“Afar in the desert,”-far
beyond the frontier settlements of the colony, far
from the influences of civilisation, in the home of
the wild beast and the savage, the explorers now ride
under the blaze of the noontide sun.
They had passed over mountain and
dale into the burning plains of the karroo, and for
many hours had travelled without water or shelter from
the scorching heat. Lucas Van Dyk, who guided
them, said he knew where water was to be got, but
there was no possibility of reaching it before evening.
This announcement was received in silence, for not
a drop of the life-giving fluid had passed the lips
of man or beast since an early hour on the previous
day, and their powers of endurance were being tried
severely. The insupportable heat not only increased
the thirst, but rendered the hunters less able to
bear it. All round them the air quivered with
the radiation from the glaring sand, and occasionally
the mirage appeared with its delicious prospects
of relief, but as the Dutchmen knew the ground well,
none were deceived by it, though all were tantalised.
Compressing their lips, and urging their wearied cattle
to the utmost, they pushed steadily on, no sound breaking
the stillness of the desert save the creak of a waggon-wheel
or the groan of an exhausted animal.
At last Charlie Considine sought to
relieve his feelings by conversation.
“This is one of the unpleasant
experiences of African travel.”
Hans Marais, to whom the remark was
made, replied “Ja,” but as he added nothing
more, and looked stern, Charlie relapsed into silence.
Ere long one of the weaker oxen fell.
The party halted a few minutes, while the Hottentot
drivers plied their cruel whips unmercifully, but in
vain. One more merciful than the drivers was
there-death came to release the poor animal.
Immediately, as if by magic, vultures appeared in
the burning sky. From the far-off horizon they
came sailing by twos and threes, as if some invisible
messenger, like death himself, had gone with lightning-speed
to tell that a banquet awaited them.
No time was wasted; a brief word from
the leader sufficed. The dying ox was released
from the yoke that had galled it so long, and the party
proceeded. Before they were a mile off the ox
was dead, its eyes were out, its carcass torn open,
and the obscene birds were gorging themselves.
Before night it was an empty skeleton covered with
a dried hide! Not many hours would suffice to
remove the hide and leave only the bleaching bones.
Such remains are familiar objects on South African
roadsides.
That evening, according to their leader’s
prophecy, water was reached. It was a thick muddy
pool, but it sufficed to relieve them all, and a night
of comparative comfort followed a day of suffering.
Next morning, just after breakfast,
a herd of springboks was observed, and several of
the more eager of the party dashed off in pursuit.
Among these was Considine, Hans, Andrew Rivers, and
Jerry Goldboy. The two last were always first
in the mad pursuit of game, and caused their placid
Dutch friends no little anxiety by the scrapes they
frequently ran themselves into.
“Follow them, they’ll
get lost,” said Van Dyk to a group of Hottentots.
Two of these, Slinger and Dikkop, obeyed the order.
The antelopes were on a distant sandhill
in the plain. There were two groups of them.
Riven and Jerry made for one of these. Becoming
suddenly imbued with an idea worthy of a hunter, Jerry
diverged to the right, intending to allow his companion
to start the game, while he should lie in wait for
it under the shelter of a bush. Unfortunately
the game took the opposite direction when started,
so that Jerry was thrown entirely out. As it
chanced, however, this did not matter much, for Jerry’s
horse, becoming unmanageable, took to its heels and
dashed away wildly over the plain, followed by Dikkop
the Hottentot.
“Mind the ant-bear holes!”
shouted Dikkop, but as he shouted in Dutch Jerry did
not understand him, and devoted himself to vain endeavours
to restrain the horse. At first the animal looked
after itself and avoided the holes referred to, but
as Jerry kept tugging furiously at the reins it became
reckless, and finally put a fore-leg into a hole.
Instantly it rolled over, and the hunter flew off
its back, turning a complete somersault in the air.
A low shrub grows in the karroo, called
the ill-tempered thorn. It resembles a mass
of miniature porcupine quills, an inch or two in length,
planted as thickly as possible together, with the needle-points
up and bristling. On one of these shrubs poor
Jerry alighted!
“Oh! ’eavens, this is
hagony!” he groaned, jumping up and stamping,
while Dikkop almost fell off his horse with laughing.
To hide his mirth he bolted off in
pursuit of Jerry’s charger, which he soon caught
and brought back, looking supernaturally grave.
“We will rejoin the ’unters,
Dikkop,” said Jerry, in the tone of a man who
endeavours to conceal his sufferings.
“Ja, Mynheer,” said Dikkop.
Whatever Jerry Goldboy might have
said, that Hottentot would have replied “Ja,
Mynheer,” for he understood not a word of English.
Jerry mounted with an ill-suppressed
groan and rode back to the party, leaning very much
forward in the saddle, while Dikkop followed, showing
the white teeth in his dirty black visage from ear
to ear.
Rivers soon afterwards returned with
a springbok behind him, but there was no appearance
of Considine or Hans. As, however, the latter
was known to be an experienced traveller, no anxiety
was felt for them, and the main party proceeded on
its way. When night came they found that a well,
on which they had counted, was dried up, and were therefore
obliged to lie down without water. Several shots
were fired after dark to guide the absent ones, but
no reply was made. Still, those in camp felt
no anxiety, knowing that Hans was quite able to take
care of himself.
And so he was, truly, but he could
not take care of a hot-headed youth who was as eager
as Jerry in the chase, and much more daring.
At first he and Considine ran together
after the springboks; then Hans got near enough, dismounted,
and shot one. While he was busy fastening the
carcass on his horse, Considine continued to pursue
the others; going at full speed, he was soon far away
on the horizon. Still Hans would have been able
to see him if he had not got among some scattered
groups of mimosa-bushes, which were sufficiently large
to conceal him. When he remounted and looked
around, his friend was not to be seen. He saw
a few springboks, however, racing on the horizon in
the direction in which Considine had galloped, and
concluded somewhat hastily that they were pursued
by his friend. Away he went, therefore, but soon
discovered that he was mistaken. He turned then,
and rode quickly back, blaming himself for not having
followed the footprints of his friend’s horse.
This he now did, and at last came up with him, but
at so late an hour, and at such a distance from the
line of march, that a bivouac in the plain was inevitable.
“Oh, Hans,” he said, “I’m
so glad you’ve found me! I had no idea
that one could get so easily lost in an open plain.”
“You’ve had enough experience
too, one would think, to have remembered the vastness
of the karroo,” said Hans, dismounting and making
the fastenings of the springbok more secure, “A
man soon dwindles to the size of a crow in plains
like this, when you gallop away from him. Men
not accustomed to them misjudge distances and sizes
in a wonderful way. I remember once being out
hunting with a fellow who mistook a waggon for a springbok!-But
come, mount; we must ride on to a better camping-place
than this, and be content to sleep without blankets
to-night.”
“I hope the camping-place is
not far off, for I’m parched with thirst,”
said Considine, mounting and following at a smart gallop.
“I’m sorry for you,”
returned Hans, “for you’ll see no water
this night. To-morrow we’ll start early
and get to the waggons by breakfast-time.”
This was depressing news to Considine,
for the heat of the day and exertions of the chase
had, as he expressed it, almost dried him up.
There was nothing for it, however, but patience.
About sunset they came to a place
where were some old deserted huts. In one of
these they resolved to pass the night, though, from
certain holes in the side, it was evidently used at
times as an abode by beasts of prey. Having
flint and steel, they made a fire, and while thus engaged
were serenaded by the distant and dolorous howls of
a hyena and the inharmonious jabberings of a jackal.
“Pleasant company!” observed
Considine as he roasted a steak over the fire.
“Ja,” replied Hans, who,
being a more expert cook, was already busy with a
rib.
The melancholy hoot of an owl seemed
to indicate that the animal kingdom agreed with the
sentiment, and the young men laughed. They were
not, however, disposed to talk much. After a
silent supper they lay down and slept soundly, quite
oblivious of the prowlers of the night, who came,
more than once, near to the door of the hut.
It was late next day when they awoke.
Hans likewise missed his way, and though he afterwards
discovered his mistake, they found it impossible to
regain the track of their companions before sunset.
All that day they were compelled to travel without
tasting a drop of water, and their poor horses became
so fatigued as to be scarcely equal to more than a
walking pace. As Hans knew that water was not
far off, he pushed on after sunset, so as to have
the shorter distance to travel to it in the morning.
“It is very tantalising,”
he said, drawing rein when the darkness of the night
rendered travelling almost impossible, “to know
that our friends cannot be far off, and yet be unable
to reach them.”
“Hadn’t we better fire a shot?”
asked Considine.
“Not of much use, I fear, but there can be no
harm in trying.”
The shot was fired and was instantly
replied to by a tremendous roar from a lion, apparently
close to where they stood. No wood was near
them to make a fire, nothing but tufts of grass; they
therefore pushed on towards a range of dark mountains
as fast as their jaded steeds would go.
“Halt a moment,” said Hans in a low voice.
They stopped and listened. The
approach of the lion in rear was distinctly heard.
“We cannot escape from him,
Charlie,” said Hans, as they again urged their
horses onward, “and in the dark we cannot take
aim at him. Our only chance is to reach yonder
pass or glen that looms like a black cleft in the
hills, and clamber up some precipice, whence we can
pelt him with stones.”
He spoke in quick, earnest tones.
They soon entered the gorge and were greeted by the
grunt of a baboon and the squalling of its young ones,
which helped to increase the savage aspect of the towering
cliffs on either side. They had not proceeded
far when the lion gave another tremendous roar, which,
echoing from cliff to cliff, gave the luckless hunters
the feeling of having got into the very heart of a
lion’s den. No suitable place to scramble
up being found, they pushed madly on over a track
of sand and bushes, expecting every instant to see
the monster bound upon them. But the defile
was shorter than Hans had supposed. On issuing
from it they were cheered by the moon rising bright
in the east, and found that their enemy had ceased
to follow them at that point. Still, though weary,
and with their tongues cleaving to the roofs of their
mouths, they continued their march for several hours,
and lying down at last, they scarcely knew how or
there, they went to sleep with a prayer for protection
and deliverance on their parched lips.
The weary wanderers passed that night
in a very paradise, bathing in cool streams and slaking
their thirst nearly, but never quite, to the
full. There was always a peculiar desire to drink
again, and, even then, to wish for more! Heavenly
music, too, sounded in their ears, and the sweet shade
of green trees sheltered them.
It was daybreak when they were roused
from these delights by a hyena’s howl, and awoke
to find that they were speechless with thirst, their
eyes inflamed, and their whole frames burning.
Saddling the horses at once, they
rode forward, and in a couple of hours reached a hill
near the top of which there was a projecting rock.
“Don’t let me raise your
hopes too high,” said Hans, pointing to the
rock, “but it is just possible that we may find
water there.”
“God grant it!” said Considine.
“Your horse is fresher than
mine,” said Hans, “and you are lighter
than I am-go first. If there is water,
hail me-if not, I will wait your return.”
With a nod of assent the youth pushed
forward, gained the rock, and found the place where
water had once been, a dry hole!
For a few minutes he stood gazing
languidly on the plain beyond the ridge. Despair
had almost taken possession of his breast, when his
eye suddenly brightened. He observed objects
moving far away on the plain. With bated breath
he stooped and shaded his eyes with his hand.
Yes, there could be no doubt about it-a
party of horsemen and bullock-waggons! He tried
to cheer, but his dry throat refused to act.
Turning quickly, he began to descend the hillside,
and chanced to cough as he went along. Instantly
he was surrounded by almost a hundred baboons, some
of gigantic size, which came fearlessly towards him.
They grunted, grinned, and sprang from stone to stone,
protruding their mouths and drawing back the skin
of their foreheads, threatening an instant attack.
Considine’s gun was loaded, but he had lived
long enough in those regions to be fully aware of
the danger of wounding one of these creatures in such
circumstances. Had he done so he would probably
have been torn to pieces in five minutes. He
therefore kept them off with the muzzle of his gun
as he continued the descent. Some of them came
so near as to touch his hat while passing projecting
rocks. At last he reached the plain, where the
baboons stopped and appeared to hold a noisy council
as to whether they should make a great assault or
not. He turned and levelled his gun.
“Come,” thought he at
that moment, “don’t do it, Charlie.
You have escaped. Be thankful, and leave the
poor brutes alone.”
Obeying the orders of his conscience,
he re-shouldered his gun and returned to his friend,
whom he found reclining under a low bush, and informed
him of what he had seen. The young Dutchman jumped
up at once, and, mounting, rode round a spur of the
hill and out upon the plain. In an hour they
had overtaken their comrades, but great was their dismay
on finding that they had long ago consumed every drop
of water, and that they were suffering from thirst
quite as much as themselves.
“Never mind,” said Lucas
Van Dyk; “let me comfort you with the assurance
that we shall certainly reach water in a few hours.”
The hunter was right. Some hours
before sunset the oxen and horses quickened their
pace of their own accord-sure sign that
they had scented water from afar. Shortly after,
they came in sight of a stream. The excitement
of all increased as they pushed forward. They
broke into a wild run on nearing the stream; and then
followed a scene which is almost indescribable.
The oxen were cast loose, the riders leaped to the
ground, and the whole party, men, oxen, and horses,
ran in a promiscuous heap into the water.
“Wow, man, Jerry, hae a care;
ee’ll be squizzen atween the beasts,” said
Sandy Black, as the active Jerry passed him in the
race.
The Scot’s warning was not without
reason, for next moment Jerry was up to the knees
in the stream between two oxen, who, closing on each
other, almost burst him. Easing off, they let
him drop on hands and knees, and he remained in that
position drinking thankfully. The whole place
was quickly stirred up into a muddy compound like
pea-soup, but neither man nor beast was particular.
They struggled forward and fell on their knees-not
inappropriately-to drink. One man
was pushed down by an ox, but seemed pleased with
the refreshing coolness of his position, and remained
where he was drinking. Another in his haste tumbled
over the edge of the bank and rolled down, preceded
by an impatient horse, which had tripped over him.
Both gathered themselves up, somehow, with their
lips in the water,-and drank! Young
Rivers, happening to gain the stream at a point where
oxen and horses were wedged together tightly, tried
to force in between them, but, failing in this, he
stooped to crawl in below them. At that moment
Slinger the “Tottie” gave a yell in Dutch,
and said that a horse was trampling on him; whom Dikkop
consoled by saying that he was fast in the
mud-and so he was, but not too fast to
prevent drinking. Meanwhile the Dutchmen and
the knowing ones of the party restrained themselves,
and sought for better positions where the water was
clearer. There they, likewise, bent their tall
heads and suggested-though they did not
sing-the couplet:
“Oh that a Dutchman’s draught
might be
As deep as the ro-o-olling Zuyder-Zee!”
The limit of drinking was capacity.
Each man and beast drank as much as he, or it, could
hold, and then unwillingly left the stream, covered
with mud and dripping wet! Oh, it was a delicious
refreshment, which some thought fully repaid them
for the toil and suffering they had previously undergone.
The aspect of the whole band may be described in
the language of Sandy Black, who, beholding his friends
after the fray, remarked that they were all “dirty
and drookit.”