Now, my father, I must tell of how
Umslopogaas the Slaughterer and Galazi the Wolf fared
in their war against the People of the Halakazi.
When I had gone from the shadow of the Ghost Mountain,
Umslopogaas summoned a gathering of all his headmen,
and told them it was his desire that the People of
the Axe should no longer be a little people; that
they should grow great and number their cattle by tens
of thousands.
The headmen asked how this might be
brought about would he then make war on
Dingaan the King? Umslopogaas answered no, he
would win the favour of the king thus: and he
told them of the Lily maid and of the Halakazi tribe
in Swaziland, and of how he would go up against that
tribe. Now some of the headmen said yea to this
and some said nay, and the talk ran high and lasted
till the evening. But when the evening was come
Umslopogaas rose and said that he was chief under the
Axe, and none other, and it was his will that they
should go up against the Halakazi. If there was
any man there who would gainsay his will, let him stand
forward and do battle with him, and he who conquered
should order all things. To this there was no
answer, for there were few who cared to face the beak
of Groan-Maker, and so it came about that it was agreed
that the People of the Axe should make war upon the
Halakazi, and Umslopogaas sent out messengers to summon
every fighting-man to his side.
But when Zinita, his head wife, came
to hear of the matter she was angry, and upbraided
Umslopogaas, and heaped curses on me, Mopo, whom she
knew only as the mouth of Dingaan, because, as she
said truly, I had put this scheme into the mind of
the Slaughterer. “What!” she went
on, “do you not live here in peace and plenty,
and must you go to make war on those who have not
harmed you; there, perhaps, to perish or to come to
other ill? You say you do this to win a girl for
Dingaan and to find favour in his sight. Has
not Dingaan girls more than he can count? It
is more likely that, wearying of us, your wives, you
go to get girls for yourself, Bulalio; and as for
finding favour, rest quiet, so shall you find most
favour. If the king sends his impis against you,
then it will be time to fight, O fool with little
wit!”
Thus Zinita spoke to him, very roughly for
she always blurted out what was in her mind, and Umslopogaas
could not challenge her to battle. So he must
bear her talk as best he might, for it is often thus,
my father, that the greatest of men grow small enough
in their own huts. Moreover, he knew that it
was because Zinita loved him that she spoke so bitterly.
Now on the third day all the fighting-men
were gathered, and there might have been two thousand
of them, good men and brave. Then Umslopogaas
went out and spoke to them, telling them of this adventure,
and Galazi the Wolf was with him. They listened
silently, and it was plain to see that, as in the
case of the headmen, some of them thought one thing
and some another. Then Galazi spoke to them briefly,
telling them that he knew the roads and the caves
and the number of the Halakazi cattle; but still they
doubted. Thereon Umslopogaas added these words:
“To-morrow, at the dawn, I,
Bulalio, Holder of the Axe, Chief of the People of
the Axe, go up against the Halakazi, with Galazi the
Wolf, my brother. If but ten men follow us, yet
we will go. Now, choose, you soldiers! Let
those come who will, and let those who will stop at
home with the women and the little children.”
Now a great shout rose from every throat.
“We will go with you, Bulalio, to victory or
death!”
So on the morrow they marched, and
there was wailing among the women of the People of
the Axe. Only Zinita did not wail, but stood by
in wrath, foreboding evil; nor would she bid her lord
farewell, yet when he was gone she wept also.
Now Umslopogaas and his impi travelled
fast and far, hungering and thirsting, till at length
they came to the land of the Umswazi, and after a
while entered the territory of the Halakazi by a high
and narrow pass. The fear of Galazi the Wolf
was that they should find this pass held, for though
they had harmed none in the kraals as they went,
and taken only enough cattle to feed themselves, yet
he knew well that messengers had sped by day and night
to warn the people of the Halakazi. But they
found no man in the pass, and on the other side of
it they rested, for the night was far spent.
At dawn Umslopogaas looked out over the wide plains
beyond, and Galazi showed him a long low hill, two
hours’ march away.
“There, my brother,” he
said, “lies the head kraal of the Halakazi,
where I was born, and in that hill is the great cave.”
Then they went on, and before the
sun was high they came to the crest of a rise, and
heard the sound of horns on its farther side.
They stood upon the rise, and looked, and lo! yet
far off, but running towards them, was the whole impi
of the Halakazi, and it was a great impi.
“They have gathered their strength
indeed,” said Galazi. “For every man
of ours there are three of these Swazis!”
The soldiers saw also, and the courage
of some of them sank low. Then Umslopogaas spoke
to them:
“Yonder are the Swazi dogs,
my children; they are many and we are few. Yet,
shall it be told at home that we, men of the Zulu blood,
were hunted by a pack of Swazi dogs? Shall our
women and children sing that song in our ears,
O Soldiers of the Axe?”
Now some cried “Never!”
but some were silent; so Umslopogaas spoke again:
“Turn back all who will:
there is yet time. Turn back all who will, but
ye who are men come forward with me. Or if ye
will, go back all of you, and leave Axe Groan-Maker
and Club Watcher to see this matter out alone.”
Now there arose a mighty shout of
“We will die together who have lived together!”
“Do you swear it?” cried
Umslopogaas, holding Groan-Maker on high.
“We swear it by the Axe,” they answered.
Then Umslopogaas and Galazi made ready
for the battle. They posted all the young men
in the broken ground above the bottom of the slope,
for these could best be spared to the spear, and Galazi
the Wolf took command of them; but the veterans stayed
upon the hillside, and with them Umslopogaas.
Now the Halakazi came on, and there
were four full regiments of them. The plain was
black with them, the air was rent with their shoutings,
and their spears flashed like lightnings. On the
farther side of the slope they halted and sent a herald
forward to demand what the People of the Axe would
have from them. The Slaughterer answered that
they would have three things: First, the head
of their chief, whose place Galazi should fill henceforth;
secondly, that fair maid whom men named the Lily;
thirdly, a thousand head of cattle. If these demands
were granted, then he would spare them, the Halakazi;
if not, he would stamp them out and take all.
So the herald returned, and when he
reached the ranks of the Halakazi he called aloud
his answer. Then a great roar of laughter went
up from the Halakazi regiments, a roar that shook
the earth. The brow of Umslopogaas the Slaughterer
burned red beneath the black when he heard it, and
he shook Groan-Maker towards their host.
“Ye shall sing another song
before this sun is set,” he cried, and strode
along the ranks speaking to this man and that by name,
and lifting up their hearts with great words.
Now the Halakazi raised a shout, and
charged to come at the young men led by Galazi the
Wolf; but beyond the foot of the slope was peaty ground,
and they came through it heavily, and as they came
Galazi and the young men fell upon them and slew them;
still, they could not hold them back for long, because
of their great numbers, and presently the battle ranged
all along the slope. But so well did Galazi handle
the young men, and so fiercely did they fight beneath
his eye, that before they could be killed or driven
back all the force of the Halakazi was doing battle
with them. Ay, and twice Galazi charged with such
as he could gather, and twice he checked the Halakazi
rush, throwing them into confusion, till at length
company was mixed with company and regiment with regiment.
But it might not endure, for now more than half the
young men were down, and the rest were being pushed
back up the hill, fighting madly.
But all this while Umslopogaas and
the veterans sat in their ranks upon the brow of the
slope and watched. “Those Swazi dogs have
a fool for their general,” quoth Umslopogaas.
“He has no men left to fall back on, and Galazi
has broken his array and mixed his regiments as milk
and cream are mixed in a bowl. They are no longer
an impi, they are a mob.”
Now the veterans moved restlessly
on their haunches, pushing their legs out and drawing
them in again. They glanced at the fray, they
looked into each other’s eyes and spoke a word
here, a word there, “Well smitten, Galazi!
Wow! that one is down! A brave lad! Ho! a
good club is the Watcher! The fight draws near,
my brother!” And ever as they spoke their faces
grew fiercer and their fingers played with their spears.
At length a captain called aloud to Umslopogaas:
“Say, Slaughterer, is it not
time to be up and doing? The grass is wet to
sit on, and our limbs grow cramped.”
“Wait awhile,” answered
Umslopogaas. “Let them weary of their play.
Let them weary, I tell you.”
As he spoke the Halakazi huddled themselves
together, and with a rush drove back Galazi and those
who were left of the young men. Yes, at last
they were forced to flee, and after them came the Swazis,
and in the forefront of the pursuit was their chief,
ringed round with a circle of his bravest.
Umslopogaas saw it and bounded to
his feet, roaring like a bull. “At them
now, wolves!” he shouted.
Then the lines of warriors sprang
up as a wave springs, and their crests were like foam
upon the wave. As a wave that swells to break
they rose suddenly, like a breaking wave they poured
down the slope. In front of them was the Slaughterer,
holding Groan-Maker aloft, and oh! his feet were swift.
So swift were his feet that, strive as they would,
he outran them by the quarter of a spear’s throw.
Galazi heard the thunder of their rush; he looked
round, and as he looked, lo! the Slaughterer swept
past him, running like a buck. Then Galazi, too,
bounded forward, and the Wolf-Brethren sped down the
hill, the length of four spears between them.
The Halakazi also saw and heard, and
strove to gather themselves together to meet the rush.
In front of Umslopogaas was their chief, a tall man
hedged about with assegais. Straight at the shield-hedge
drove Umslopogaas, and a score of spears were lifted
to greet him, a score of shields heaved into the air this
was a fence that none might pass alive. Yet would
the Slaughterer pass it not alone!
See! he steadies his pace, he gathers himself together,
and now he leaps! High into the air he leaps;
his feet knock the heads of the warriors and rattle
against the crowns of their shields. They smite
upwards with the spear, but he has swept over them
like a swooping bird. He has cleared them he
has lit and now the shield-hedge guards
two chiefs. But not for long. Ou! Groan-Maker
is aloft, he falls and neither shield nor
axe may stay his stroke, both are cleft through, and
the Halakazi lack a leader.
The shield-ring wheels in upon itself.
Fools! Galazi is upon you! What was that?
Look, now! see how many bones are left unbroken in
him whom the Watcher falls on full! What! another
down! Close up, shield-men close up!
Ai! are you fled?
Ah! the wave has fallen on the beach.
Listen to its roaring listen to the roaring
of the shields! Stand, you men of the Halakazi stand!
Surely they are but a few. So! it is done!
By the head of Chaka! they break they are
pushed back now the wave of slaughter seethes
along the sands now the foe is swept like
floating weed, and from all the line there comes a
hissing like the hissing of thin waters. “S’gee!”
says the hiss. “S’gee! S’gee!”
There, my father, I am old. What
have I do with the battle any more, with the battle
and its joy? Yet it is better to die in such a
fight as that than to live any other way. I have
seen such I have seen many such. Oh!
we could fight when I was a man, my father, but none
that I knew could ever fight like Umslopogaas the
Slaughterer, son of Chaka, and his blood-brother Galazi
the Wolf! So, so! they swept them away, those
Halakazi; they swept them as a maid sweeps the dust
of a hut, as the wind sweeps the withered leaves.
It was soon done when once it was begun. Some
were fled and some were dead, and this was the end
of that fight. No, no, not of all the war.
The Halakazi were worsted in the field, but many lived
to win the great cave, and there the work must be
finished. Thither, then, went the Slaughterer
presently, with such of his impi as was left to him.
Alas! many were killed; but how could they have died
better than in that fight? Also those who were
left were as good as all, for now they knew that they
should not be overcome easily while Axe and Club still
led the way.
Now they stood before a hill, measuring,
perhaps, three thousand paces round its base.
It was of no great height, and yet unclimbable, for,
after a man had gone up a little way, the sides of
it were sheer, offering no foothold except to the
rock-rabbits and the lizards. No one was to be
seen without this hill, nor in the great kraal
of the Halakazi that lay to the east of it, and yet
the ground about was trampled with the hoofs of oxen
and the feet of men, and from within the mountain came
a sound of lowing cattle.
“Here is the nest of Halakazi,” quoth
Galazi the Wolf.
“Here is the nest indeed,”
said Umslopogaas; “but how shall we come at
the eggs to suck them? There are no branches on
this tree.”
“But there is a hole in the trunk,” answered
the Wolf.
Now he led them a little way till
they came to a place where the soil was trampled as
it is at the entrance to a cattle kraal, and they
saw that there was a low cave which led into the cliff,
like an archway such as you white men build.
But this archway was filled up with great blocks of
stone placed upon each other in such a fashion that
it could not be forced from without. After the
cattle were driven in it had been filled up.
“We cannot enter here,” said Galazi.
“Follow me.”
So they followed him, and came to
the north side of the mountain, and there, two spear-casts
away, a soldier was standing. But when he saw
them he vanished suddenly.
“There is the place,”
said Galazi, “and the fox has gone to earth in
it.”
Now they ran to the spot and saw a
little hole in the rock, scarcely bigger than an ant-bear’s
burrow, and through the hole came sounds and some
light.
“Now where is the hyena who
will try a new burrow?” cried Umslopogaas.
“A hundred head of cattle to the man who wins
through and clears the way!”
Then two young men sprang forward
who were flushed with victory and desired nothing
more than to make a great name and win cattle, crying:
“Here are hyenas, Bulalio.”
“To earth, then!” said
Umslopogaas, “and let him who wins through hold
the path awhile till others follow.”
The two young men sprang at the hole,
and he who reached it first went down upon his hands
and knees and crawled in, lying on his shield and
holding his spear before him. For a little while
the light in the burrow vanished, and they heard the
sound of his crawling. Then came the noise of
blows, and once more light crept through the hole.
The man was dead.
“This one had a bad snake,”
said the second soldier; “his snake deserted
him. Let me see if mine is better.”
So down he went on his hands and knees,
and crawled as the first had done, only he put his
shield over his head. For awhile they heard him
crawling, then once more came the sound of blows echoing
on the ox-hide shield, and after the blows groans.
He was dead also, yet it seemed that they had left
his body in the hole, for now no light came through.
This was the cause, my father: when they struck
the man he had wriggled back a little way and died
there, and none had entered from the farther side
to drag him out.
Now the soldiers stared at the mouth
of the passage and none seemed to love the look of
it, for this was but a poor way to die. Umslopogaas
and Galazi also looked at it, thinking.
“Now I am named Wolf,”
said Galazi, “and a wolf should not fear the
dark; also, these are my people, and I must be the
first to visit them,” and he went down on his
hands and knees without more ado. But Umslopogaas,
having peered once more down the burrow, said:
“Hold, Galazi; I will go first! I have
a plan. Do you follow me. And you, my children,
shout loudly, so that none may hear us move; and, if
we win through, follow swiftly, for we cannot hold
the mouth of that place for long. Hearken, also!
this is my counsel to you: if I fall choose another
chief Galazi the Wolf, if he is still living.”
“Nay, Slaughterer, do not name
me,” said the Wolf, “for together we live
or die.”
“So let it be, Galazi.
Then choose you some other man and try this road no
more, for if we cannot pass it none can, but seek food
and sit down here till those jackals bolt; then be
ready. Farewell, my children!”
“Farewell, father,” they
answered, “go warily, lest we be left like cattle
without a herdsman, wandering and desolate.”
Then Umslopogaas crept into the hole,
taking no shield, but holding Groan-Maker before him,
and at his heels crept Galazi. When he had covered
the length of six spears he stretched out his hand,
and, as he trusted to do, he found the feet of that
man who had gone before and died in the place.
Then Umslopogaas the way did this: he put his
head beneath the dead man’s legs and thrust
himself onward till all the body was on his back,
and there he held it with one hand, gripping its two
wrists in his hand. Then he crawled forward a
little space and saw that he was coming to the inner
mouth of the burrow, but that the shadow was deep
there because of a great mass of rock which lay before
the burrow shutting out the light. “This
is well for me,” thought Umslopogaas, “for
now they will not know the dead from the living.
I may yet look upon the sun again.” Now
he heard the Halakazi soldiers talking without.
“The Zulu rats do not love this
run,” said one, “they fear the rat-catcher’s
stick. This is good sport,” and a man laughed.
Then Umslopogaas pushed himself forward
as swiftly as he could, holding the dead man on his
back, and suddenly came out of the hole into the open
place in the dark shadow of the great rock.
“By the Lily,” cried a
soldier, “here’s a third! Take this,
Zulu rat!” And he struck the dead man heavily
with a kerrie. “And that!” cried
another, driving his spear through him so that it pricked
Umslopogaas beneath. “And that! and this!
and that!” said others, as they smote and stabbed.
Now Umslopogaas groaned heavily in
the deep shadow and lay still. “No need
to waste more blows,” said the man who had struck
first. “This one will never go back to
Zululand, and I think that few will care to follow
him. Let us make an end: run, some of you,
and find stones to stop the burrow, for now the sport
is done.”
He turned as he spoke and so did the
others, and this was what the Slaughter sought.
With a swift movement, he freed himself from the dead
man and sprang to his feet. They heard the sound
and turned again, but as they turned Groan-Maker pecked
softly, and that man who had sworn by the Lily was
no more a man. Then Umslopogaas leaped forwards,
and, bounding on to the great rock, stood there like
a buck against the sky.
“A Zulu rat is not so easily
slain, O ye weasels!” he cried, as they came
at him from all sides at once with a roar. He
smote to the right and the left, and so swiftly that
men could scarcely see the blows fall, for he struck
with Groan-Maker’s beak. But though men
scarcely saw the blows, yet, my father, men fell beneath
them. Now foes were all around, leaping up at
the Slaughterer as rushing water leaps to hide a rock everywhere
shone spears, thrusting at him from this side and from
that. Those in front and to the side Groan-Maker
served to stay, but one wounded Umslopogaas in the
neck, and another was lifted to pierce his back when
the strength of its holder was bowed to the dust to
the dust, to become of the dust.
For now the Wolf was through the hole
also, and the Watcher grew very busy; he was so busy
that soon the back of the Slaughterer had nothing
to fear yet those had much to fear who stood
behind his back. The pair fought bravely, making
a great slaughter, and presently, one by one, plumed
heads of the People of the Axe showed through the burrow
and strong arms mingled in the fray. Swiftly
they came, leaping into battle as otters leap to the
water now there were ten of them, now there
were twenty and now the Halakazi broke
and fled, since they did not bargain for this.
Then the rest of the Men of the Axe came through in
peace, and the evening grew towards the dark before
all had passed the hole.