Soon after this the explorers passed
beyond the level country, and their sufferings were
for the time relieved. The region through which
they then passed was varied-hilly, wooded,
and beautiful, and, to crown all, water was plentiful.
Large game was also abundant, and one day the footprints
of elephants were discovered.
To some of the party that day was
one of deepest interest and excitement.
Charlie Considine, who was, as we
have said, an adept with the pencil, longed to sit
down and sketch the lordly elephant in his native haunts.
Andrew Rivers and Jerry Goldboy wanted to shoot him,
so did George Rennie and the Müllers and Lucas
Van Dyk. More moderate souls, like Sandy Black,
said they would be satisfied merely to see him,
while Slinger and Dikkop, with their brethren, declared
that they wanted to eat him.
At last they came in sight of him!
It was a little after mid-day. They were traversing
at the time a jungle so dense that it would have been
impassable but for a Kafir-path which had been kept
open by wild animals. The hunters had already
seen herds of quaggas, and buffaloes, and some of
the larger sorts of antelopes, also one rhinoceros,
but not yet elephants. Now, to their joy, the
giant tracks of these monsters were discovered.
Near the river, in swampy places, it was evident that
some of them had been rolling luxuriously in the ooze
and mud. But it was in the forests and jungles
that they had left the most striking marks of their
habits and mighty power, for there thorny brakes of
the most impenetrable character had been trodden flat
by them, and trees had been overturned. In traversing
such places the great bull-elephant always marches
in the van, bursting through everything by sheer force
and weight, breaking off huge limbs of the larger trees
with his proboscis when these obstruct his path, and
overturning the smaller ones bodily, while the females
and younger members of the family follow in his wake.
A little further on they came to a
piece of open ground where the elephants had torn
up a number of mimosa-trees and inverted them so that
they might the more easily browse on the juicy roots.
It was evident from appearances that the animals
had used their tusks as crowbars, inserting them under
the roots to loosen their hold of the earth, and it
was equally clear that, like other and higher creatures,
they sometimes attempted what was beyond their strength,
for some of the larger trees had resisted their utmost
efforts.
As these signs multiplied the hunters
proceeded with increased vigilance and caution, each
exhibiting the peculiarity of his character, more or
less, by his look and actions. The Müllers,
Van Dyk, Rennie, Hans, and other experienced men,
rode along, calmly watchful, yet not so much absorbed
as to prevent a humorous glance and a smile at the
conduct of their less experienced comrades.
Considine and Rivers showed that their spirits were
deeply stirred, by the flash of their ever-roving eyes,
the tight compression of their lips, the flush on
their brows, and the position of readiness in which
they carried their guns-elephant-guns,
by the way, lent them by their Dutch friends for the
occasion. Sandy Black rode with a cool, sober,
sedate air, looking interested and attentive, but
with that peculiar twinkle of the eyes and slightly
sarcastic droop at the corners of the mouth which is
often characteristic of the sceptical Scotsman.
On the other hand, Jerry Goldboy went along blazing
with excitement, while every now and then he uttered
a suppressed exclamation, and clapped the blunderbuss
to his shoulder when anything moved, or seemed to
move, in the jungle.
Jerry had flatly refused to exchange
his artillery for any other weapon, and having learned
that small shot was useless against elephants, he had
charged it with five or six large pebbles-such
as David might have used in the slaying of Goliath.
Mixed with these was a sprinkling of large nails,
and one or two odd buttons. He was a source of
constant and justifiable alarm to his friends, who
usually compelled him either to ride in front, with
the blunderbuss pointing forward, or in the rear,
with its muzzle pointing backward.
“There go your friends at last,
Jerry,” said Van Dyk, curling his black moustache,
with a smile, as the party emerged from a woody defile
into a wide valley.
“What? where? eh! in which direction?
point ’em out quick!” cried Jerry, cocking
the blunderbuss violently and wheeling his steed round
with such force that his haunch hit Sandy Black’s
leg pretty severely.
“Hoot, ye loupin’ eedyit!”
growled the Scot, somewhat nettled.
Jerry subdued himself with a violent
effort, while the experienced hunters pointed out
the elephants, and consulted as to the best plan of
procedure.
There were fifty at least of the magnificent
animals scattered in groups over the bottom and sides
of a valley about three miles in extent; some were
browsing on the succulent spekboom, of which they are
very fond. Others were digging up and feeding
among the young mimosa-thorns and evergreens.
The place where the hunters stood was not suitable
for an attack. It was therefore resolved to
move round to a better position. As they advanced
some of the groups of elephants came more distinctly
into view, but they seemed either not to observe, or
to disregard, the intruders.
“Why not go at ’em at
once?” asked young Rivers in an impatient whisper.
“Because we don’t want
to be killed,” was the laconic reply from Diederik
Muller.
“Don’t you see,”
explained Van Dyk, with one of his quiet smiles, “that
the ground where the nearest fellows stand is not suitable
for horsemen?”
“Well, I don’t see exactly,
but I’ll take your word for it.”
While they were speaking, and riding
through a meadow thickly studded over with clumps
of tall evergreens, Considine observed something moving
over the top of a bush close ahead of him.
“Look out there!” he exclaimed,
but those in advance had already turned the corner
of a bush, and found themselves within a hundred paces
of a huge male elephant.
Jerry at once pointed the blunderbuss
and shut his eyes, and would infallibly have pulled
the trigger, if Sandy Black, who had in some measure
become his keeper, had not seized his wrist and wrenched
the weapon from his grasp.
“Man, ye’ll be the death
o’ somebody yet,” he said in a low stern
tone.
Jerry at once became penitent and
on giving a solemn promise that he would not fire
till he obtained permission, received his weapon back.
“Een groot gruwzaam karl,”
whispered one of the Hottentots, in broken Dutch.
“My certie, but he is
a great gruesome carl!” said Black, echoing in
Scotch the Dutchman’s expression as he gazed
in admiration.
“He’s fourteen feet high
if he’s an inch,” observed George Rennie.
The scent and hearing of the elephant
are both keen, but his sight is not very good.
As the wind chanced to blow from him to the hunters
he had not perceived them. This was fortunate,
for it would have been highly dangerous to have attacked
him in such ground. They wheeled round therefore
and galloped away towards some scattered rocks, whence
they could better approach him on foot. Dismounting,
the leaders formed a hasty plan of operations, and
immediately proceeded to put it in execution.
It may have been that their explanation
of the plan was not lucid, or that Jerry Goldboy’s
head was not clear, but certain it is that after having
been carefully told what to do, he dashed into the
jungle after Sandy Black and did what seemed right
in his own eyes.
Black kept close to the heels of Hans
Marais, and so did Considine, but Jerry soon began
to pant with excitement; then he stumbled and fell.
Before recovering himself from a “wait-a-bit”
thorn he had been left out of sight behind.
He pushed valiantly on however and came to a small
open plain, where he looked anxiously round, but his
comrades were nowhere to be seen. Just then
a shot was fired, it was followed quickly by another,
and then was heard, above the shouting of excited
Hottentots, the shrill screaming of wounded and enraged
elephants. Jerry heard the tremendous sounds
for the first time, and quaked in his spinal marrow.
Observing the smoke of a shot on the
opposite side of the little plain, he proceeded to
cross over hastily, but had barely gained the middle
of the open space when the shrill screams were repeated
with redoubled fury. At the same time Jerry
heard cries of warning, coupled with his own name.
He looked right and left in alarm, not knowing where
the threatened danger was likely to come from.
He was not kept long in suspense. Behind him
he heard the crackling and crashing of branches caused
by elephants bursting through the wood. Then
a large female with three young, but by no means small,
ones issued from the edge of the jungle and made straight
at the unfortunate man. Jerry turned and ran,
but he had no chance; the elephants gained on him so
fast that he felt, with an awful sickening of the
heart, it was not possible to reach the rocky ground
beyond the meadow, where he might have been safe.
With the courage of despair he faced about and fired
straight in the face of the old female, which ran
him down with a shriek of indignation. She had
only one tusk, but with that she made a prod at Jerry
that would have quickly ended his days if it had not
missed the mark and gone deep into the ground.
She then caught him by the middle with her trunk,
threw him between her fore-feet, and attempted to
tread him to death. This she certainly would
have accomplished, but that Jerry was remarkably agile
and very small; the ground being soft and muddy was
also in his favour. Once she set her foot on
his chest, and he felt the bones bending. Of
course had the creature’s full weight pressed
it, Jerry would have been cracked like a walnut, but
the monster’s foot was rounded and wet, and,
the poor man making a desperate wrench, it slipped
into the mud; then she trod on his arm, and squeezed
it into the ground without snapping the bone.
Thus stamping and wriggling for a few seconds, the
two fought on for vengeance and for life, while George
Rennie, Hans, and the two Müllers ran to
the rescue and fired a volley. This caused the
animal to wince and look up. Jerry, taking advantage
of the pause, jumped up and dived out from below her
between her hind-legs-alighting on his head
and turning a complete somersault. He regained
his feet just as she turned round again to seize him.
At that critical moment Lucas Van Dyk put a ball
in her head, and Considine sent another into the root
of her trunk, which induced her to turn and join her
screaming offspring in the bushes.
The hunters pursued, while Jerry,
covered with mud and bruises, and scarcely able to
run, made off in the opposite direction. He had
scarcely reached the shelter of some broken ground,
when the enormous male elephant which had been previously
encountered, came running past, either to the rescue
of its mate, or flying in alarm at the firing.
It caught one of the Hottentots who had loitered
in rear of the attacking party, carried him some distance
in its trunk, and then, throwing him on the ground,
brought its four feet together and trod and stamped
on him for a considerable time. The unfortunate
man was killed instantly. It left the corpse
for a little, and then returned to it, as if to make
quite sure of its deadly work, and, kneeling down,
crushed and kneaded the body with its fore-legs.
Then seizing it again with its trunk, it carried
it off and threw it into the jungle.
This delay on the elephant’s
part gave the hunters time to return from the destruction
of the female, and with several successful shots to
kill the male.
“’Tis a heavy price to
pay for our sport,” said Considine sadly, as
he stood with his companions gazing on the body of
the Hottentot, which was trodden into a shapeless
mass.
“Hunters don’t go out
for mere sport,” said Lucas Van Dyk, “they
do it in the way of business-for ivory
and hides. Of course they must take the chances
of a risky trade.”
This sad incident naturally cast a
gloom over the party, and they remained there only
long enough to cut out the tusks of the male elephant
and stow them away with choice parts of the meat in
their waggon.
After quitting the valley they fell
in with the party under John Skyd and Frank Dobson,
and led by Stephen Orpin. They were much surprised
to find with these their friends Kenneth McTavish
and Groot Willem, who soon accounted for their unexpected
appearance. They had been steadily tracing the
spoor of poor Junkie, had lost and re-found it several
times and, during their pursuit, had crossed the waggon-tracks
of Skyd and his party, whom they followed up, in the
faint hope that they might have heard or seen something
to guide them in their search. In this they
were disappointed.
After a brief council of war it was
resolved to join their forces and continue the search
after Junkie.
Proceeding on their way, they fell
in with a wounded Kafir. He lay dying under
a bush, and made no attempt to escape, although he
evidently regarded the white men as enemies.
Having been reassured on this point, and comforted
with a piece of tobacco, he told them that his village
had been attacked by the Fetcani and completely destroyed,
with all the women and children-only a
few of the wounded warriors like himself having escaped,
to perish in the jungle. The Fetcani he described
as the most ferocious warriors ever seen. They
did not use the ordinary assagai or throwing spear,
but a short stabbing one, and invariably closed at
once with their foes with irresistible impetuosity.
On being questioned about prisoners,
and reference being made to white men’s children,
he said that he had heard of a white boy who was brought
to a village a day’s march or more from where
they then were, but added that the Fetcani hordes
had gone off to destroy that village just after destroying
his own, and that he had no doubt it was by that time
reduced to ashes and all its inhabitants slain.
On hearing this, and learning the
direction of the village in question, the hunters
went off at full gallop, leaving the waggons to follow
their spoor.
It was nearly sunset when they came
to an eminence beyond which lay the Kafir town of
which they were in search. The first glance showed
that something unusual was going on in it-at
the same time it relieved their fears to observe that
it was not yet destroyed. The mud hovels, like
huge beehives, in which the Kafirs dwelt, were not
yet burnt, and the only smoke visible was that which
rose from cooking fires. But it was quite plain
that the people, who in the distance seemed to swarm
in and about the place like black ants, were in wild
excitement.
“No doubt they’ve heard
that the Fetcani are coming,” said Groot Willem,
riding to the highest point of the ridge on which they
stood. “The place seems pretty strong.
I think we might do worse than go lend the niggers
a helping hand till we’ve made inquiries about
the lad.”
Lucas Van Dyk echoed this sentiment,
and so did Stephen Orpin, but there were others who
thought it best to let the niggers fight their own
battles.
“Well, friends,” said
Kenneth McTavish, “you may hold what opinion
you like on that point, but my business just now is
to go into that town and see if I can find Junkie
Brook. The sooner I do so the better, so let
those who choose follow me.”
He rode off at a brisk trot, and was
followed by the whole party. On reaching the
town they halted, and the principal chief, Eno, came
out to meet them. One of the Hottentots being
called to interpret, the hunters were informed that
the Fetcani had threatened to attack the town, and
that the inhabitants were busy putting themselves in
a state of defence. They were glad, said the
chief, to see the white men, and hoped they would
stay to assist him.
To this Stephen Orpin replied through
the interpreter. Stephen somehow fell naturally
into the position of spokesman and chief of the party
in positions where tact and eloquence or diplomacy
were wanted, though in the hunting-field he held a
very subordinate place.
He told Eno that the white men had
come to seek for a white boy who had been stolen from
one of the frontier settlements, and that he had heard
the boy was in his, Eno’s, town. That he
was glad to hear it, though of course he did not suppose
Eno had stolen the boy, seeing that none of his people
had been yet near the colony. That he and his
friends now came to claim the boy, and would be glad
to aid them in defending the town, if attacked while
they were in it.
In reply the chief said he knew nothing
about a white boy being in his town, but would make
inquires.
While this conference was going on,
a man was seen to approach, running at full speed.
He fell from exhaustion on arriving, and for some
moments could not speak. Recovering, he told
that he had just escaped from a band of two hundred
Fetcani warriors, who were even then on their way
to attack the town.
Instantly all was uproar and confusion.
The warriors, seizing their shields and spears, sallied
forth under their chief to meet the enemy-a
few of the youngest being left behind to guard the
women and children. A party of the Hottentots
under Kenneth McTavish also remained to guard the
town, while the rest set off to aid the Kafirs.
They were compelled, however, to ride back a short
distance to meet the waggons, and obtain a supply
of ammunition. Thus a little time was lost, and
before they could reach the scene of action the Kafirs
had met with the Fetcani warriors, been thoroughly
beaten, and put to flight.
On the appearance, however, of the
horsemen the pursuers halted.
“Now, lads,” cried Groot
Willem, “a steady volley and a charge home will
send them to the right about.”
“Better fire over their heads,”
said Orpin earnestly. “We are not at war
with these men. Let us not kill if we can help
it.”
“I agree with that heartily,” cried Charlie
Considine.
“So do I,” said Hans.
“Depend on’t the sound will suffice for
men who perhaps never saw fire-arms before.”
“Quite right, Maister Marais,”
said Sandy Black, with grave approval, “an’
if oor charge is only heeded by Groot Willem an’
Jerry Goldboy, tak’ my word for’t thae
Fit-canny craters’ll flee like chaff before the
wund.”
“Very good,” said Groot
Willem, with a grin.-“Come along,
Jerry.”
The dauntless little man answered
the summons with delight, and the whole party approached
the wondering Fetcani at a trot. Halting when
within about eighty yards, they fired a volley from
horseback over the heads of the enemy. Then,
through the smoke, they charged at full speed like
thunderbolts, Groot Willem roaring like a mad buffalo-bull,
Jerry Goldboy shrieking like a wounded elephant, and
energising fearfully with legs, arms, reins, and blunderbuss,
while the others shouted or laughed in wild excitement.
The Fetcani, as Sandy Black had prophesied,
could not stand it. Turning their backs to the
foe, they fled as only panic-stricken and naked niggers
can fly, and were soon scattered and lost in
the jungle.
While this was going on far out on
the plain, Kenneth McTavish had much ado to keep the
people quiet in the town-so great was their
dread of falling into the hands of the ferocious Fetcani.
But when the wounded warriors began to come in, breathless,
gashed, and bleeding, with the report of their disaster,
he found it impossible to restrain the people.
The young warriors ignominiously left the place and
fled, while the women followed, carrying their children
and such of their worldly goods as they were loath
to leave behind. For some time McTavish managed
to restrain the latter, but when at last the hunters
came thundering back after their bloodless victory,
the poor women, fancying they were the enemy, flung
down goods, and even babies, and ran.
The horsemen called out to assure
them they were friends, but their terror was too great
to permit of their comprehending, and they continued
to fly.
“Come, Charlie, we must head
these poor creatures, and drive them back,”
said Hans, as he rode over ground which was strewn
with utensils, mantles, and victuals, among which
many little black and naked children were seen running,
stumbling, tottering, or creeping, according to age
and courage.
Followed by the other horsemen, they
rode ahead of the flying multitude, and, cracking
their whips menacingly in front, with an occasional
charge, they succeeded in staying the flight and turning
the poor women back. No sooner did these comprehend
how matters stood than they turned, and caught up
their little ones with as much affection and thankfulness
as if they had just shown a readiness to die for, rather
than forsake, them.
Among these children was one who,
although as black as the ace of spades in body and
face, had light curly flaxen hair. He ran about
in a wild unaccountable manner, darting hither and
thither, from side to side.
McTavish and the others, who had by
that time dismounted, and were standing at their horses’
heads amused spectators of the scene, looked at this
urchin in surprise, until they observed that he was
endeavouring to escape from a stout young woman who
did her best to catch him. She had nearly succeeded,
when he suddenly doubled like a hare and bore straight
down on the horsemen. Seeing this, the woman
gave in, and, turning, fled to the town, while the
little fellow ran and clasped the Highlander by the
knees.
“Oh! Miss’r Tavish!” he cried,
and looked up.
“Ah! why-it’s
Junkie!” cried the Highlander, catching the child
up in his arms and hugging him, by which means he
left a dark imprint of him on his own breast and face.
It was indeed Junkie-naked
as on the day of his birth, greased from head to foot,
and charcoaled as black as the King of Ashantee!
Although an object of the deepest
interest to the white men, poor Junkie was not at
that moment personally attractive. He was, however,
unspeakably happy at seeing white and familiar faces
once more. He was also very much subdued, and
had obviously profited by the rude teaching he had
undergone in Kafirland, for his obedience to orders
was prompt and unquestioning.
The first important matter was to
clean Junkie. This was only partially effected,
and with difficulty. The next was to clothe him.
This was done, on the spur of the moment, with pocket-handkerchiefs,
each hunter contributing one till the costume was
complete. A large red cotton one formed a sort
of plaid; a blue one with a hole in the middle, through
which his head was thrust, served as a pretty good
poncho or tippet; a green one with white spots, tied
round the loins, did duty as a tunic or kilt; and
one of crimson silk round the head formed a gorgeous
turban.
Returning to the village, the hunters
found Eno the chief, and, after expressing much satisfaction
at having arrived in time to lend him effectual aid
at so critical a period, they presented him with gifts
of brass wire and cotton cloth, from the stores in
Skyd and Dobson’s waggons.
The chief expressed his gratitude
in glowing terms, and begged the hunters to stay with
him for some time. But this they would not do,
as it was important to return to the colony, and report
what they had seen without delay. Notwithstanding
their professions of gratitude, however, these rascals
stole as many small articles front the waggons as they
could lay hands on, and would doubtless have taken
all that the hunters possessed, if they had not been
impressed by their valour, and by the dreadful firearms
which they carried.
This accidental skirmish was the first
meeting of the colonists with the Fetcani. It
was not till two years later that the Government felt
constrained to take active measures against these savages.
The Fetcani, or Mantatee hordes, having
been driven from their own country by the bloodthirsty
Zulu chief Chaka, had been preying upon other tribes
for many years, and at last, in 1827, they precipitated
themselves on the Tambookies, and afterwards on the
Galekas, threatening to extirpate these Kafirs altogether,
or to drive them into the colony as suppliants and
beggars. In this extremity the Kafir chief Hintza
urgently craved assistance.
It was granted. A body of the
colonists sent out by Government, under Major Dundas
of the Royal Artillery, defeated the warlike Fetcani,
who were afterwards utterly routed and scattered,
and their dreaded power finally annihilated, near
the sources of the Umtata river, by a body of troops
under Colonel Somerset. Hintza’s warriors
were present at that affair, to the number of about
twenty thousand, and they hovered about during the
engagement admiringly, though without rendering assistance.
But when the enemy were routed and in confused retreat,
they fell upon them, and, despite the remonstrances
of the white men, committed the most appalling atrocities,
mutilating the dead, and cutting off the arms and
legs of the living, in order the more easily to obtain
their brass rings and ornaments.
This warlike episode did not, however,
affect the general condition of the frontier.
The settlers, having overcome the misfortunes of the
first years, began to prosper and multiply, troubled
a good deal, no doubt, by the thievish propensities
of their ungrateful black neighbours, but on the whole
enjoying the fruit of their labours in comparative
peace for several years.