yesterday had been a tempestuous
day; indeed, what between buffalo, rhinoceros, and
elephant, it had been very tempestuous. Having
realized this fact, I next bethought me of those magnificent
tusks, and instantly, early as it was, broke the tenth
commandment. I coveted my neighbours tusks, if
an elephant could be said to be my neighbour de
jure, as certainly, so recently as the previous
night, he had been de facto a much
closer neighbour than I cared for, indeed. Now
when you covet your neighbour’s goods, the best
thing, if not the most moral thing, to do is to enter
his house as a strong man armed, and take them.
I was not a strong man, but having recovered my eight-bore
I was armed, and so was the other strong man the
elephant with the tusks. Consequently I prepared
for a struggle to the death. In other words, I
summoned my faithful retainers, and told them that
I was now going to follow those elephants to the edge
of the world, if necessary. They showed a certain
bashfulness about the business, but they did not gainsay
me, because they dared not. Ever since I had prepared
with all due solemnity to execute the rebellious Gobo
they had conceived a great respect for me.
“So I went up to bid adieu to
the old head man, whom I found alternately contemplating
the ruins of his kraal and, with the able assistance
of his last wife, thrashing the jealous lady who had
slept in the mealie hut, because she was, as he declared,
the fount of all his sorrows.
“Leaving them to work a way
through their domestic differences, I levied a supply
of vegetable food from the kraal in consideration
of services rendered, and left them with my blessing.
I do not know how they settled matters, because I
have not seen them since.
“Then I started on the spoor
of the three bulls. For a couple of miles or
so below the kraal as far, indeed,
as the belt of swamp that borders the river the
ground is at this spot rather stony, and clothed with
scattered bushes. Rain had fallen towards the
daybreak, and this fact, together with the nature
of the soil, made spooring a very difficult business.
The wounded bull had indeed bled freely, but the rain
had washed the blood off the leaves and grass, and
the ground being so rough and hard did not take the
footmarks so clearly as was convenient. However,
we got along, though slowly, partly by the spoor, and
partly by carefully lifting leaves and blades of grass,
and finding blood underneath them, for the blood gushing
from a wounded animal often falls upon their inner
surfaces, and then, of course, unless the rain is very
heavy, it is not washed away. It took us something
over an hour and a half to reach the edge of the marsh,
but once there our task became much easier, for the
soft soil showed plentiful evidences of the great
brutes’ passage. Threading our way through
the swampy land, we came at last to a ford of the
river, and here we could see where the poor wounded
animal had lain down in the mud and water in the hope
of easing himself of his pain, and could see also
how his two faithful companions had assisted him to
rise again. We crossed the ford, and took up the
spoor on the further side, and followed it into the
marsh-like land beyond. No rain had fallen on
this side of the river, and the blood-marks were consequently
much more frequent.
“All that day we followed the
three bulls, now across open plains, and now through
patches of bush. They seemed to have travelled
on almost without stopping, and I noticed that as
they went the wounded bull recovered his strength
a little. This I could see from his spoor, which
had become firmer, and also from the fact that the
other two had ceased to support him. At last
evening closed in, and having travelled some eighteen
miles, we camped, thoroughly tired out.
“Before dawn on the following
day we were up, and the first break of light found
us once more on the spoor. About half-past five
o’clock we reached the place where the elephants
had fed and slept. The two unwounded bulls had
taken their fill, as the condition of the neighbouring
bushes showed, but the wounded one had eaten nothing.
He had spent the night leaning against a good-sized
tree, which his weight had pushed out of the perpendicular.
They had not long left this place, and could not be
very far ahead, especially as the wounded bull was
now again so stiff after his night’s rest that
for the first few miles the other two had been obliged
to support him. But elephants go very quick,
even when they seem to be travelling slowly, for shrub
and creepers that almost stop a man’s progress
are no hindrance to them. The three had now turned
to the left, and were travelling back again in a semicircular
line toward the mountains, probably with the idea of
working round to their old feeding grounds on the
further side of the river.
“There was nothing for it but
to follow their lead, and accordingly we followed
with industry. Through all that long hot day did
we tramp, passing quantities of every sort of game,
and even coming across the spoor of other elephants.
But, in spite of my men’s entreaties, I would
not turn aside after these. I would have those
mighty tusks or none.
“By evening we were quite close
to our game, probably within a quarter of a mile,
but the bush was dense, and we could see nothing of
them, so once more we must camp, thoroughly disgusted
with our luck. That night, just after the moon
rose, while I was sitting smoking my pipe with my
back against a tree, I heard an elephant trumpet, as
though something had startled it, and not three hundred
yards away. I was very tired, but my curiosity
overcame my weariness, so, without saying a word to
any of the men, all of whom were asleep, I took my
eight-bore and a few spare cartridges, and steered
toward the sound. The game path which we had
been following all day ran straight on in the direction
from which the elephant had trumpeted. It was
narrow, but well trodden, and the light struck down
upon it in a straight white line. I crept along
it cautiously for some two hundred yards, when it
opened suddenly into a most beautiful glade some hundred
yards or more in width, wherein tall grass grew and
flat-topped trees stood singly. With the caution
born of long experience I watched for a few moments
before I entered the glade, and then I saw why the
elephant had trumpeted. There in the middle of
the glade stood a large maned lion. He stood quite
still, making a soft purring noise, and waving his
tail to and fro. Presently the grass about forty
yards on the hither side of him gave a wide ripple,
and a lioness sprang out of it like a flash, and bounded
noiselessly up to the lion. Reaching him, the
great cat halted suddenly, and rubbed her head against
his shoulder. Then they both began to purr loudly,
so loudly that I believe that in the stillness one
might have heard them two hundred yards or more away.
“After a time, while I was still
hesitating what to do, either they got a whiff of
my wind, or they wearied of standing still, and determined
to start in search of game. At any rate, as though
moved by a common impulse, they bounded suddenly away,
leap by leap, and vanished in the depths of the forest
to the left. I waited for a little while longer
to see if there were any more yellow skins about,
and seeing none, came to the conclusion that the lions
must have frightened the elephants away, and that
I had taken my stroll for nothing. But just as
I was turning back I thought that I heard a bough
break upon the further side of the glade, and, rash
as the act was, I followed the sound. I crossed
the glade as silently as my own shadow. On its
further side the path went on. Albeit with many
fears, I went on too. The jungle growth was so
thick here that it almost met overhead, leaving so
small a passage for the light that I could scarcely
see to grope my way along. Presently, however,
it widened, and then opened into a second glade slightly
smaller than the first, and there, on the further side
of it, about eighty yards from me, stood the three
enormous elephants.
“They stood thus: Immediately
opposite and facing me was the wounded one-tusked
bull. He was leaning his bulk against a dead thorn-tree,
the only one in the place, and looked very sick indeed.
Near him stood the second bull as though keeping a
watch over him. The third elephant was a good
deal nearer to me and broadside on. While I was
still staring at them, this elephant suddenly walked
off and vanished down a path in the bush to the right.
“There are now two things to
be done either I could go back to the camp
and advance upon the elephants at dawn, or I could
attack them at once. The first was, of course,
by far the wiser and safer course. To engage
one elephant by moonlight and single-handed is a sufficiently
rash proceeding; to tackle three was little short
of lunacy. But, on the other hand, I knew that
they would be on the march again before daylight,
and there might come another day of weary trudging
before I could catch them up, or they might escape
me altogether.
“‘No,’ I thought
to myself, ’faint heart never won fair tusk.
I’ll risk it, and have a slap at them.
But how?’ I could not advance across the open,
for they would see me; clearly the only thing to do
was to creep round in the shadow of the bush and try
to come upon them so. So I started. Seven
or eight minutes of careful stalking brought me to
the mouth of the path down which the third elephant
had walked. The other two were now about fifty
yards from me, and the nature of the wall of bush
was such that I could not see how to get nearer to
them without being discovered. I hesitated, and
peeped down the path which the elephant had followed.
About five yards in, it took a turn round a shrub.
I thought that I would just have a look behind it,
and advanced, expecting that I should be able to catch
a sight of the elephant’s tail. As it happened,
however, I met his trunk coming round the corner.
It is very disconcerting to see an elephant’s
trunk when you expect to see his tail, and for a moment
I stood paralyzed almost under the vast brute’s
head, for he was not five yards from me. He too
halted, threw up his trunk and trumpeted preparatory
to a charge. I was in for it now, for I could
not escape either to the right or left, on account
of the bush, and I did not dare turn my back.
So I did the only thing that I could do raised
the rifle and fired at the black mass of his chest.
It was too dark for me to pick a shot; I could only
brown him, as it were.
“The shot rung out like thunder
on the quiet air, and the elephant answered it with
a scream, then dropped his trunk and stood for a second
or two as still as though he had been cut in stone.
I confess that I lost my head; I ought to have fired
my second barrel, but I did not. Instead of doing
so, I rapidly opened my rifle, pulled out the old
cartridge from the right barrel and replaced it.
But before I could snap the breech to, the bull was
at me. I saw his great trunk fly up like a brown
beam, and I waited no longer. Turning, I fled
for dear life, and after me thundered the elephant.
Right into the open glade I ran, and then, thank Heaven,
just as he was coming up with me the bullet took effect
on him. He had been shot right through the heart,
or lungs, and down he fell with a crash, stone dead.
“But in escaping from Scylla
I had run into the jaws of Charybdis. I heard
the elephant fall, and glanced round. Straight
in front of me, and not fifteen paces away, were the
other two bulls. They were staring about, and
at that moment they caught sight of me. Then they
came, the pair of them came like thunderbolts,
and from different angles. I had only time to
snap my rifle to, lift it, and fire, almost at haphazard,
at the head of the nearest, the unwounded bull.
“Now, as you know, in the case
of the African elephant, whose skull is convex, and
not concave like that of the Indian, this is always
a most risky and very frequently a perfectly useless
shot. The bullet loses itself in the masses of
bone, that is all. But there is one little vital
place, and should the bullet happen to strike there,
it will follow the channel of the nostrils at
least I suppose it is that of the nostrils and
reach the brain. And this was what happened in
the present case the ball struck the fatal
spot in the region of the eye and travelled to the
brain. Down came the great bull all of a heap,
and rolled on to his side as dead as a stone.
I swung round at that instant to face the third, the
monster bull with one tusk that I had wounded two
days before. He was already almost over me, and
in the dim moonlight seemed to tower above me like
a house. I lifted the rifle and pulled at his
neck. It would not go off! Then, in a flash,
as it were, I remembered that it was on the half-cock.
The lock of this barrel was a little weak, and a few
days before, in firing at a cow eland, the left barrel
had jarred off at the shock of the discharge of the
right, knocking me backwards with the recoil; so after
that I had kept it on the half-cock till I actually
wanted to fire it.
“I gave one desperate bound
to the right, and, my lame leg notwithstanding, I
believe that few men could have made a better jump.
At any rate, it was none too soon, for as I jumped
I felt the wind made by the tremendous downward stroke
of the monster’s trunk. Then I ran for
it.
“I ran like a buck, still keeping
hold of my gun, however. My idea, so far as I
could be said to have any fixed idea, was to bolt down
the pathway up which I had come, like a rabbit down
a burrow, trusting that he would lose sight of me
in the uncertain light. I sped across the glade.
Fortunately the bull, being wounded, could not go full
speed; but wounded or no, he could go quite as fast
as I could. I was unable to gain an inch, and
away we went, with just about three feet between our
separate extremities. We were at the other side
now, and a glance served to show me that I had miscalculated
and overshot the opening. To reach it now was
hopeless; I should have blundered straight into the
elephant. So I did the only thing I could do:
I swerved like a course hare, and started off round
the edge of the glade, seeking for some opening into
which I could plunge. This gave me a moment’s
start, for the bull could not turn as quickly as I
could, and I made the most of it. But no opening
could I see; the bush was like a wall. We were
speeding round the edge of the glade, and the elephant
was coming up again. Now he was within about
six feet, and now, as he trumpeted or rather screamed,
I could feel the fierce hot blast of his breath strike
upon my head. Heavens! how it frightened me!
“We were three parts round the
glade now, and about fifty yards ahead was the single
large dead thorn-tree against which the bull had been
leaning. I spurted for it; it was my last chance
of safety. But spurt as I would, it seemed hours
before I got there. Putting out my right hand,
I swung round the tree, thus bringing myself face to
face with the elephant. I had not time to lift
the rifle to fire, I had barely time to cock it, and
run sideways and backward, when he was on to me.
Crash! he came, striking the tree full with his forehead.
It snapped like a carrot about forty inches from the
ground. Fortunately I was clear of the trunk,
but one of the dead branches struck me on the chest
as it went down and swept me to the ground. I
fell upon my back, and the elephant blundered past
me as I lay. More by instinct than anything else
I lifted the rifle with one hand and pulled the trigger.
It exploded, and, as I discovered afterwards, the
bullet struck him in the ribs. But the recoil
of the heavy rifle held thus was very severe; it bent
my arm up, and sent the butt with a thud against the
top of my shoulder and the side of my neck, for the
moment quite paralyzing me, and causing the weapon
to jump from my grasp. Meanwhile the bull was
rushing on. He travelled for some twenty paces,
and then suddenly he stopped. Faintly I reflected
that he was coming back to finish me, but even the
prospect of imminent and dreadful death could not
rouse me into action. I was utterly spent; I
could not move.
“Idly, almost indifferently,
I watched his movements. For a moment he stood
still, next he trumpeted till the welkin rang, and
then very slowly, and with great dignity, he knelt
down. At this point I swooned away.
“When I came to myself again
I saw from the moon that I must have been insensible
for quite two hours. I was drenched with dew,
and shivering all over. At first I could not
think where I was, when, on lifting my head, I saw
the outline of the one-tusked bull still kneeling some
five-and-twenty paces from me. Then I remembered.
Slowly I raised myself, and was instantly taken with
a violent sickness, the result of over-exertion, after
which I very nearly fainted a second time. Presently
I grew better, and considered the position. Two
of the elephants were, as I knew, dead; but how about
N? There he knelt in majesty in the lonely
moonlight. The question was, was he resting, or
dead? I rose on my hands and knees, loaded my
rifle, and painfully crept a few paces nearer.
I could see his eye now, for the moonlight fell full
upon it it was open, and rather prominent.
I crouched and watched; the eyelid did not move, nor
did the great brown body, or the trunk, or the ear,
or the tail nothing moved. Then I knew
that he must be dead.
“I crept up to him, still keeping
the rifle well forward, and gave him a thump, reflecting
as I did so how very near I had been to being thumped
instead of thumping. He never stirred; certainly
he was dead, though to this day I do not know if it
was my random shot that killed him, or if he died
from concussion of the brain consequent upon the tremendous
shock of his contact with the tree. Anyhow, there
he was. Cold and beautiful he lay, or rather
knelt, as the poet nearly puts it. Indeed, I
do not think that I have ever seen a sight more imposing
in its way than that of the mighty beast crouched
in majestic death, and shone upon by the lonely moon.
“While I stood admiring the
scene, and heartily congratulating myself upon my
escape, once more I began to feel sick. Accordingly,
without waiting to examine the other two bulls, I
staggered back to the camp, which in due course I
reached in safety. Everybody in it was asleep.
I did not wake them, but having swallowed a mouthful
of brandy I threw off my coat and shoes, rolled myself
up in a blanket, and was soon fast asleep.
“When I woke it was already
light, and at first I thought that, like Joseph, I
had dreamed a dream. At that moment, however,
I turned my head, and quickly knew that it was no
dream, for my neck and face were so stiff from the
blow of the butt-end of the rifle that it was agony
to move them. I collapsed for a minute or two.
Gobo and another man, wrapped up like a couple of
monks in their blankets, thinking that I was still
asleep, were crouched over a little fire they had made,
for the morning was damp and chilly, and holding sweet
converse.
“Gobo said that he was getting
tired of running after elephants which they never
caught. Macumazahn (that is, myself) was without
doubt a man of parts, and of some skill in shooting,
but also he was a fool. None but a fool would
run so fast and far after elephants which it was impossible
to catch, when they kept cutting the spoor of fresh
ones. He certainly was a fool, but he must not
be allowed to continue in his folly; and he, Gobo,
had determined to put a stop to it. He should
refuse to accompany him any further on so mad a hunt.
“‘Yes,’ the other
answered, ’the poor man certainly was sick in
his head, and it was quite time that they checked
his folly while they still had a patch of skin left
upon their feet. Moreover, he for his part certainly
did not like this country of Wambe’s, which really
was full of ghosts. Only the last night he had
heard the spooks at work they were out
shooting, at least it sounded as though they were.
It was very queer, but perhaps their lunatic of a
master ’
“‘Gobo, you scoundrel!’
I shouted out at this juncture, sitting bolt upright
on the blankets, ‘stop idling there and make
me some coffee.’
“Up sprang Gobo and his friend,
and in half a moment were respectfully skipping about
in a manner that contrasted well with the lordly contempt
of their previous conversation. But all the time
they were in earnest in what they said about hunting
the elephants any further, for before I had finished
my coffee they came to me in a body, and said that
if I wanted to follow those elephants I must follow
them myself, for they would not go.
“I argued with them, and affected
to be much put out. The elephants were close
at hand, I said; I was sure of it; I had heard them
trumpet in the night.
“‘Yes,’ answered
the men mysteriously, ’they too had heard things
in the night, things not nice to hear; they had heard
the spooks out shooting, and no longer would they
remain in a country so vilely haunted.’
“‘It was nonsense,’
I replied. ’If ghosts went out shooting,
surely they would use air-guns and not black powder,
and one would not hear an air-gun. Well, if they
were cowards, and would not come, of course I could
not force them to, but I would make a bargain with
them. They should follow those elephants for
one half-hour more, then if we failed to come upon
them I would abandon the pursuit, and we would go straight
to Wambe, chief of the Matuku, and give him hongo.’
“To this compromise the men
agreed readily. Accordingly about half-an-hour
later we struck our camp and started, and notwithstanding
my aches and bruises, I do not think that I ever felt
in better spirits in my life. It is something
to wake up in the morning and remember that in the
dead of the night, single-handed, one has given battle
to and overthrown three of the largest elephants in
Africa, slaying them with three bullets. Such
a feat to my knowledge had never been done before,
and on that particular morning I felt a very ‘tall
man of my hands’ indeed. The only thing
I feared was, that should I ever come to tell the
story nobody would believe it, for when a strange tale
is told by a hunter, people are apt to think it is
necessarily a lie, instead of being only probably
so.
For the satisfaction of any who
may be so disbelieving as to take this view of
Mr. Quatermain’s story, the Editor may
state that a gentleman with whom he is acquainted,
and whose veracity he believes to be beyond doubt,
not long ago described to him how he chanced
to kill four African elephants with four
consecutive bullets. Two of these elephants
were charging him simultaneously, and out of the four
three were killed with the head shot, a very uncommon
thing in the case of the African elephant. Editor.
“Well, we passed on till, having
crossed the first glade where I had seen the lions,
we reached the neck of bush that separated it from
the second glade, where the dead elephants were.
And here I began to take elaborate precautions, amongst
others ordering Gobo to keep some yards ahead and
look out sharp, as I thought that the elephants might
be about. He obeyed my instructions with a superior
smile, and pushed ahead. Presently I saw him
pull up as though he had been shot, and begin to snap
his fingers faintly.
“‘What is it?’ I whispered.
“‘The elephant, the great elephant with
one tusk kneeling down.’
“I crept up beside him.
There knelt the bull as I had left him last night,
and there too lay the other bulls.
“‘Do these elephants sleep?’ I whispered
to the astonished Gobo.
“‘Yes, Macumazahn, they sleep.’
“‘Nay, Gobo, they are dead.’
“‘Dead? How can they be dead?
Who killed them?’
“‘What do people call me, Gobo?’
“‘They call you Macumazahn.’
“‘And what does Macumazahn mean?’
“’It means the man who
keeps his eyes open, the man who gets up in the night.’
“’Yes, Gobo, and I am
that man. Look, you idle, lazy cowards; while
you slept last night I rose, and alone I hunted those
great elephants, and slew them by the moonlight.
To each of them I gave one bullet and only one, and
it fell dead. Look,’ and I advanced into
the glade, ’here is my spoor, and here is the
spoor of the great bull charging after me, and there
is the tree that I took refuge behind; see, the elephant
shattered it in his charge. Oh, you cowards,
you who would give up the chase while the blood spoor
steamed beneath your nostrils, see what I did single-handed
while you slept, and be ashamed.’
“‘Ou!’ said
the men, ‘où! Koos! Koos y umcool!’
(Chief, great Chief!) And then they held their tongues,
and going up to the three dead beasts, gazed upon
them in silence.
“But after that those men looked
upon me with awe as being almost more than mortal.
No mere man, they said, could have slain those three
elephants alone in the night-time. I never had
any further trouble with them. I believe that
if I had told them to jump over a precipice and that
they would take no harm, they would have believed me.
“Well, I went up and examined
the bulls. Such tusks as they had I never saw
and never shall see again. It took us all day
to cut them out; and when they reached Delagoa Bay,
as they did ultimately, though not in my keeping,
the single tusk of the big bull scaled one hundred
and sixty pounds, and the four other tusks averaged
ninety-nine and a half pounds a most wonderful,
indeed an almost unprecedented, lot of ivory. Unfortunately
I was forced to saw the big tusk in two, otherwise
we could not have carried it.”
The largest elephant
tusk of which the Editor has any
certain knowledge scaled
one hundred and fifty pounds.
“Oh, Quatermain, you barbarian!”
I broke in here, “the idea of spoiling such
a tusk! Why, I would have kept it whole if I had
been obliged to drag it myself.”
“Oh yes, young man,” he
answered, “it is all very well for you to talk
like that, but if you had found yourself in the position
which it was my privilege to occupy a few hours afterwards,
it is my belief that you would have thrown the tusks
away altogether and taken to your heels.”
“Oh,” said Good, “so
that isn’t the end of the yarn? A very good
yarn, Quatermain, by the way I couldn’t
have made up a better one myself.”
The old gentleman looked at Good severely,
for it irritated him to be chaffed about his stories.
“I don’t know what you
mean, Good. I don’t see that there is any
comparison between a true story of adventure and the
preposterous tales which you invent about ibex hanging
by their horns. No, it is not the end of the
story; the most exciting part is to come. But
I have talked enough for to-night; and if you go on
in that way, Good, it will be some time before I begin
again.”
“Sorry I spoke, I’m sure,”
said Good, humbly. “Let’s have a split
to show that there is no ill-feeling.”
And they did.