A Night-Bivouac under the mimosa-bushes
of the Zwartkops River. The Cape-waggons are
drawn up in various comfortable nooks; the oxen are
turned loose to graze; camp-fires are kindled.
Round these men and women group themselves very much
as they do in ordinary society. Classes keep
by themselves, not because one class wishes to exclude
the other, but because habits, sympathies, interests,
and circumstances draw like to like. The ruddy
glare of the camp-fires contrasts pleasantly with
the cold light of the moon, which casts into deepest
shadow the wild recesses of bush and brake, inducing
many a furtive glance from the more timid of the settlers,
who see an elephant, a buffalo, or a Cape “tiger”
in every bank and stump and stone. Their suspicions
are not so wild as one might suppose, for the neighbouring
jungle, called the Addo Bush, swarms with these and
other wild animals.
The distance travelled on this first
day was not great; the travellers were not much fatigued,
but were greatly excited by novelty, which rendered
them wakeful. If one had gone round to the numerous
fires and played eavesdropper, what eager discussion
on the new land he would have heard; what anxious
speculations; what sanguine hopes; what noble plans;
what ridiculous ideas; what mad anticipations-for
all were hopeful and enthusiastic.
Round one of these fires was assembled
the family and retainers of our Highland farmer, Kenneth
McTavish, among whom were Sandy Black and Jerry Goldboy.
They had been joined by Charlie Considine, who felt
drawn somewhat to Sandy. Quite close to these,
round another fire, were grouped the three bachelor
brothers Skyd, with their friend Dobson. At
another, within earshot of these, were Edwin Brook
and his wife, his daughter Gertrude, Scholtz and his
wife, Junkie, George Dally, and Stephen Orpin, with
bluff Hans Marais, who had somehow got acquainted
with the Brook family, and seemed to prefer their society
to that of any other.
Down in a hollow under a thick spreading
mimosa bush was the noisiest fire of all, for there
were assembled some of the natives belonging to the
waggons of Hans and Jan Smit. These carried on
an uproarious discussion of some sort, appealing frequently
to our friend Ruyter the Hottentot, who appeared to
be regarded by them as an umpire or an oracle.
The Hottentot race is a very inferior one, both mentally
and physically, but there are among them individuals
who rise much above the ordinary level. Ruyter
was one of these. He had indeed the sallow visage,
high cheek-bones, and dots of curly wool scattered
thinly over his head, peculiar to his race, but his
countenance was unusually intelligent, his frame well
made and very powerful, and his expression good.
He entered heartily into the fun of attempting to
teach the Hottentot klick to some of the younger men
among the emigrants, who were attracted to his fire
by the shouts of laughter in which the swarthy slaves
and others indulged. Abdul Jemalee, the Malay
slave, was there; also Booby the Bushman-the
former grave and silent, almost sad; the latter conducting
himself like a monkey-to which animal he
seemed closely related-and evoking shouts
of laughter from a few youths, for whose special benefit
he kept in the background and mimicked every one else.
“What a noisy set they are over
there!” observed Edwin Brook, who had for some
time been quietly contemplating the energetic George
Dally, as he performed the duties of cook and waiter
to his party.
“They are, sir,” replied
Dally, “like niggers in general, fond of showing
their white teeth.”
“Come, Gertie, your mother can
spare you now; let’s go over and listen to them.”
Gertie complied with alacrity, and took her father’s
arm.
“Oh!” she exclaimed, with
a little scream, as a thorn full five inches long
gave her a wicked probe on the left shoulder.
Hans Marais sprang up and gallantly
raised the branch which had touched her.
“It is only Kafirs who can run
against mimosa thorns with impunity,” said the
handsome young Dutchman.
Gertie laughed, remarked that mimosa
thorns, like South African gentlemen, were unusually
long and sharp, and passed on.
Hans sat down on the ground, filled
his large pipe, and gazed dreamily into the fire,
with something of the sensation of a hunter when he
makes a bad shot.
“Now then, Goliath,” said
the ever busy George Dally; “move your long
legs out o’ that. Don’t you see the
pot’s about to bile over?”
Hans quietly obeyed.
“If I chanced to be alongside
o’ that Tottie over there just now,” continued
George, “I’d be inclined to stop his noise
with a rap on his spotted pate.”
“You’d have to make it
a heavy rap, then, to produce any effect,” said
Hans, taking a long draw at his pipe, “for he
belongs to a hard-headed race.”
The truth of the young farmer’s
words was verified just then in a way that was alarming
as well as unexpected.
One of the heavy waggons, which had
been delayed behind the others by some trifling accident,
came lumbering up just as Hans spoke. There was
a softish sandy spot in advance of it, into which one
of the front wheels plunged. The tilt caught
on part of the waggon to which Ruyter belonged.
To prevent damage the active Hottentot sprang forward.
In doing so he tripped and fell. At the same
instant a tremendous crack of the whip and a shout
produced a wrench at the waggon, the hind wheel of
which went over Ruyter’s head and crushed it
into the ground!
A roar of consternation followed,
and several eager hands carefully dug out the poor
man’s head. To the surprise of all, the
five-ton waggon had not flattened it!
The sand was so soft that it had not been squeezed
at all-at least to any damaging extent,-a
round stone having opportunely taken much of the pressure
on itself, so that the Hottentot soon revived, and,
beyond a headache, was little the worse of the accident.
He returned to his place at the fire, but did not
resume his part in the discussions, which were continued
as noisily as before.
In strong contrast with the other
groups were those of the Dutch-African boers who had
brought the waggons to the Bay. Most of them
were men of colossal stature. They sat apart,
smoking their huge pipes in silent complacency and
comfort, amused a little at the scenes going on around
them, but apparently disinclined to trouble themselves
about anything in particular.
Supper produced a lull in the general
hum of conversation, but when pipes were lit the storm
revived and continued far into the night. At
last symptoms of weariness appeared, and people began
to make arrangements for going to rest.
These arrangements were as varied
as the characters of the emigrants.
Charlie Considine and Hans Marais,
now become inseparable comrades, cleared and levelled
the ground under a mimosa-bush, and, spreading their
kaross thereon, lay down to sleep. George Dally,
being an adaptable man, looked at the old campaigners
for a few minutes, and then imitated their example.
Little Jerry Goldboy, being naturally a nervous creature,
and having his imagination filled with snakes, scorpions,
tarantulas, etcetera, would fain have slept in one
of the waggons above the baggage-as did
many of the women and children-if he had
not been laughed out of his desire by Dally, and induced
to spread his couch manfully on the bare ground.
It must not be supposed, however,
that Jerry, although timid, was cowardly. On
the contrary, he was bold as a lion. He could
not control his sensitively-strung nervous system,
but instead of running away, like the coward, he was
prone to rush furiously at whatever startled him, and
grapple with it.
Some families pitched their tents,
others, deeming curtains a needless luxury in such
magnificent weather, contented themselves with the
shelter of the bushes.
Meanwhile the Hottentot attendants
replenished the fires, while the boers unslung their
huge guns and placed them so as to be handy; for,
although elephants and lions were not nearly so numerous
as they once had been in that particular locality,
there was still sufficient possibility of their presence,
as well as of other nocturnal wanderers in the African
wilds, to render such precaution necessary. The
whole scene was most romantic, especially in the eyes
of those who thus bivouacked for the first time in
the wilderness. To them the great waggons; the
gigantic Cape-oxen-which appeared to have
been created expressly to match the waggons as well
as to carry their own ponderous horns; the wild-looking
Hottentots and Bushmen; the big phlegmatic Dutchmen;
the bristling thorns of the mimosas, cropping
out of comparative darkness; the varied groups of
emigrants; the weird forms of the clumps of cactus,
aloes, euphorbias, and other strange plants, lit up
by the fitful glare of the camp-fires, and canopied
by the star-spangled depths of a southern sky-all
seemed to them the unbelievable creations of a wild
vision.
Poor Jerry Goldboy, however, had sufficient
faith in the reality of the vision to increase his
nervous condition considerably, and he resolved to
lie down with his “arms handy.” These
arms consisted of a flint-lock blunderbuss, an heirloom
in his father’s family, and a bowie-knife, which
had been presented to him by an American cousin on
his leaving England. Twice during that day’s
march had the blunderbuss exploded owing to its owner’s
inexperience in fire-arms. Fortunately no harm
had been done, the muzzle on each occasion having
been pointed to the sky, but the ire of the Dutch
driver in front of Jerry had been aroused, and he
was forbidden to reload the piece. Now, however,
observing the preparations above referred to, he felt
it to be his duty to prepare for the worst, and quietly
loaded his bell-mouthed weapon with a heavy charge
of buckshot.
“What’s that you’re
after, boy?” asked George Dally, who was making
some final arrangements at the fire, before lying
down for the night.
“Oh, nothing,” replied
Jerry, with a start, for he had thought himself unobserved,
“only seein’ to my gun before turnin’
in.”
“That’s right,”
said George. “Double-load it. Nothin’
like bein’ ready for whatever may turn up in
a wild country like this. Why, I once knew a
man named Snip who said he had been attacked one night
in South America by a sarpint full forty feet long,
and who saved his life by means of a blunderbuss,
though he didn’t fire at the reptile at all.”
“Indeed, how was that?” asked Jerry.
“Why, just because his weapon
was bell-mouthed an’ loaded a’most to the
muzzle. You see, the poor fellow was awoke out
of a deep sleep and couldn’t well see, so that
instead o’ firin’ at the brute, he fired
his blunderbuss about ten yards to one side of it,
but the shot scattered so powerfully that one o’
the outside bullets hit a stone, glanced off, and
caught the sarpint in the eye, and though it failed
to kill the brute on the spot, the wound gave it such
pain that it stood up on its tail and wriggled in
agony for full five minutes, sending broken twigs and
dry leaves flying about like a whirlwind, so Snip
he jumped up, dropped his weapon, an’ bolted.
He never returned to the encampment, and never saw
the big snake or his blunderbuss again.”
“What a pity! then he lost it?”
said Jerry, looking with some anxiety at a decayed
branch, to which the flickering flame gave apparent
motion.
“Yes, he lost the blunderbuss,
but he saved his life,” replied Dally, as he
lay down near his little friend and drew his blanket
over him. “You’d better put the gun
between us, my boy, to be handy to both-an’
if anything comes, the one of us that wakes
first can lay hold of it and fire.”
There was, we need scarcely observe,
a strong spice of wickedness in George. If he
had suggested a lion, or even an elephant, there would
have been something definite for poor Jerry’s
anxious mind to lay hold of and try to reason down
and defy, but that dreadful “anything”
that might come, gave him nothing to hold by.
It threw the whole zoological ferocities of South
Africa open to his unanchored imagination, and for
a long time banished sleep from his eyes.
He allowed the blunderbuss to remain
as his friend had placed it, and hugged the naked
bowie-knife to his breast. In addition to these
weapons he had provided himself with a heavy piece
of wood, something like the exaggerated truncheon
of a policeman, for the purpose of killing snakes,
should any such venture near his couch.
The wild shrieks of laughter at the
neighbouring Hottentot fire helped to increase Jerry’s
wakefulness, and when this at last lulled, the irritation
was kept up by the squalling of Master Junkie, whose
tent was about three feet distant from Jerry’s
pillow, and who kept up a vicious piping just in proportion
to the earnestness of Mrs Scholtz’s attempts
to calm him.
At last, however, the child’s
lamentations ceased, and there broke upon the night
air a sweet sound which stilled the merriment of the
natives. It was the mellow voice of Stephen Orpin
singing a hymn of praise, with a number of like-minded
emigrants, before retiring to rest. Doubtless
some of those who had already retired, and lay, perchance,
watching the stars and thinking dreamily of home,
were led naturally by the sweet hymn to think of the
home in the “better land,” which might
possibly be nearer to some of them than the old home
they had left for ever-ay, even than the
new “locations” to which they were bound.
But, whatever the thoughts suggested,
the whole camp soon afterwards sank into repose.
Tent-doors were drawn and curtains of waggon-tilts
let down. The boers, sticking their big pipes
in their hatbands, wrapped themselves in greatcoats,
and, regardless of snake or scorpion, stretched their
limbs on the bare ground, while Hottentots, negroes,
and Bushmen, rolling themselves in sheepskin karosses,
lay coiled up like balls with their feet to the fire.
Only once was the camp a little disturbed, during
the early part of the night, by the mournful howl of
a distant hyena. It was the first that the newcomers
had heard, and most of those who were awake raised
themselves on their elbows eagerly to listen.
Jerry was just dropping into slumber
at the time. He sat bolt upright on hearing
the cry, and when it was repeated he made a wild grasp
at the blunderbuss, but Dally was beforehand.
He caught up the weapon, and this probably saved
an explosion.
“Come, lie down, you imp!” he said, somewhat
sternly.
Jerry obeyed, and his nose soon told
that he had reached the land of dreams.
Dally then quietly drew the charge
of shot, but left the powder and laid the piece in
its former position. Turning over with the sigh
of one whose active duties for the day have been completed,
he then went to sleep.
Gradually the fires burned low, and
gave out such flickering uncertain light, when an
occasional flame leaped up ever and anon, that to
unaccustomed eyes it might have seemed as though snakes
were crawling everywhere, and Jerry Goldboy, had he
been awake, would have beheld a complete menagerie
in imagination. But Jerry was now in blessed
oblivion.
When things were in this condition,
that incomprehensible subtlety, the brain of Junkie
Brook-or something else-so acted
as to cause the urchin to give vent to a stentorian
yell. Strong though it was, it did not penetrate
far through the canvas tent, but being, as we have
said, within a few feet of Jerry’s ear, it sounded
to that unhappy man like the united, and as yet unknown,
shriek of all the elephants and buffaloes in Kafirland.
Starting up with a sharp cry he stretched
out his hand towards the blunderbuss, but drew it
back with a thrill of horror. A huge black snake
lay in its place!
To seize his truncheon was the act
of a moment. The next, down it came with stunning
violence on the snake. The reptile instantly
exploded with a bellowing roar of smoke and flame,
which roused the whole camp.
“Blockhead! what d’you
mean by that?” growled George Dally, turning
round sleepily, but without rising, for he was well
aware of the cause of the confusion.
Jerry shrank within himself like a
guilty thing caught in the act, and glanced uneasily
round to ascertain how much of death and destruction
had been dealt out. Relieved somewhat to see
no one writhing in blood, he arose, and, in much confusion,
replied to the numerous eager queries as to what he
had fired at. When the true state of affairs
became manifest, most of the Dutchmen, who had been
active enough when aroused by supposed danger, sauntered
back to their couches with a good-natured chuckle;
the settlers who had “turned out” growled
or chaffed, according to temperament, as they followed
suit, and the natives spent half an hour in uproarious
merriment over Booby’s dramatic representation
of the whole incident, which he performed with graphic
power and much embellishment.
Thereafter the camp sank once more
into repose, and rested in peace till morning.