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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Land of Footprints, by Stewart Edward White
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+Project Gutenberg's The Land of Footprints, by Stewart Edward White
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Land of Footprints
+
+Author: Stewart Edward White
+
+Release Date: August 20, 2008 [EBook #1378]
+Last Updated: March 12, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LAND OF FOOTPRINTS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Aaron Cannon, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE LAND OF FOOTPRINTS
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ by Stewart Edward White
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ 1913
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> I. ON BOOKS OF ADVENTURE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> II. AFRICA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> III. THE CENTRAL PLATEAU </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> IV. THE FIRST CAMP </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> V. MEMBA SASA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> VI. THE FIRST GAME CAMP </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> VII. ON THE MARCH </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> VIII. THE RIVER JUNGLE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> IX. THE FIRST LION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> X. LIONS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> XI. LIONS AGAIN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> XII. MORE LIONS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> XIII. ON THE MANAGING OF A SAFARI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> XIV. A DAY ON THE ISIOLA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> XV. THE LION DANCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> XVI. FUNDI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> XVII. NATIVES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> XVIII. IN THE JUNGLE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> XIX. THE TANA RIVER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> XX. DIVERS ADVENTURES ALONG THE TANA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> XXI. THE RHINOCEROS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> XXII. THE RHINOCEROS-(continued) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> XXIII. THE HIPPO POOL </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> XXIV. BUFFALO </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> XXV. THE BUFFALO-continued </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> XXVI. JUJA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> XXVII. A VISIT AT JUJA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> XXVIII. A RESIDENCE AT JUJA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> XXIX. CHAPTER THE LAST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_APPE"> APPENDIX I </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_APPE2"> APPENDIX II </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_APPE3"> APPENDIX III </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_APPE4"> APPENDIX IV. THE AMERICAN IN AFRICA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_APPE5"> APPENDIX V. THE AMERICAN IN AFRICA </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ I. ON BOOKS OF ADVENTURE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Books of sporting, travel, and adventure in countries little known to the
+ average reader naturally fall in two classes-neither, with a very few
+ exceptions, of great value. One class is perhaps the logical result of the
+ other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the first type is the book that is written to make the most of far
+ travels, to extract from adventure the last thrill, to impress the
+ awestricken reader with a full sense of the danger and hardship the writer
+ has undergone. Thus, if the latter takes out quite an ordinary routine
+ permit to go into certain districts, he makes the most of travelling in
+ &ldquo;closed territory,&rdquo; implying that he has obtained an especial privilege,
+ and has penetrated where few have gone before him. As a matter of fact,
+ the permit is issued merely that the authorities may keep track of who is
+ where. Anybody can get one. This class of writer tells of shooting beasts
+ at customary ranges of four and five hundred yards. I remember one in
+ especial who airily and as a matter of fact killed all his antelope at
+ such ranges. Most men have shot occasional beasts at a quarter mile or so,
+ but not airily nor as a matter of fact: rather with thanksgiving and a
+ certain amount of surprise. The gentleman of whom I speak mentioned
+ getting an eland at seven hundred and fifty yards. By chance I happened to
+ mention this to a native Africander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I remember that; I was there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This interested me-and I said so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He made a long shot,&rdquo; said I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A GOOD long shot,&rdquo; replied the Africander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you pace the distance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laughed. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;the old chap was immensely delighted. 'Eight
+ hundred yards if it was an inch!' he cried.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How far was it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;About three hundred and fifty. But it was a long shot, all right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it was! Three hundred and fifty yards is a very long shot. It is over
+ four city blocks-New York size. But if you talk often enough and glibly
+ enough of &ldquo;four and five hundred yards,&rdquo; it does not sound like much, does
+ it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same class of writer always gets all the thrills. He speaks of
+ &ldquo;blanched cheeks,&rdquo; of the &ldquo;thrilling suspense,&rdquo; and so on down the gamut
+ of the shilling shocker. His stuff makes good reading; there is no doubt
+ of that. The spellbound public likes it, and to that extent it has
+ fulfilled its mission. Also, the reader believes it to the letter-why
+ should he not? Only there is this curious result: he carries away in his
+ mind the impression of unreality, of a country impossible to be understood
+ and gauged and savoured by the ordinary human mental equipment. It is
+ interesting, just as are historical novels, or the copper-riveted heroes
+ of modern fiction, but it has no real relation with human life. In the
+ last analysis the inherent untruth of the thing forces itself on him. He
+ believes, but he does not apprehend; he acknowledges the fact, but he
+ cannot grasp its human quality. The affair is interesting, but it is more
+ or less concocted of pasteboard for his amusement. Thus essential truth
+ asserts its right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this, you must understand, is probably not a deliberate attempt to
+ deceive. It is merely the recrudescence under the stimulus of a brand-new
+ environment of the boyish desire to be a hero. When a man jumps back into
+ the Pleistocene he digs up some of his ancestors' cave-qualities. Among
+ these is the desire for personal adornment. His modern development of
+ taste precludes skewers in the ears and polished wire around the neck; so
+ he adorns himself in qualities instead. It is quite an engaging and
+ diverting trait of character. The attitude of mind it both presupposes and
+ helps to bring about is too complicated for my brief analysis. In itself
+ it is no more blameworthy than the small boy's pretence at Indians in the
+ back yard; and no more praiseworthy than infantile decoration with
+ feathers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In its results, however, we are more concerned. Probably each of us has
+ his mental picture that passes as a symbol rather than an idea of the
+ different continents. This is usually a single picture-a deep river, with
+ forest, hanging snaky vines, anacondas and monkeys for the east coast of
+ South America, for example. It is built up in youth by chance reading and
+ chance pictures, and does as well as a pink place on the map to stand for
+ a part of the world concerning which we know nothing at all. As time goes
+ on we extend, expand, and modify this picture in the light of what
+ knowledge we may acquire. So the reading of many books modifies and
+ expands our first crude notions of Equatorial Africa. And the result is,
+ if we read enough of the sort I describe above, we build the idea of an
+ exciting, dangerous, extra-human continent, visited by half-real people of
+ the texture of the historical-fiction hero, who have strange and
+ interesting adventures which we could not possibly imagine happening to
+ ourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This type of book is directly responsible for the second sort. The author
+ of this is deadly afraid of being thought to brag of his adventures. He
+ feels constantly on him the amusedly critical eye of the old-timer. When
+ he comes to describe the first time a rhino dashed in his direction, he
+ remembers that old hunters, who have been so charged hundreds of times,
+ may read the book. Suddenly, in that light, the adventure becomes
+ pitifully unimportant. He sets down the fact that &ldquo;we met a rhino that
+ turned a bit nasty, but after a shot in the shoulder decided to leave us
+ alone.&rdquo; Throughout he keeps before his mind's eye the imaginary audience
+ of those who have done. He writes for them, to please them, to convince
+ them that he is not &ldquo;swelled head,&rdquo; nor &ldquo;cocky,&rdquo; nor &ldquo;fancies himself,&rdquo;
+ nor thinks he has done, been, or seen anything wonderful. It is a good,
+ healthy frame of mind to be in; but it, no more than the other type, can
+ produce books that leave on the minds of the general public any impression
+ of a country in relation to a real human being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a matter of fact, the same trouble is at the bottom of both failures.
+ The adventure writer, half unconsciously perhaps, has been too much
+ occupied play-acting himself into half-forgotten boyhood heroics. The more
+ modest man, with even more self-consciousness, has been thinking of how he
+ is going to appear in the eyes of the expert. Both have thought of
+ themselves before their work. This aspect of the matter would probably
+ vastly astonish the modest writer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, then, one is to formulate an ideal toward which to write, he might
+ express it exactly in terms of man and environment. Those readers desiring
+ sheer exploration can get it in any library: those in search of sheer
+ romantic adventure can purchase plenty of it at any book-stall. But the
+ majority want something different from either of these. They want, first
+ of all, to know what the country is like-not in vague and grandiose &ldquo;word
+ paintings,&rdquo; nor in strange and foreign sounding words and phrases, but in
+ comparison with something they know. What is it nearest like-Arizona?
+ Surrey? Upper New York? Canada? Mexico? Or is it totally different from
+ anything, as is the Grand Canyon? When you look out from your camp-any one
+ camp-how far do you see, and what do you see?-mountains in the distance,
+ or a screen of vines or bamboo near hand, or what? When you get up in the
+ morning, what is the first thing to do? What does a rhino look like, where
+ he lives, and what did you do the first time one came at you? I don't want
+ you to tell me as though I were either an old hunter or an admiring
+ audience, or as though you were afraid somebody might think you were
+ making too much of the matter. I want to know how you REALLY felt. Were
+ you scared or nervous? or did you become cool? Tell me frankly just how it
+ was, so I can see the thing as happening to a common everyday human being.
+ Then, even at second-hand and at ten thousand miles distance, I can enjoy
+ it actually, humanly, even though vicariously, speculating a bit over my
+ pipe as to how I would have liked it myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Obviously, to write such a book the author must at the same time sink his
+ ego and exhibit frankly his personality. The paradox in this is only
+ apparent. He must forget either to strut or to blush with diffidence.
+ Neither audience should be forgotten, and neither should be exclusively
+ addressed. Never should he lose sight of the wholesome fact that old
+ hunters are to read and to weigh; never should he for a moment slip into
+ the belief that he is justified in addressing the expert alone. His
+ attitude should be that many men know more and have done more than he, but
+ that for one reason or another these men are not ready to transmit their
+ knowledge and experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To set down the formulation of an ideal is one thing: to fulfil it is
+ another. In the following pages I cannot claim a fulfilment, but only an
+ attempt. The foregoing dissertation must be considered not as a promise,
+ but as an explanation. No one knows better than I how limited my African
+ experience is, both in time and extent, bounded as it is by East
+ Equatorial Africa and a year. Hundreds of men are better qualified than
+ myself to write just this book; but unfortunately they will not do it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. AFRICA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In looking back on the multitudinous pictures that the word Africa bids
+ rise in my memory, four stand out more distinctly than the others.
+ Strangely enough, these are by no means all pictures of average
+ country-the sort of thing one would describe as typical. Perhaps, in a
+ way, they symbolize more the spirit of the country to me, for certainly
+ they represent but a small minority of its infinitely varied aspects. But
+ since we must make a start somewhere, and since for some reason these four
+ crowd most insistently in the recollection it might be well to begin with
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our camp was pitched under a single large mimosa tree near the edge of a
+ deep and narrow ravine down which a stream flowed. A semicircle of low
+ mountains hemmed us in at the distance of several miles. The other side of
+ the semicircle was occupied by the upthrow of a low rise blocking off an
+ horizon at its nearest point but a few hundred yards away. Trees marked
+ the course of the stream; low scattered bushes alternated with open plain.
+ The grass grew high. We had to cut it out to make camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing indicated that we were otherwise situated than in a very pleasant,
+ rather wide grass valley in the embrace of the mountains. Only a walk of a
+ few hundred yards atop the upthrow of the low rise revealed the fact that
+ it was in reality the lip of a bench, and that beyond it the country fell
+ away in sheer cliffs whose ultimate drop was some fifteen hundred feet.
+ One could sit atop and dangle his feet over unguessed abysses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a week we had been hunting for greater kudu. Each day Memba Sasa and I
+ went in one direction, while Mavrouki and Kongoni took another line. We
+ looked carefully for signs, but found none fresher than the month before.
+ Plenty of other game made the country interesting; but we were after a shy
+ and valuable prize, so dared not shoot lesser things. At last, at the end
+ of the week, Mavrouki came in with a tale of eight lions seen in the low
+ scrub across the stream. The kudu business was about finished, as far as
+ this place went, so we decided to take a look for the lions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We ate by lantern and at the first light were ready to start. But at that
+ moment, across the slope of the rim a few hundred yards away, appeared a
+ small group of sing-sing. These are a beautiful big beast, with widespread
+ horns, proud and wonderful, like Landseer's stags, and I wanted one of
+ them very much. So I took the Springfield, and dropped behind the line of
+ some bushes. The stalk was of the ordinary sort. One has to remain behind
+ cover, to keep down wind, to make no quick movements. Sometimes this takes
+ considerable manoeuvring; especially, as now, in the case of a small band
+ fairly well scattered out for feeding. Often after one has succeeded in
+ placing them all safely behind the scattered cover, a straggler will step
+ out into view. Then the hunter must stop short, must slowly, oh very, very
+ slowly, sink down out of sight; so slowly, in fact, that he must not seem
+ to move, but rather to melt imperceptibly away. Then he must take up his
+ progress at a lower plane of elevation. Perhaps he needs merely to stoop;
+ or he may crawl on hands and knees; or he may lie flat and hitch himself
+ forward by his toes, pushing his gun ahead. If one of the beasts suddenly
+ looks very intently in his direction, he must freeze into no matter what
+ uncomfortable position, and so remain an indefinite time. Even a
+ hotel-bred child to whom you have rashly made advances stares no longer
+ nor more intently than a buck that cannot make you out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had no great difficulty with this lot, but slipped up quite successfully
+ to within one hundred and fifty yards. There I raised my head behind a
+ little bush to look. Three does grazed nearest me, their coats rough
+ against the chill of early morning. Up the slope were two more does and
+ two funny, fuzzy babies. An immature buck occupied the extreme left with
+ three young ladies. But the big buck, the leader, the boss of the lot, I
+ could not see anywhere. Of course he must be about, and I craned my neck
+ cautiously here and there trying to make him out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly, with one accord, all turned and began to trot rapidly away to
+ the right, their heads high. In the strange manner of animals, they had
+ received telepathic alarm, and had instantly obeyed. Then beyond and far
+ to the right I at last saw the beast I had been looking for. The old
+ villain had been watching me all the time!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little herd in single file made their way rapidly along the face of
+ the rise. They were headed in the direction of the stream. Now, I happened
+ to know that at this point the stream-canyon was bordered by sheer cliffs.
+ Therefore, the sing-sing must round the hill, and not cross the stream. By
+ running to the top of the hill I might catch a glimpse of them somewhere
+ below. So I started on a jog trot, trying to hit the golden mean of speed
+ that would still leave me breath to shoot. This was an affair of some
+ nicety in the tall grass. Just before I reached the actual slope, however,
+ I revised my schedule. The reason was supplied by a rhino that came
+ grunting to his feet about seventy yards away. He had not seen me, and he
+ had not smelled me, but the general disturbance of all these events had
+ broken into his early morning nap. He looked to me like a person who is
+ cross before breakfast, so I ducked low and ran around him. The last I saw
+ of him he was still standing there, quite disgruntled, and evidently
+ intending to write to the directors about it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arriving at the top, I looked eagerly down. The cliff fell away at an
+ impossible angle, but sheer below ran out a narrow bench fifty yards wide.
+ Around the point of the hill to my right-where the herd had gone-a game
+ trail dropped steeply to this bench. I arrived just in time to see the
+ sing-sing, still trotting, file across the bench and over its edge, on
+ some other invisible game trail, to continue their descent of the cliff.
+ The big buck brought up the rear. At the very edge he came to a halt, and
+ looked back, throwing his head up and his nose out so that the heavy fur
+ on his neck stood forward like a ruff. It was a last glimpse of him, so I
+ held my little best, and pulled trigger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This happened to be one of those shots I spoke of-which the perpetrator
+ accepts with a thankful and humble spirit. The sing-sing leaped high in
+ the air and plunged over the edge of the bench. I signalled the camp-in
+ plain sight-to come and get the head and meat, and sat down to wait. And
+ while waiting, I looked out on a scene that has since been to me one of my
+ four symbolizations of Africa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The morning was dull, with gray clouds through which at wide intervals
+ streamed broad bands of misty light. Below me the cliff fell away clear to
+ a gorge in the depths of which flowed a river. Then the land began to
+ rise, broken, sharp, tumbled, terrible, tier after tier, gorge after
+ gorge, one twisted range after the other, across a breathlessly
+ immeasurable distance. The prospect was full of shadows thrown by the
+ tumult of lava. In those shadows one imagined stranger abysses. Far down
+ to the right a long narrow lake inaugurated a flatter, alkali-whitened
+ country of low cliffs in long straight lines. Across the distances proper
+ to a dozen horizons the tumbled chaos heaved and fell. The eye sought rest
+ at the bounds usual to its accustomed world-and went on. There was no
+ roundness to the earth, no grateful curve to drop this great fierce
+ country beyond a healing horizon out of sight. The immensity of primal
+ space was in it, and the simplicity of primal things-rough, unfinished,
+ full of mystery. There was no colour. The scene was done in slate gray,
+ darkening to the opaque where a tiny distant rain squall started;
+ lightening in the nearer shadows to reveal half-guessed peaks; brightening
+ unexpectedly into broad short bands of misty gray light slanting from the
+ gray heavens above to the sombre tortured immensity beneath. It was such a
+ thing as Gustave Dore might have imaged to serve as an abiding place for
+ the fierce chaotic spirit of the African wilderness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sat there for some time hugging my knees, waiting for the men to come.
+ The tremendous landscape seemed to have been willed to immobility. The
+ rain squalls forty miles or more away did not appear to shift their
+ shadows; the rare slanting bands of light from the clouds were as constant
+ as though they were falling through cathedral windows. But nearer at hand
+ other things were forward. The birds, thousands of them, were doing their
+ best to cheer things up. The roucoulements of doves rose from the bushes
+ down the face of the cliffs; the bell bird uttered his clear ringing note;
+ the chime bird gave his celebrated imitation of a really gentlemanly
+ sixty-horse power touring car hinting you out of the way with the
+ mellowness of a chimed horn; the bottle bird poured gallons of guggling
+ essence of happiness from his silver jug. From the direction of camp,
+ evidently jumped by the boys, a steinbuck loped gracefully, pausing every
+ few minutes to look back, his dainty legs tense, his sensitive ears
+ pointed toward the direction of disturbance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now, along the face of the cliff, I make out the flashing of much
+ movement, half glimpsed through the bushes. Soon a fine old-man baboon,
+ his tail arched after the dandified fashion of the baboon aristocracy
+ stepped out, looked around, and bounded forward. Other old men followed
+ him, and then the young men, and a miscellaneous lot of half-grown
+ youngsters. The ladies brought up the rear, with the babies. These rode
+ their mothers' backs, clinging desperately while they leaped along, for
+ all the world like the pathetic monkey &ldquo;jockeys&rdquo; one sees strapped to the
+ backs of big dogs in circuses. When they had approached to within fifty
+ yards, remarked &ldquo;hullo!&rdquo; to them. Instantly they all stopped. Those in
+ front stood up on their hind legs; those behind clambered to points of
+ vantage on rocks and the tops of small bushes: They all took a good long
+ look at me. Then they told me what they thought about me personally, the
+ fact of my being there, and the rude way I had startled them. Their
+ remarks were neither complimentary nor refined. The old men, in especial,
+ got quite profane, and screamed excited billingsgate. Finally they all
+ stopped at once, dropped on all fours, and loped away, their ridiculous
+ long tails curved in a half arc. Then for the first time I noticed that,
+ under cover of the insults, the women and children had silently retired.
+ Once more I was left to the familiar gentle bird calls, and the vast
+ silence of the wilderness beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second picture, also, was a view from a height, but of a totally
+ different character. It was also, perhaps, more typical of a greater part
+ of East Equatorial Africa. Four of us were hunting lions with natives-both
+ wild and tame-and a scratch pack of dogs. More of that later. We had
+ rummaged around all the morning without any results; and now at noon had
+ climbed to the top of a butte to eat lunch and look abroad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our butte ran up a gentle but accelerating slope to a peak of big rounded
+ rocks and slabs sticking out boldly from the soil of the hill. We made
+ ourselves comfortable each after his fashion. The gunbearers leaned
+ against rocks and rolled cigarettes. The savages squatted on their heels,
+ planting their spears ceremonially in front of them. One of my friends lay
+ on his back, resting a huge telescope over his crossed feet. With this he
+ purposed seeing any lion that moved within ten miles. None of the rest of
+ us could ever make out anything through the fearsome weapon. Therefore,
+ relieved from responsibility by the presence of this Dreadnaught of a
+ 'scope, we loafed and looked about us. This is what we saw:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mountains at our backs, of course-at some distance; then plains in long
+ low swells like the easy rise and fall of a tropical sea, wave after wave,
+ and over the edge of the world beyond a distant horizon. Here and there on
+ this plain, single hills lay becalmed, like ships at sea; some peaked,
+ some cliffed like buttes, some long and low like the hulls of battleships.
+ The brown plain flowed up to wash their bases, liquid as the sea itself,
+ its tides rising in the coves of the hills, and ebbing in the valleys
+ between. Near at hand, in the middle distance, far away, these fleets of
+ the plain sailed, until at last hull-down over the horizon their topmasts
+ disappeared. Above them sailed too the phantom fleet of the clouds, shot
+ with light, shining like silver, airy as racing yachts, yet casting here
+ and there exaggerated shadows below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sky in Africa is always very wide, greater than any other skies.
+ Between horizon and horizon is more space than any other world contains.
+ It is as though the cup of heaven had been pressed a little flatter; so
+ that while the boundaries have widened, the zenith, with its flaming sun,
+ has come nearer. And yet that is not a constant quantity either. I have
+ seen one edge of the sky raised straight up a few million miles, as though
+ some one had stuck poles under its corners, so that the western heaven did
+ not curve cup-wise over to the horizon at all as it did everywhere else,
+ but rather formed the proscenium of a gigantic stage. On this stage they
+ had piled great heaps of saffron yellow clouds, and struck shafts of
+ yellow light, and filled the spaces with the lurid portent of a
+ storm-while the twenty thousand foot mountains below, crouched whipped and
+ insignificant to the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We sat atop our butte for an hour while H. looked through his 'scope.
+ After the soft silent immensity of the earth, running away to infinity,
+ with its low waves, and its scattered fleet of hills, it was with
+ difficulty that we brought our gaze back to details and to things near at
+ hand. Directly below us we could make out many different-hued specks.
+ Looking closely, we could see that those specks were game animals. They
+ fed here and there in bands of from ten to two hundred, with valleys and
+ hills between. Within the radius of the eye they moved, nowhere crowded in
+ big herds, but everywhere present. A band of zebras grazed the side of one
+ of the earth waves, a group of gazelles walked on the skyline, a herd of
+ kongoni rested in the hollow between. On the next rise was a similar
+ grouping; across the valley a new variation. As far as the eye could
+ strain its powers it could make out more and ever more beasts. I took up
+ my field glasses, and brought them all to within a sixth of the distance.
+ After amusing myself for some time in watching them, I swept the glasses
+ farther on. Still the same animals grazing on the hills and in the
+ hollows. I continued to look, and to look again, until even the powerful
+ prismatic glasses failed to show things big enough to distinguish. At the
+ limit of extreme vision I could still make out game, and yet more game.
+ And as I took my glasses from my eyes, and realized how small a portion of
+ this great land-sea I had been able to examine; as I looked away to the
+ ship-hills hull-down over the horizon, and realized that over all that
+ extent fed the Game; the ever-new wonder of Africa for the hundredth time
+ filled my mind-the teeming fecundity of her bosom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; said H. without removing his eye from the 'scope, &ldquo;just
+ beyond the edge of that shadow to the left of the bushes in the donga-I've
+ been watching them ten minutes, and I can't make 'em out yet. They're
+ either hyenas acting mighty queer, or else two lionesses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We snatched our glasses and concentrated on that important detail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To catch the third experience you must have journeyed with us across the
+ &ldquo;Thirst,&rdquo; as the natives picturesquely name the waterless tract of two
+ days and a half. Our very start had been delayed by a breakage of some
+ Dutch-sounding essential to our ox wagon, caused by the confusion of a
+ night attack by lions: almost every night we had lain awake as long as we
+ could to enjoy the deep-breathed grumbling or the vibrating roars of these
+ beasts. Now at last, having pushed through the dry country to the river in
+ the great plain, we were able to take breath from our mad hurry, and to
+ give our attention to affairs beyond the limits of mere expediency. One of
+ these was getting Billy a shot at a lion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Billy had never before wanted to shoot anything except a python. Why a
+ python we could not quite fathom. Personally, I think she had some vague
+ idea of getting even for that Garden of Eden affair. But lately, pythons
+ proving scarcer than in that favoured locality, she had switched to a
+ lion. She wanted, she said, to give the skin to her sister. In vain we
+ pointed out that a zebra hide was very decorative, that lions go to absurd
+ lengths in retaining possession of their own skins, and other equally
+ convincing facts. It must be a lion or nothing; so naturally we had to
+ make a try.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are several ways of getting lions, only one of which is at all
+ likely to afford a steady pot shot to a very small person trying to
+ manipulate an over-size gun. That is to lay out a kill. The idea is to
+ catch the lion at it in the early morning before he has departed for home.
+ The best kill is a zebra: first, because lions like zebra; second, because
+ zebra are fairly large; third, because zebra are very numerous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, after we had pitched camp just within a fringe of mimosa
+ trees and of red-flowering aloes near the river; had eaten lunch, smoked a
+ pipe and issued necessary orders to the men, C. and I set about the
+ serious work of getting an appropriate bait in an appropriate place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plains stretched straight away from the river bank to some indefinite
+ and unknown distance to the south. A low range of mountains lay blue to
+ the left; and a mantle of scrub thornbush closed the view to the right.
+ This did not imply that we could see far straight ahead, for the surface
+ of the plain rose slowly to the top of a swell about two miles away.
+ Beyond it reared a single butte peak at four or five times that distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We stepped from the fringe of red aloes and squinted through the dancing
+ heat shimmer. Near the limit of vision showed a very faint glimmering
+ whitish streak. A newcomer to Africa would not have looked at it twice:
+ nevertheless, it could be nothing but zebra. These gaudily marked beasts
+ take queer aspects even on an open plain. Most often they show pure white;
+ sometimes a jet black; only when within a few hundred yards does one
+ distinguish the stripes. Almost always they are very easily made out. Only
+ when very distant and in heat shimmer, or in certain half lights of
+ evening, does their so-called &ldquo;protective colouration&rdquo; seem to be in
+ working order, and even then they are always quite visible to the least
+ expert hunter's scrutiny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not difficult to kill a zebra, though sometimes it has to be done at
+ a fairly long range. If all you want is meat for the porters, the matter
+ is simple enough. But when you require bait for a lion, that; is another
+ affair entirely. In the first place, you must be able to stalk within a
+ hundred yards of your kill without being seen; in the second place, you
+ must provide two or three good lying-down places for your prospective
+ trophy within fifteen yards of the carcass-and no more than two or three;
+ in the third place, you must judge the direction of the probable morning
+ wind, and must be able to approach from leeward. It is evidently pretty
+ good luck to find an accommodating zebra in just such a spot. It is a
+ matter of still greater nicety to drop him absolutely in his tracks. In a
+ case of porters' meat it does not make any particular difference if he
+ runs a hundred yards before he dies. With lion bait even fifty yards makes
+ all the difference in the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ C. and I talked it over and resolved to press Scallywattamus into service.
+ Scallywattamus is a small white mule who is firmly convinced that each and
+ every bush in Africa conceals a mule-eating rhinoceros, and who does not
+ intend to be one of the number so eaten. But we had noticed that at times
+ zebra would be so struck with the strange sight of Scallywattamus carrying
+ a man, that they would let us get quite close. C. was to ride
+ Scallywattamus while I trudged along under his lee ready to shoot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We set out through the heat shimmer, gradually rising as the plain
+ slanted. Imperceptibly the camp and the trees marking the river's course
+ fell below us and into the heat haze. In the distance, close to the
+ stream, we made out a blurred, brown-red solid mass which we knew for
+ Masai cattle. Various little Thompson's gazelles skipped away to the left
+ waggling their tails vigorously and continuously as Nature long since
+ commanded &ldquo;Tommies&rdquo; to do. The heat haze steadied around the dim white
+ line, so we could make out the individual animals. There were plenty of
+ them, dozing in the sun. A single tiny treelet broke the plain just at the
+ skyline of the rise. C. and I talked low-voiced as we went along. We
+ agreed that the tree was an excellent landmark to come to, that the little
+ rise afforded proper cover, and that in the morning the wind would in all
+ likelihood blow toward the river. There were perhaps twenty zebra near
+ enough to the chosen spot. Any of them would do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the zebra did not give a hoot for Scallywattamus. At five hundred
+ yards three or four of them awoke with a start, stared at us a minute, and
+ moved slowly away. They told all the zebra they happened upon that the
+ three idiots approaching were at once uninteresting and dangerous. At four
+ hundred and fifty yards a half dozen more made off at a trot. At three
+ hundred and fifty yards the rest plunged away at a canter-all but one. He
+ remained to stare, but his tail was up, and we knew he only stayed because
+ he knew he could easily catch up in the next twenty seconds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chance was very slim of delivering a knockout at that distance, but we
+ badly needed meat, anyway, after our march through the Thirst, so I tried
+ him. We heard the well-known plunk of the bullet, but down went his head,
+ up went his heels, and away went he. We watched him in vast disgust. He
+ cavorted out into a bare open space without cover of any sort, and then
+ flopped over. I thought I caught a fleeting grin of delight on Mavrouki's
+ face; but he knew enough instantly to conceal his satisfaction over sure
+ meat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were now no zebra anywhere near; but since nobody ever thinks of
+ omitting any chances in Africa, I sneaked up to the tree and took a
+ perfunctory look. There stood another, providentially absent-minded,
+ zebra!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We got that one. Everybody was now happy. The boys raced over to the first
+ kill, which soon took its dismembered way toward camp. C. and I carefully
+ organized our plan of campaign. We fixed in our memories the exact
+ location of each and every bush; we determined compass direction from
+ camp, and any other bearings likely to prove useful in finding so small a
+ spot in the dark. Then we left a boy to keep carrion birds off until
+ sunset; and returned home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were out in the morning before even the first sign of dawn. Billy rode
+ her little mule, C. and I went afoot, Memba Sasa accompanied us because he
+ could see whole lions where even C.'s trained eye could not make out an
+ ear, and the syce went along to take care of the mule. The heavens were
+ ablaze with the thronging stars of the tropics, so we found we could make
+ out the skyline of the distant butte over the rise of the plains. The
+ earth itself was a pool of absolute blackness. We could not see where we
+ were placing our feet, and we were continually bringing up suddenly to
+ walk around an unexpected aloe or thornbush. The night was quite still,
+ but every once in a while from the blackness came rustlings, scamperings,
+ low calls, and once or twice the startled barking of zebra very near at
+ hand. The latter sounded as ridiculous as ever. It is one of the many
+ incongruities of African life that Nature should have given so large and
+ so impressive a creature the petulant yapping of an exasperated Pomeranian
+ lap dog. At the end of three quarters of an hour of more or less stumbling
+ progress, we made out against the sky the twisted treelet that served as
+ our landmark. Billy dismounted, turned the mule over to the syce, and we
+ crept slowly forward until within a guessed two or three hundred yards of
+ our kill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing remained now but to wait for the daylight. It had already begun to
+ show. Over behind the distant mountains some one was kindling the fires,
+ and the stars were flickering out. The splendid ferocity of the African
+ sunrise was at hand. Long bands of slate dark clouds lay close along the
+ horizon, and behind them glowed a heart of fire, as on a small scale the
+ lamplight glows through a metal-worked shade. On either side the sky was
+ pale green-blue, translucent and pure, deep as infinity itself. The earth
+ was still black, and the top of the rise near at hand was clear edged. On
+ that edge, and by a strange chance accurately in the centre of
+ illumination, stood the uncouth massive form of a shaggy wildebeeste, his
+ head raised, staring to the east. He did not move; nothing of that fire
+ and black world moved; only instant by instant it changed, swelling in
+ glory toward some climax until one expected at any moment a fanfare of
+ trumpets, the burst of triumphant culmination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then very far down in the distance a lion roared. The wildebeeste, without
+ moving, bellowed back an answer or a defiance. Down in the hollow an
+ ostrich boomed. Zebra barked, and several birds chirped strongly. The
+ tension was breaking not in the expected fanfare and burst of triumphal
+ music, but in a manner instantly felt to be more fitting to what was
+ indeed a wonder, but a daily wonder for all that. At one and the same
+ instant the rim of the sun appeared and the wildebeeste, after the sudden
+ habit of his kind, made up his mind to go. He dropped his head and came
+ thundering down past us at full speed. Straight to the west he headed, and
+ so disappeared. We could hear the beat of his hoofs dying into the
+ distance. He had gone like a Warder of the Morning whose task was
+ finished. On the knife-edged skyline appeared the silhouette of
+ slim-legged little Tommies, flirting their rails, sniffing at the dewy
+ grass, dainty, slender, confiding, the open-day antithesis of the
+ tremendous and awesome lord of the darkness that had roared its way to its
+ lair, and to the massive shaggy herald of morning that had thundered down
+ to the west.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. THE CENTRAL PLATEAU
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Now is required a special quality of the imagination, not in myself, but
+ in my readers, for it becomes necessary for them to grasp the logic of a
+ whole country in one mental effort. The difficulties to me are very real.
+ If I am to tell you it all in detail, your mind becomes confused to the
+ point of mingling the ingredients of the description. The resultant mental
+ picture is a composite; it mixes localities wide apart; it comes out, like
+ the snake-creeper-swamp-forest thing of grammar-school South America, an
+ unreal and deceitful impression. If, on the other hand, I try to give you
+ a bird's-eye view-saying, here is plain, and there follows upland, and
+ yonder succeed mountains and hills-you lose the sense of breadth and space
+ and the toil of many days. The feeling of onward outward extending
+ distance is gone; and that impression so indispensable to finite
+ understanding-&ldquo;here am I, and what is beyond is to be measured by the
+ length of my legs and the toil of my days.&rdquo; You will not stop long enough
+ on my plains to realize their physical extent nor their influence on the
+ human soul. If I mention them in a sentence, you dismiss them in a
+ thought. And that is something the plains themselves refuse to permit you
+ to do. Yet sometimes one must become a guide-book, and bespeak his
+ reader's imagination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country, then, wherein we travelled begins at the sea. Along the coast
+ stretches a low rolling country of steaming tropics, grown with cocoanuts,
+ bananas, mangoes, and populated by a happy, half-naked race of the
+ Swahilis. Leaving the coast, the country rises through hills. These hills
+ are at first fertile and green and wooded. Later they turn into an almost
+ unbroken plateau of thorn scrub, cruel, monotonous, almost impenetrable.
+ Fix thorn scrub in your mind, with rhino trails, and occasional openings
+ for game, and a few rivers flowing through palms and narrow jungle strips;
+ fix it in your mind until your mind is filled with it, until you are
+ convinced that nothing else can exist in the world but more and more of
+ the monotonous, terrible, dry, onstretching desert of thorn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then pass through this to the top of the hills inland, and journey over
+ these hills to the highland plains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now sense and appreciate these wide seas of and the hills and ranges of
+ mountains rising from them, and their infinite diversity of country-their
+ rivers marked by ribbons of jungle, their scattered-bush and their
+ thick-bush areas, their grass expanses, and their great distances
+ extending far over exceedingly wide horizons. Realize how many weary hours
+ you must travel to gain the nearest butte, what days of toil the view from
+ its top will disclose. Savour the fact that you can spend months in its
+ veriest corner without exhausting its possibilities. Then, and not until
+ then, raise your eyes to the low rising transverse range that bands it to
+ the west as the thorn desert bands it to the east.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And on these ranges are the forests, the great bewildering forests. In
+ what looks like a grove lying athwart a little hill you can lose yourself
+ for days. Here dwell millions of savages in an apparently untouched
+ wilderness. Here rises a snow mountain on the equator. Here are tangles
+ and labyrinths, great bamboo forests lost in folds of the mightiest hills.
+ Here are the elephants. Here are the swinging vines, the jungle itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet finally it breaks. We come out on the edge of things and look down on
+ a great gash in the earth. It is like a sunken kingdom in itself, miles
+ wide, with its own mountain ranges, its own rivers, its own landscape
+ features. Only on either side of it rise the escarpments which are the
+ true level of the plateau. One can spend two months in this valley, too,
+ and in the countries south to which it leads. And on its farther side are
+ the high plateau plains again, or the forests, or the desert, or the great
+ lakes that lie at the source of the Nile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So now, perhaps, we are a little prepared to go ahead. The guide-book work
+ is finished for good and all. There is the steaming hot low coast belt,
+ and the hot dry thorn desert belt, and the varied immense plains, and the
+ high mountain belt of the forests, and again the variegated wide country
+ of the Rift Valley and the high plateau. To attempt to tell you seriatim
+ and in detail just what they are like is the task of an encyclopaedist.
+ Perhaps more indirectly you may be able to fill in the picture of the
+ country, the people, and the beasts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. THE FIRST CAMP
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Our very first start into the new country was made when we piled out from
+ the little train standing patiently awaiting the good pleasure of our
+ descent. That feature strikes me with ever new wonder-the accommodating
+ way trains of the Uganda Railway have of waiting for you. One day, at a
+ little wayside station, C. and I were idly exchanging remarks with the
+ only white man in sight, killing time until the engine should whistle to a
+ resumption of the journey. The guard lingered about just out of earshot.
+ At the end of five minutes C. happened to catch his eye, whereupon he
+ ventured to approach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When you have finished your conversation,&rdquo; said he politely, &ldquo;we are all
+ ready to go on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morning in question there were a lot of us to disembark-one hundred
+ and twenty-two, to be exact-of which four were white. We were not yet
+ acquainted with our men, nor yet with our stores, nor with the methods of
+ our travel. The train went off and left us in the middle of a high
+ plateau, with low ridges running across it, and mountains in the distance.
+ Men were squabbling earnestly for the most convenient loads to carry, and
+ as fast as they had gained undisputed possession, they marked the loads
+ with some private sign of their own. M'ganga, the headman, tall, fierce,
+ big-framed and bony, clad in fez, a long black overcoat, blue puttees and
+ boots, stood stiff as a ramrod, extended a rigid right arm and rattled off
+ orders in a high dynamic voice. In his left hand he clasped a bulgy
+ umbrella, the badge of his dignity and the symbol of his authority. The
+ four askaris, big men too, with masterful high-cheekboned countenances,
+ rushed here and there seeing that the orders were carried out.
+ Expostulations, laughter, the sound of quarrelling rose and fell. Never
+ could the combined volume of it all override the firecracker stream of
+ M'ganga's eloquence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had nothing to do with it all, but stood a little dazed, staring at the
+ novel scene. Our men were of many tribes, each with its own cast of
+ features, its own notions of what befitted man's performance of his duties
+ here below. They stuck together each in its clan. A fine free
+ individualism of personal adornment characterized them. Every man dressed
+ for his own satisfaction solely. They hung all sorts of things in the
+ distended lobes of their ears. One had succeeded in inserting a fine big
+ glittering tobacco tin. Others had invented elaborate topiary designs in
+ their hair, shaving their heads so as to leave strange tufts, patches,
+ crescents on the most unexpected places. Of the intricacy of these designs
+ they seemed absurdly proud. Various sorts of treasure trove hung from
+ them-a bunch of keys to which there were no locks, discarded hunting
+ knives, tips of antelope horns, discharged brass cartridges, a hundred and
+ one valueless trifles plucked proudly from the rubbish heap. They were all
+ clothed. We had supplied each with a red blanket, a blue jersey, and a
+ water bottle. The blankets they were twisting most ingeniously into
+ turbans. Beside these they sported a great variety of garments. Shooting
+ coats that had seen better days, a dozen shabby overcoats-worn proudly
+ through the hottest noons-raggety breeches and trousers made by some
+ London tailor, queer baggy homemades of the same persuasion, or quite
+ simply the square of cotton cloth arranged somewhat like a short tight
+ skirt, or nothing at all as the man's taste ran. They were many of them
+ amusing enough; but somehow they did not look entirely farcical and
+ ridiculous, like our negroes putting on airs. All these things were worn
+ with a simplicity of quiet confidence in their entire fitness. And beneath
+ the red blanket turbans the half-wild savage faces peered out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Mahomet approached. Mahomet was my personal boy. He was a Somali from
+ the Northwest coast, dusky brown, with the regular clear-cut features of a
+ Greek marble god. His dress was of neat khaki, and he looked down on
+ savages; but, also, as with all the dark-skinned races, up to his white
+ master. Mahomet was with me during all my African stay, and tested out
+ nobly. As yet, of course, I did not know him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Chakula taiari,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is Swahili. It means literally &ldquo;food is ready.&rdquo; After one has hunted
+ in Africa for a few months, it means also &ldquo;paradise is opened,&rdquo; &ldquo;grief is
+ at an end,&rdquo; &ldquo;joy and thanksgiving are now in order,&rdquo; and similar affairs.
+ Those two words are never forgotten, and the veriest beginner in Swahili
+ can recognize them without the slightest effort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We followed Mahomet. Somehow, without orders, in all this confusion, the
+ personal staff had been quietly and efficiently busy. Drawn a little to
+ one side stood a table with four chairs. The table was covered with a
+ white cloth, and was set with a beautiful white enamel service. We took
+ our places. Behind each chair straight as a ramrod stood a neat khaki-clad
+ boy. They brought us food, and presented it properly on the left side,
+ waiting like well-trained butlers. We might have been in a London
+ restaurant. As three of us were Americans, we felt a trifle dazed. The
+ porters, having finished the distribution of their loads, squatted on
+ their heels and watched us respectfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then, not two hundred yards away, four ostriches paced slowly across
+ the track, paying not the slightest attention to us-our first real wild
+ ostriches, scornful of oranges, careless of tourists, and rightful
+ guardians of their own snowy plumes. The passage of these four solemn
+ birds seemed somehow to lend this strange open-air meal an exotic flavour.
+ We were indeed in Africa; and the ostriches helped us to realize it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We finished breakfast and arose from our chairs. Instantly a half dozen
+ men sprang forward. Before our amazed eyes the table service, the chairs
+ and the table itself disappeared into neat packages. M'ganga arose to his
+ feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bandika!&rdquo; he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The askaris rushed here and there actively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bandika! bandika! bandika!&rdquo; they cried repeatedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men sprang into activity. A struggle heaved the varicoloured
+ multitude-and, lo! each man stood upright, his load balanced on his head.
+ At the same moment the syces led up our horses, mounted and headed across
+ the little plain whence had come the four ostriches. Our African journey
+ had definitely begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behind us, all abreast marched the four gunbearers; then the four syces;
+ then the safari single file, an askari at the head bearing proudly his
+ ancient musket and our banner, other askaris flanking, M'ganga bringing up
+ the rear with his mighty umbrella and an unsuspected rhinoceros-hide whip.
+ The tent boys and the cook scattered along the flank anywhere, as befitted
+ the free and independent who had nothing to do with the serious business
+ of marching. A measured sound of drumming followed the beating of loads
+ with a hundred sticks; a wild, weird chanting burst from the ranks and
+ died down again as one or another individual or group felt moved to song.
+ One lot had a formal chant and response. Their leader, in a high falsetto,
+ said something like,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kuna koma kuno,&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ and all his tribesmen would follow with a single word in a deep gruff
+ tone,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Za-la-nee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All of which undoubtedly helped immensely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country was a bully country, but somehow it did not look like Africa.
+ That is to say, it looked altogether too much like any amount of country
+ at home. There was nothing strange and exotic about it. We crossed a
+ little plain, and up over a small hill, down into a shallow canyon that
+ seemed to be wooded with live oaks, across a grass valley or so, and
+ around a grass hill. Then we went into camp at the edge of another grass
+ valley, by a stream across which rose some ordinary low cliffs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is the disconcerting thing about a whole lot of this country-it is so
+ much like home. Of course, there are many wide districts exotic enough in
+ all conscience-the jungle beds of the rivers, the bamboo forests, the
+ great tangled forests themselves, the banana groves down the aisles of
+ which dance savages with shields-but so very much of it is familiar. One
+ needs only church spires and a red-roofed village or so to imagine one's
+ self in Surrey. There is any amount of country like Arizona, and more like
+ the uplands of Wyoming, and a lot of it resembling the smaller landscapes
+ of New England. The prospects of the whole world are there, so that
+ somewhere every wanderer can find the countryside of his own home
+ repeated. And, by the same token, that is exactly what makes a good deal
+ of it so startling. When a man sees a file of spear-armed savages, or a
+ pair of snorty old rhinos, step out into what has seemed practically his
+ own back yard home, he is even more startled than if he had encountered
+ them in quite strange surroundings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We rode into the grass meadow and picked camp site. The men trailed in and
+ dumped down their loads in a row.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At a signal they set to work. A dozen to each tent got them up in a jiffy.
+ A long file brought firewood from the stream bed. Others carried water,
+ stones for the cook, a dozen other matters. The tent boys rescued our
+ boxes; they put together the cots and made the beds, even before the tents
+ were raised from the ground. Within an incredibly short space of time the
+ three green tents were up and arranged, each with its bed made, its
+ mosquito bar hung, its personal box open, its folding washstand ready with
+ towels and soap, the table and chairs unlimbered. At a discreet distance
+ flickered the cook campfire, and at a still discreeter distance the little
+ tents of the men gleamed pure white against the green of the high grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. MEMBA SASA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I wish I could plunge you at once into the excitements of big game in
+ Africa, but I cannot truthfully do so. To be sure, we went hunting that
+ afternoon, up over the low cliffs, and we saw several of a very lively
+ little animal known as the Chandler's reedbuck. This was not supposed to
+ be a game country, and that was all we did see. At these we shot several
+ times-disgracefully. In fact, for several days we could not shoot at all,
+ at any range, nor at anything. It was very sad, and very aggravating.
+ Afterward we found that this is an invariable experience to the newcomer.
+ The light is new, the air is different, the sizes of the game are
+ deceiving. Nobody can at first hit anything. At the end of five days we
+ suddenly began to shoot our normal gait. Why, I do not know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in this afternoon tramp around the low cliffs after the elusive
+ reedbuck, I for the first time became acquainted with a man who developed
+ into a real friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His name is Memba Sasa. Memba Sasa are two Swahili words meaning &ldquo;now a
+ crocodile.&rdquo; Subsequently, after I had learned to talk Swahili, I tried to
+ find out what he was formerly, before he was a crocodile, but did not
+ succeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was of the tribe of the Monumwezi, of medium height, compactly and
+ sturdily built, carried himself very erect, and moved with a concentrated
+ and vigorous purposefulness. His countenance might be described as
+ pleasing but not handsome, of a dark chocolate brown, with the broad nose
+ of the negro, but with a firm mouth, high cheekbones, and a frowning
+ intentness of brow that was very fine. When you talked to him he looked
+ you straight in the eye. His own eyes were shaded by long, soft, curling
+ lashes behind which they looked steadily and gravely-sometimes fiercely-on
+ the world. He rarely smiled-never merely in understanding or for
+ politeness' sake-and never laughed unless there was something really
+ amusing. Then he chuckled from deep in his chest, the most contagious
+ laughter you can imagine. Often we, at the other end of the camp, have
+ laughed in sympathy, just at the sound of that deep and hearty ho! ho! ho!
+ of Memba Sasa. Even at something genuinely amusing he never laughed much,
+ nor without a very definite restraint. In fact, about him was no
+ slackness, no sprawling abandon of the native in relaxation; but always a
+ taut efficiency and a never-failing self-respect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Naturally, behind such a fixed moral fibre must always be some moral idea.
+ When a man lives up to a real, not a pompous, dignity some ideal must
+ inform it. Memba Sasa's ideal was that of the Hunter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a gunbearer; and he considered that a good gunbearer stood quite a
+ few notches above any other human being, save always the white man, of
+ course. And even among the latter Memba Sasa made great differences. These
+ differences he kept to himself, and treated all with equal respect.
+ Nevertheless, they existed, and Memba Sasa very well knew that fact. In
+ the white world were two classes of masters: those who hunted well, and
+ those who were considered by them as their friends and equals. Why they
+ should be so considered Memba Sasa did not know, but he trusted the
+ Hunter's judgment. These were the bwanas, or masters. All the rest were
+ merely mazungos, or, &ldquo;white men.&rdquo; To their faces he called them bwana, but
+ in his heart he considered them not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Observe, I say those who hunted well. Memba Sasa, in his profession as
+ gunbearer, had to accompany those who hunted badly. In them he took no
+ pride; from them he held aloof in spirit; but for them he did his
+ conscientious best, upheld by the dignity of his profession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For to Mamba Sasa that profession was the proudest to which a black man
+ could aspire. He prided himself on mastering its every detail, in
+ accomplishing its every duty minutely and exactly. The major virtues of a
+ gunbearer are not to be despised by anybody; for they comprise great
+ physical courage, endurance, and loyalty: the accomplishments of a
+ gunbearer are worthy of a man's best faculties, for they include the
+ ability to see and track game, to take and prepare properly any sort of a
+ trophy, field taxidermy, butchering game meat, wood and plainscraft, the
+ knowledge of how properly to care for firearms in all sorts of
+ circumstances, and a half hundred other like minutiae. Memba Sasa knew
+ these things, and he performed them with the artist's love for details;
+ and his keen eyes were always spying for new ways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At a certain time I shot an egret, and prepared to take the skin. Memba
+ Sasa asked if he might watch me do it. Two months later, having killed a
+ really gaudy peacocklike member of the guinea fowl tribe, I handed it over
+ to him with instructions to take off the breast feathers before giving it
+ to the cook. In a half hour he brought me the complete skin, I examined it
+ carefully, and found it to be well done in every respect. Now in skinning
+ a bird there are a number of delicate and unusual operations, such as
+ stripping the primary quills from the bone, cutting the ear cover, and the
+ like. I had explained none of them; and yet Memba Sasa, unassisted, had
+ grasped their method from a single demonstration and had remembered them
+ all two months later! C. had a trick in making the second skin incision of
+ a trophy head that had the effect of giving a better purchase to the
+ knife. Its exact description would be out of place here, but it actually
+ consisted merely in inserting the point of the knife two inches away from
+ the place it is ordinarily inserted. One day we noticed that Memba Sasa
+ was making his incisions in that manner. I went to Africa fully determined
+ to care for my own rifle. The modern high-velocity gun needs rather
+ especial treatment; mere wiping out will not do. I found that Memba Sasa
+ already knew all about boiling water, and the necessity for having it
+ really boiling, about subsequent metal sweating, and all the rest. After
+ watching him at work I concluded, rightly, that he would do a lot better
+ job than I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the new employer Memba Sasa maintained an attitude of strict
+ professional loyalty. His personal respect was upheld by the necessity of
+ every man to do his job in the world. Memba Sasa did his. He cleaned the
+ rifles; he saw that everything was in order for the day's march; he was at
+ my elbow all ways with more cartridges and the spare rifle; he trailed and
+ looked conscientiously. In his attitude was the stolidity of the wooden
+ Indian. No action of mine, no joke on the part of his companions, no
+ circumstance in the varying fortunes of the field gained from him the
+ faintest flicker of either approval, disapproval, or interest. When we
+ returned to camp he deposited my water bottle and camera, seized the
+ cleaning implements, and departed to his own campfire. In the field he
+ pointed out game that I did not see, and waited imperturbably the result
+ of my shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I before stated, the result of that shot for the first five days was
+ very apt to be nil. This, at the time, puzzled and grieved me a lot.
+ Occasionally I looked at Memba Sasa to catch some sign of sympathy,
+ disgust, contempt, or-rarely-triumph at a lucky shot. Nothing. He gently
+ but firmly took away my rifle, reloaded it, and handed it back; then
+ waited respectfully for my next move. He knew no English, and I no
+ Swahili.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as time went on this attitude changed. I was armed with the new
+ Springfield rifle, a weapon with 2,700 feet velocity, and with a
+ marvellously flat trajectory. This commanding advantage, combined with a
+ very long familiarity with firearms, enabled me to do some fairish
+ shooting, after the strangeness of these new conditions had been mastered.
+ Memba Sasa began to take a dawning interest in me as a possible source of
+ pride. We began to develop between us a means of communication. I set
+ myself deliberately to learn his language, and after he had cautiously
+ determined that I really meant it, he took the greatest pains-always
+ gravely-to teach me. A more human feeling sprang up between us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we had still the final test to undergo-that of danger and the tight
+ corner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In close quarters the gunbearer has the hardest job in the world. I have
+ the most profound respect for his absolute courage. Even to a man armed
+ and privileged to shoot and defend himself, a charging lion is an awesome
+ thing, requiring a certain amount of coolness and resolution to face
+ effectively. Think of the gunbearer at his elbow, depending not on himself
+ but on the courage and coolness of another. He cannot do one solitary
+ thing to defend himself. To bolt for the safety of a tree is to beg the
+ question completely, to brand himself as a shenzi forever; to fire a gun
+ in any circumstances is to beg the question also, for the white man must
+ be able to depend absolutely on his second gun in an emergency. Those
+ things are outside consideration, even, of any respectable gunbearer. In
+ addition, he must keep cool. He must see clearly in the thickest
+ excitement; must be ready unobtrusively to pass up the second gun in the
+ position most convenient for immediate use, to seize the other and to
+ perform the finicky task of reloading correctly while some rampageous
+ beast is raising particular thunder a few yards away. All this in absolute
+ dependence on the ability of his bwana to deal with the situation. I can
+ confess very truly that once or twice that little unobtrusive touch of
+ Memba Sasa crouched close to my elbow steadied me with the thought of how
+ little right I-with a rifle in my hand-had to be scared. And the best
+ compliment I ever received I overheard by chance. I had wounded a lion
+ when out by myself, and had returned to camp for a heavier rifle and for
+ Memba Sasa to do the trailing. From my tent I overheard the following
+ conversation between Memba Sasa and the cook:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The grass is high,&rdquo; said the cook. &ldquo;Are you not afraid to go after a
+ wounded lion with only one white man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My one white man is enough,&rdquo; replied Memba Sasa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a quality of courage that I must confess would be quite beyond me-to
+ depend entirely on the other fellow, and not at all on myself. This
+ courage is always remarkable to me, even in the case of the gunbearer who
+ knows all about the man whose heels he follows. But consider that of the
+ gunbearer's first experience with a stranger. The former has no idea of
+ how the white man will act; whether he will get nervous, get actually
+ panicky, lose his shooting ability, and generally mess things up.
+ Nevertheless, he follows his master in, and he stands by. If the hunter
+ fails, the gunbearer will probably die. To me it is rather fine: for he
+ does it, not from the personal affection and loyalty which will carry men
+ far, but from a sheer sense of duty and pride of caste. The quiet pride of
+ the really good men, like Memba Sasa, is easy to understand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the records are full of stories of the white man who has not made
+ good: of the coward who bolts, leaving his black man to take the brunt of
+ it, or who sticks but loses his head. Each new employer must be very
+ closely and interestedly scrutinized. In the light of subsequent
+ experience, I can no longer wonder at Memba Sasa's first detached and
+ impersonal attitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As time went on, however, and we grew to know each other better, this
+ attitude entirely changed. At first the change consisted merely in
+ dropping the disinterested pose as respects game. For it was a pose. Memba
+ Sasa was most keenly interested in game whenever it was an object of
+ pursuit. It did not matter how common the particular species might be: if
+ we wanted it, Memba Sasa would look upon it with eager ferocity; and if we
+ did not want it, he paid no attention to it at all. When we started in the
+ morning, or in the relaxation of our return at night, I would mention
+ casually a few of the things that might prove acceptable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-morrow we want kongoni for boys' meat, or zebra; and some meat for
+ masters-Tommy, impala, oribi,&rdquo; and Memba Sasa knew as well as I did what
+ we needed to fill out our trophy collection. When he caught sight of one
+ of these animals his whole countenance changed. The lines of his face set,
+ his lips drew back from his teeth, his eyes fairly darted fire in the
+ fixity of their gaze. He was like a fine pointer dog on birds, or like the
+ splendid savage he was at heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;M'palla!&rdquo; he hissed; and then after a second, in a restrained fierce
+ voice, &ldquo;Na-ona? Do you see?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I did not see he pointed cautiously. His own eyes never left the beast.
+ Rarely he stayed put while I made the stalk. More often he glided like a
+ snake at my heels. If the bullet hit, Memba Sasa always exhaled a grunt of
+ satisfaction-&ldquo;hah!&rdquo;-in which triumph and satisfaction mingled with a faint
+ derision at the unfortunate beast. In case of a trophy he squatted
+ anxiously at the animal's head while I took my measurements, assisting
+ very intelligently with the tape line. When I had finished, he always
+ looked up at me with wrinkled brow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Footie n'gapi?&rdquo; he inquired. This means literally, &ldquo;How many feet?&rdquo;,
+ footie being his euphemistic invention of a word for the tape. I would
+ tell him how many &ldquo;footie&rdquo; and how many &ldquo;inchie&rdquo; the measurement proved to
+ be. From the depths of his wonderful memory he would dig up the
+ measurements of another beast of the same sort I had killed months back,
+ but which he had remembered accurately from a single hearing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shooting of a beast he always detailed to his few cronies in camp: the
+ other gunbearers, and one or two from his own tribe. He always used the
+ first person plural, &ldquo;we&rdquo; did so and so; and took an inordinate pride in
+ making out his bwana as being an altogether superior person to any of the
+ other gunbearer's bwanas. Over a miss he always looked sad; but with a
+ dignified sadness as though we had met with undeserved misfortune sent by
+ malignant gods. If there were any possible alleviating explanation, Memba
+ Sasa made the most of it, provided our fiasco was witnessed. If we were
+ alone in our disgrace, he buried the incident fathoms deep. He took an
+ inordinate pride in our using the minimum number of cartridges, and would
+ explain to me in a loud tone of voice that we had cartridges enough in the
+ belt. When we had not cartridges enough, he would sneak around after dark
+ to get some more. At times he would even surreptitiously &ldquo;lift&rdquo; a few from
+ B.'s gunbearer!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When in camp, with his &ldquo;cazi&rdquo; finished, Memba Sasa did fancy work! The
+ picture of this powerful half-savage, his fierce brows bent over a tiny
+ piece of linen, his strong fingers fussing with little stitches, will
+ always appeal to my sense of the incongruous. Through a piece of linen he
+ punched holes with a porcupine quill. Then he &ldquo;buttonhole&rdquo; stitched the
+ holes, and embroidered patterns between them with fine white thread. The
+ result was an openwork pattern heavily encrusted with beautiful fine
+ embroidery. It was most astounding stuff, such as you would expect from a
+ French convent, perhaps, but never from an African savage. He did a
+ circular piece and a long narrow piece. They took him three months to
+ finish, and then he sewed them together to form a skull cap. Billy,
+ entranced with the lacelike delicacy of the work, promptly captured it;
+ whereupon Memba Sasa philosophically started another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time he had identified himself with my fortunes. We had become a
+ firm whose business it was to carry out the affairs of a single
+ personality-me. Memba Sasa, among other things, undertook the dignity.
+ When I walked through a crowd, Memba Sasa zealously kicked everybody out
+ of my royal path. When I started to issue a command, Memba Sasa finished
+ it and amplified it and put a snapper on it. When I came into camp, Memba
+ Sasa saw to it personally that my tent went up promptly and properly,
+ although that was really not part of his &ldquo;cazi&rdquo; at all. And when somewhere
+ beyond my ken some miserable boy had committed a crime, I never remained
+ long in ignorance of that fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps I happened to be sitting in my folding chair idly smoking a pipe
+ and reading a book. Across the open places of the camp would stride Memba
+ Sasa, very erect, very rigid, moving in short indignant jerks, his eye
+ flashing fire. Behind him would sneak a very hang-dog boy. Memba Sasa
+ marched straight up to me, faced right, and drew one side, his silence
+ sparkling with honest indignation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just look at THAT!&rdquo; his attitude seemed to say, &ldquo;Could you believe such
+ human depravity possible? And against OUR authority?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He always stood, quite rigid, waiting for me to speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Memba Sasa?&rdquo; I would inquire, after I had enjoyed the show a
+ little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few restrained words he put the case before me, always briefly,
+ always with a scornful dignity. This shenzi has done so-and-so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will suppose the case fairly serious. I listened to the man's story, if
+ necessary called a few witnesses, delivered judgment. All the while Memba
+ Sasa stood at rigid attention, fairly bristling virtue, like the good dog
+ standing by at the punishment of the bad dogs. And in his attitude was a
+ subtle triumph, as one would say: &ldquo;You see! Fool with my bwana, will you!
+ Just let anybody try to get funny with US!&rdquo; Judgment pronounced-we have
+ supposed the case serious, you remember-Memba Sasa himself applied the
+ lash. I think he really enjoyed that; but it was a restrained joy. The
+ whip descended deliberately, without excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man's devotion in unusual circumstances was beyond praise. Danger or
+ excitement incite a sort of loyalty in any good man; but humdrum,
+ disagreeable difficulty is a different matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day we marched over a country of thorn-scrub desert. Since two days we
+ had been cut loose from water, and had been depending on a small amount
+ carried in zinc drums. Now our only reasons for faring were a conical
+ hill, over the horizon, and the knowledge of a river somewhere beyond. How
+ far beyond, or in what direction, we did not know. We had thirty men with
+ us, a more or less ragtag lot, picked up anyhow in the bazaars. They were
+ soft, ill-disciplined and uncertain. For five or six hours they marched
+ well enough. Then the sun began to get very hot, and some of them began to
+ straggle. They had, of course, no intention of deserting, for their only
+ hope of surviving lay in staying with us; but their loads had become
+ heavy, and they took too many rests. We put a good man behind, but without
+ much avail. In open country a safari can be permitted to straggle over
+ miles, for always it can keep in touch by sight; but in this thorn-scrub
+ desert, that looks all alike, a man fifty yards out of sight is fifty
+ yards lost. We would march fifteen or twenty minutes, then sit down to
+ wait until the rearmost men had straggled in, perhaps a half hour later.
+ And we did not dare move on until the tale of our thirty was complete. At
+ this rate progress was very slow, and as the fierce equatorial sun
+ increased in strength, became always slower still. The situation became
+ alarming. We were quite out of water, and we had no idea where water was
+ to be found. To complicate matters, the thornbrush thickened to a jungle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My single companion and I consulted. It was agreed that I was to push on
+ as rapidly as possible to locate the water, while he was to try to hold
+ the caravan together. Accordingly, Memba Sasa and I marched ahead. We
+ tried to leave a trail to follow; and we hoped fervently that our guess as
+ to the stream's course would prove to be a good one. At the end of two
+ hours and a half we found the water-a beautiful jungle-shaded stream-and
+ filled ourselves up therewith. Our duty was accomplished, for we had left
+ a trail to be followed. Nevertheless, I felt I should like to take back
+ our full canteens to relieve the worst cases. Memba Sasa would not hear of
+ it, and even while I was talking to him seized the canteens and
+ disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of two hours more camp was made, after a fashion; but still
+ four men had failed to come in. We built a smudge in the hope of guiding
+ them; and gave them up. If they had followed our trail, they should have
+ been in long ago; if they had missed that trail, heaven knows where they
+ were, or where we should go to find them. Dusk was falling, and, to tell
+ the truth, we were both very much done up by a long day at 115 degrees in
+ the shade under an equatorial sun. The missing men would climb trees away
+ from the beasts, and we would organize a search next day. As we debated
+ these things, to us came Memba Sasa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want to take 'Winchi,'&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Winchi&rdquo; is his name for my Winchester
+ 405.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo; we asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I can take Winchi, I will find the men,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was entirely voluntary on his part. He, as well as we, had had a hard
+ day, and he had made a double journey for part of it. We gave him Winchi
+ and he departed. Sometime after midnight he returned with the missing men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps a dozen times all told he volunteered for these special services;
+ once in particular, after a fourteen-hour day, he set off at nine o'clock
+ at night in a soaking rainstorm, wandered until two o'clock, and returned
+ unsuccessful, to rouse me and report gravely that he could not find them.
+ For these services he neither received nor expected special reward. And
+ catch him doing anything outside his strict &ldquo;cazi&rdquo; except for US.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were always very ceremonious and dignified in our relations on such
+ occasions. Memba Sasa would suddenly appear, deposit the rifle in its
+ place, and stand at attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Memba Sasa?&rdquo; I would inquire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have found the men; they are in camp.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then I would give him his reward. It was either the word &ldquo;assanti,&rdquo; or the
+ two words &ldquo;assanti sana,&rdquo; according to the difficulty and importance of
+ the task accomplished. They mean simply &ldquo;thank you&rdquo; and &ldquo;thank you very
+ much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once or twice, after a particularly long and difficult month or so, when
+ Memba Sasa has been almost literally my alter ego, I have called him up
+ for special praise. &ldquo;I am very pleased with you, Memba Sasa,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;You
+ have done your cazi well. You are a good man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He accepted this with dignity, without deprecation, and without the idiocy
+ of spoken gratitude. He agreed perfectly with everything I said! &ldquo;Yes&rdquo; was
+ his only comment. I liked it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On our ultimate success in a difficult enterprise Memba Sasa set great
+ store; and his delight in ultimate success was apparently quite apart from
+ personal considerations. We had been hunting greater kudu for five weeks
+ before we finally landed one. The greater kudu is, with the bongo, easily
+ the prize beast in East Africa, and very few are shot. By a piece of bad
+ luck, for him, I had sent Memba Sasa out in a different direction to look
+ for signs the afternoon we finally got one. The kill was made just at
+ dusk. C. and I, with Mavrouki, built a fire and stayed, while Kongoni went
+ to camp after men. There he broke the news to Memba Sasa that the great
+ prize had been captured, and he absent. Memba Sasa was hugely delighted,
+ nor did he in any way show what must have been a great disappointment to
+ him. After repeating the news triumphantly to every one in camp, he came
+ out to where we were waiting, arrived quite out of breath, and grabbed me
+ by the hand in heartiest congratulation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Memba Sasa went in not at all for personal ornamentation, any more than he
+ allowed his dignity to be broken by anything resembling emotionalism. No
+ tattoo marks, no ear ornaments, no rings nor bracelets. He never even
+ picked up an ostrich feather for his head. On the latter he sometimes wore
+ an old felt hat; sometimes, more picturesquely, an orange-coloured fillet.
+ Khaki shirt, khaki &ldquo;shorts,&rdquo; blue puttees, besides his knife and my own
+ accoutrements: that was all. In town he was all white clad, a long fine
+ linen robe reaching to his feet; and one of the lacelike skull caps he was
+ so very skilful at making.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That will do for a preliminary sketch. If you follow these pages, you will
+ hear more of him; he is worth it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI. THE FIRST GAME CAMP
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the review of &ldquo;first&rdquo; impressions with which we are concerned, we must
+ now skip a week or ten days to stop at what is known in our diaries as the
+ First Ford of the Guaso Nyero River.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These ten days were not uneventful. We had crossed the wide and undulating
+ plains, had paused at some tall beautiful falls plunging several hundred
+ feet into the mysteriousness of a dense forest on which we looked down.
+ There we had enjoyed some duck, goose and snipe shooting; had made the
+ acquaintance of a few of the Masai, and had looked with awe on our first
+ hippo tracks in the mud beside a tiny ditchlike stream. Here and there
+ were small game herds. In the light of later experience we now realize
+ that these were nothing at all; but at the time the sight of full-grown
+ wild animals out in plain sight was quite wonderful. At the close of the
+ day's march we always wandered out with our rifles to see what we could
+ find. Everything was new to us, and we had our men to feed. Our shooting
+ gradually improved until we had overcome the difficulties peculiar to this
+ new country and were doing as well as we could do anywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, at the end of a hard day through scrub, over rolling bold hills, and
+ down a scrub brush slope, we had reached the banks of the Guaso Nyero.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point, above the junction of its principal tributary rivers, it
+ was a stream about sixty or seventy feet wide, flowing swift between high
+ banks. A few trees marked its course, but nothing like a jungle. The ford
+ was in swift water just above a deep still pool suspected of crocodiles.
+ We found the water about waist deep, stretched a rope across, and forcibly
+ persuaded our eager boys that one at a time was about what the situation
+ required. On the other side we made camp on an open flat. Having marched
+ so far continuously, we resolved to settle down for a while. The men had
+ been without sufficient meat; and we desired very much to look over the
+ country closely, and to collect a few heads as trophies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps a word might not come amiss as to the killing of game. The case is
+ here quite different from the condition of affairs at home. Here animal
+ life is most extraordinarily abundant; it furnishes the main food supply
+ to the traveller; and at present is probably increasing slightly,
+ certainly holding its own. Whatever toll the sportsman or traveller take
+ is as nothing compared to what he might take if he were an unscrupulous
+ game hog. If his cartridges and his shoulder held out, he could easily
+ kill a hundred animals a day instead of the few he requires. In that
+ sense, then, no man slaughters indiscriminately. During the course of a
+ year he probably shoots from two hundred to two hundred and fifty beasts,
+ provided he is travelling with an ordinary sized caravan. This, the
+ experts say, is about the annual toll of one lion. If the traveller gets
+ his lion, he plays even with the fauna of the country; if he gets two or
+ more lions, he has something to his credit. This probably explains why the
+ game is still so remarkably abundant near the road and on the very
+ outskirts of the town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were now much in need of a fair quantity of meat, both for immediate
+ consumption of our safari, and to make biltong or jerky. Later, in like
+ circumstances, we should have sallied forth in a businesslike fashion,
+ dropped the requisite number of zebra and hartebeeste as near camp as
+ possible, and called it a job. Now, however, being new to the game, we
+ much desired good trophies in variety. Therefore, we scoured the country
+ far and wide for desirable heads; and the meat waited upon the acquisition
+ of the trophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, then, might be called our first Shooting Camp. Heretofore we had
+ travelled every day. Now the boys settled down to what the native porter
+ considers the height of bliss: a permanent camp with plenty to eat. Each
+ morning we were off before daylight, riding our horses, and followed by
+ the gunbearers, the syces, and fifteen or twenty porters. The country rose
+ from the river in a long gentle slope grown with low brush and scattered
+ candlestick euphorbias. This slope ended in a scattered range of low rocky
+ buttes. Through any one of the various openings between them, we rode to
+ find ourselves on the borders of an undulating grass country of low
+ rounded hills with wide valleys winding between them. In these valleys and
+ on these hills was the game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Daylight of the day I would tell about found us just at the edge of the
+ little buttes. Down one of the slopes the growing half light revealed two
+ oryx feeding, magnificent big creatures, with straight rapier horns three
+ feet in length. These were most exciting and desirable, so off my horse I
+ got and began to sneak up on them through the low tufts of grass. They fed
+ quite calmly. I congratulated myself, and slipped nearer. Without even
+ looking in my direction, they trotted away. Somewhat chagrined, I returned
+ to my companions, and we rode on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then across a mile-wide valley we saw two dark objects in the tall grass;
+ and almost immediately identified these as rhinoceroses, the first we had
+ seen. They stood there side by side, gazing off into space, doing nothing
+ in a busy morning world. After staring at them through our glasses for
+ some time, we organized a raid. At the bottom of the valley we left the
+ horses and porters; lined up, each with his gunbearer at his elbow; and
+ advanced on the enemy. B. was to have the shot According to all the books
+ we should have been able, provided we were downwind and made no noise, to
+ have approached within fifty or sixty yards undiscovered. However, at a
+ little over a hundred yards they both turned tail and departed at a swift
+ trot, their heads held well up and their tails sticking up straight and
+ stiff in the most ridiculous fashion. No good shooting at them in such
+ circumstances, so we watched them go, still keeping up their slashing
+ trot, growing smaller and smaller in the distance until finally they
+ disappeared over the top of a swell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We set ourselves methodically to following them. It took us over an hour
+ of steady plodding before we again came in sight of them. They were this
+ time nearer the top of a hill, and we saw instantly that the curve of the
+ slope was such that we could approach within fifty yards before coming in
+ sight at all. Therefore, once more we dismounted, lined up in battle
+ array, and advanced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sensations? Distinctly nervous, decidedly alert, and somewhat
+ self-congratulatory that I was not more scared. No man can predicate how
+ efficient he is going to be in the presence of really dangerous game. Only
+ the actual trial will show. This is not a question of courage at all, but
+ of purely involuntary reaction of the nerves. Very few men are physical
+ cowards. They will and do face anything. But a great many men are rendered
+ inefficient by the way their nervous systems act under stress. It is not a
+ matter for control by will power in the slightest degree. So the big game
+ hunter must determine by actual trial whether it so happens that the great
+ excitement of danger renders his hand shaky or steady. The excitement in
+ either case is the same. No man is ever &ldquo;cool&rdquo; in the sense that personal
+ danger is of the same kind of indifference to him as clambering aboard a
+ street car. He must always be lifted above himself, must enter an extra
+ normal condition to meet extra normal circumstances. He can always control
+ his conduct; but he can by no means always determine the way the
+ inevitable excitement will affect his coordinations. And unfortunately, in
+ the final result it does not matter how brave a man is, but how closely he
+ can hold. If he finds that his nervous excitement renders him unsteady, he
+ has no business ever to tackle dangerous game alone. If, on the other
+ hand, he discovers that IDENTICALLY THE SAME nervous excitement happens to
+ steady his front sight to rocklike rigidity-a rigidity he could not
+ possibly attain in normal conditions-then he will probably keep out of
+ trouble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To amplify this further by a specific instance: I hunted for a short time
+ in Africa with a man who was always eager for exciting encounters, whose
+ pluck was admirable in every way, but whose nervous reaction so manifested
+ itself that he was utterly unable to do even decent shooting at any range.
+ Furthermore, his very judgment and power of observation were so obscured
+ that he could not remember afterward with any accuracy what had
+ happened-which way the beast was pointing, how many there were of them, in
+ which direction they went, how many shots were fired, in short all the
+ smaller details of the affair. He thought he remembered. After the show
+ was over it was quite amusing to get his version of the incident. It was
+ almost always so wide of the fact as to be little recognizable. And, mind
+ you, he was perfectly sincere in his belief, and absolutely courageous.
+ Only he was quite unfitted by physical make-up for a big game hunter; and
+ I was relieved when, after a short time, his route and mine separated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, we clambered up that slope with a fine compound of tension,
+ expectation, and latent uneasiness as to just what was going to happen,
+ anyway. Finally, we raised the backs of the beasts, stooped, sneaked a
+ little nearer, and finally at a signal stood upright perhaps forty yards
+ from the brutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the first time I experienced a sensation I was destined many times to
+ repeat-that of the sheer size of the animals. Menagerie rhinoceroses had
+ been of the smaller Indian variety; and in any case most menagerie beasts
+ are more or less stunted. These two, facing us, their little eyes
+ blinking, looked like full-grown ironclads on dry land. The moment we
+ stood erect B. fired at the larger of the two. Instantly they turned and
+ were off at a tearing run. I opened fire, and B. let loose his second
+ barrel. At about two hundred and fifty yards the big rhinoceros suddenly
+ fell on his side, while the other continued his flight. It was all
+ over-very exciting because we got excited, but not in the least dangerous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boys were delighted, for here was meat in plenty for everybody. We
+ measured the beast, photographed him, marvelled at his immense size, and
+ turned him over to the gunbearers for treatment. In half an hour or so a
+ long string of porters headed across the hills in the direction of camp,
+ many miles distant, each carrying his load either of meat, or the
+ trophies. Rhinoceros hide, properly treated, becomes as transparent as
+ amber, and so from it can be made many very beautiful souvenirs, such as
+ bowls, trays, paper knives, table tops, whips, canes, and the like. And,
+ of course, the feet of one's first rhino are always saved for cigar boxes
+ or inkstands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already we had an admiring and impatient audience. From all directions
+ came the carrion birds. They circled far up in the heavens; they shot
+ downward like plummets from a great height with an inspiring roar of
+ wings; they stood thick in a solemn circle all around the scene of the
+ kill; they rose with a heavy flapping when we moved in their direction.
+ Skulking forms flashed in the grass, and occasionally the pointed ears of
+ a jackal would rise inquiringly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was by now nearly noon. The sun shone clear and hot; the heat shimmer
+ rose in clouds from the brown surface of the hills. In all directions we
+ could make out small gameherds resting motionless in the heat of the day,
+ the mirage throwing them into fantastic shapes. While the final
+ disposition was being made of the defunct rhinoceros I wandered over the
+ edge of the hill to see what I could see, and fairly blundered on a herd
+ of oryx at about a hundred and fifty yards range. They looked at me a
+ startled instant, then leaped away to the left at a tremendous speed. By a
+ lucky shot, I bowled one over. He was a beautiful beast, with his black
+ and white face and his straight rapierlike horns nearly three feet long,
+ and I was most pleased to get him. Memba Sasa came running at the sound of
+ the shot. We set about preparing the head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then through a gap in the hills far to the left we saw a little black
+ speck moving rapidly in our direction. At the end of a minute we could
+ make it out as the second rhinoceros. He had run heaven knows how many
+ miles away, and now he was returning; whether with some idea of rejoining
+ his companion or from sheer chance, I do not know. At any rate, here he
+ was, still ploughing along at his swinging trot. His course led him along
+ a side hill about four hundred yards from where the oryx lay. When he was
+ directly opposite I took the Springfield and fired, not at him, but at a
+ spot five or six feet in front of his nose. The bullet threw up a column
+ of dust. Rhino brought up short with astonishment, wheeled to the left,
+ and made off at a gallop. I dropped another bullet in front of him. Again
+ he stopped, changed direction, and made off. For the third time I hit the
+ ground in front of him. Then he got angry, put his head down and charged
+ the spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Five more shots I expended on the amusement of that rhinoceros; and at the
+ last had run furiously charging back and forth in a twenty-yard space,
+ very angry at the little puffing, screeching bullets, but quite unable to
+ catch one. Then he made up his mind and departed the way he had come,
+ finally disappearing as a little rapidly moving black speck through the
+ gap in the hills where we had first caught sight of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We finished caring for the oryx, and returned to camp. To our surprise we
+ found we were at least seven or eight miles out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this fashion days passed very quickly. The early dewy start in the cool
+ of the morning, the gradual grateful warming up of sunrise, and
+ immediately after, the rest during the midday heats under a shady tree,
+ the long trek back to camp at sunset, the hot bath after the toilsome
+ day-all these were very pleasant. Then the swift falling night, and the
+ gleam of many tiny fires springing up out of the darkness; with each its
+ sticks full of meat roasting, and its little circle of men, their skins
+ gleaming in the light. As we sat smoking, we would become aware that
+ M'ganga, the headman, was standing silent awaiting orders. Some one would
+ happen to see the white of his eyes, or perhaps he might smile so that his
+ teeth would become visible. Otherwise he might stand there an hour, and no
+ one the wiser, for he was respectfully silent, and exactly the colour of
+ the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We would indicate to him our plans for the morrow, and he would disappear.
+ Then at a distance of twenty or thirty feet from the front of our tents a
+ tiny tongue of flame would lick up. Dark figures could be seen
+ manipulating wood. A blazing fire sprang up, against which we could see
+ the motionless and picturesque figure of Saa-sita (Six o'Clock), the
+ askari of the first night watch, leaning on his musket. He was a most
+ picturesque figure, for his fancy ran to original headdresses, and at the
+ moment he affected a wonderful upstanding structure made of marabout
+ wings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this sign that the night had begun, we turned in. A few hyenas moaned,
+ a few jackals barked: otherwise the first part of the night was silent,
+ for the hunters were at their silent business, and the hunted were &ldquo;layin'
+ low and sayin' nuffin'.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Day after day we rode out, exploring the country in different directions.
+ The great uncertainty as to what of interest we would find filled the
+ hours with charm. Sometimes we clambered about the cliffs of the buttes
+ trying to find klipspringers; again we ran miles pursuing the gigantic
+ eland. I in turn got my first rhinoceros, with no more danger than had
+ attended the killing of B.'s. On this occasion, however, I had my first
+ experience of the lightning skill of the first-class gunbearer. Having
+ fired both barrels, and staggered the beast, I threw open the breech and
+ withdrew the empty cartridges, intending, of course, as my next move to
+ fish two more out of my belt. The empty shells were hardly away from the
+ chambers, however, when a long brown arm shot over my right shoulder and
+ popped two fresh cartridges in the breech. So astonished was I at this
+ unexpected apparition, that for a second or so I actually forgot to close
+ the gun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII. ON THE MARCH
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After leaving the First Game Camp, we travelled many hours and miles over
+ rolling hills piling ever higher and higher until they broke through a
+ pass to illimitable plains. These plains were mantled with the dense
+ scrub, looking from a distance and from above like the nap of soft green
+ velvet. Here and there this scrub broke in round or oval patches of grass
+ plain. Great mountain ranges peered over the edge of a horizon. Lesser
+ mountain peaks of fantastic shapes-sheer Yosemite cliffs, single buttes,
+ castles-had ventured singly from behind that same horizon barricade. The
+ course of a river was marked by a meandering line of green jungle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It took us two days to get to that river. Our intermediate camp was
+ halfway down the pass. We ousted a hundred indignant straw-coloured
+ monkeys and twice as many baboons from the tiny flat above the water hole.
+ They bobbed away cursing over their shoulders at us. Next day we debouched
+ on the plains. They were rolling, densely grown, covered with volcanic
+ stones, swarming with game of various sorts. The men marched well. They
+ were happy, for they had had a week of meat; and each carried a light
+ lunch of sun-dried biltong or jerky. Some mistaken individuals had
+ attempted to bring along some &ldquo;fresh&rdquo; meat. We found it advisable to pass
+ to windward of these; but they themselves did not seem to mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It became very hot; for we were now descending to the lower elevations.
+ The marching through long grass and over volcanic stones was not easy.
+ Shortly we came out on stumbly hills, mostly rock, very dry, grown with
+ cactus and discouraged desiccated thorn scrub. Here the sun reflected
+ powerfully and the bearers began to flag.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then suddenly, without warning, we pitched over a little rise to the
+ river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No more marvellous contrast could have been devised. From the blasted
+ barren scrub country we plunged into the lush jungle. It was not a very
+ wide jungle, but it was sufficient. The trees were large and variegated,
+ reaching to a high and spacious upper story above the ground tangle. From
+ the massive limbs hung vines, festooned and looped like great serpents.
+ Through this upper corridor flitted birds of bright hue or striking
+ variegation. We did not know many of them by name, nor did we desire to;
+ but were content with the impression of vivid flashing movement and
+ colour. Various monkeys swung, leaped and galloped slowly away before our
+ advance; pausing to look back at us curiously, the ruffs of fur standing
+ out all around their little black faces. The lower half of the forest
+ jungle, however, had no spaciousness at all, but a certain breathless
+ intimacy. Great leaved plants as tall as little trees, and trees as small
+ as big plants, bound together by vines, made up the &ldquo;deep impenetrable
+ jungle&rdquo; of our childhood imagining. Here were rustlings, sudden
+ scurryings, half-caught glimpses, once or twice a crash as some greater
+ animal made off. Here and there through the thicket wandered well beaten
+ trails, wide, but low, so that to follow them one would have to bend
+ double. These were the paths of rhinoceroses. The air smelt warm and moist
+ and earthy, like the odour of a greenhouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We skirted this jungle until it gave way to let the plain down to the
+ river. Then, in an open grove of acacias, and fairly on the river's bank,
+ we pitched our tents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These acacia trees were very noble big chaps, with many branches and a
+ thick shade. In their season they are wonderfully blossomed with white,
+ with yellow, sometimes even with vivid red flowers. Beneath them was only
+ a small matter of ferns to clear away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before us the sodded bank rounded off ten feet the river itself. At this
+ point far up in its youth it was a friendly river. Its noble width ran
+ over shallows of yellow sand or of small pebbles. Save for unexpected deep
+ holes one could wade across it anywhere. Yet it was very wide, with still
+ reaches of water, with islands of gigantic papyrus, with sand bars
+ dividing the current, and with always the vista for a greater or lesser
+ distance down through the jungle along its banks. From our canvas chairs
+ we could look through on one side to the arid country, and on the other to
+ this tropical wonderland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, at this point in its youth it was indeed a friendly river in every
+ sense of the word. There are three reasons, ordinarily, why one cannot
+ bathe in the African rivers. In the first place, they are nearly all
+ disagreeably muddy; in the second place, cold water in a tropical climate
+ causes horrible congestions; in the third place they swarm with crocodiles
+ and hippos. But this river was as yet unpolluted by the alluvial soil of
+ the lower countries; the sun on its shallows had warmed its waters almost
+ to blood heat; and the beasts found no congenial haunts in these clear
+ shoals. Almost before our tents were up the men were splashing. And always
+ my mental image of that river's beautiful expanse must include round black
+ heads floating like gourds where the water ran smoothest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our tents stood all in a row facing the stream, the great trees at their
+ backs. Down in the grove the men had pitched their little white shelters.
+ Happily they settled down to ease. Settling down to ease, in the case of
+ the African porter, consists in discarding as many clothes as possible.
+ While on the march he wears everything he owns; whether from pride or a
+ desire to simplify transportation I am unable to say. He is supplied by
+ his employer with a blanket and jersey. As supplementals he can generally
+ produce a half dozen white man's ill-assorted garments: an old shooting
+ coat, a ragged pair of khaki breeches, a kitchen tablecloth for a skirt,
+ or something of the sort. If he can raise an overcoat he is happy,
+ especially if it happen to be a long, thick WINTER overcoat. The possessor
+ of such a garment will wear it conscientiously throughout the longest
+ journey and during the hottest noons. But when he relaxes in camp, he puts
+ away all these prideful possessions and turns out in the savage simplicity
+ of his red blanket. Draped negligently, sometimes very negligently, in
+ what may be termed semi-toga fashion, he stalks about or squats before his
+ little fire in all the glory of a regained savagery. The contrast of the
+ red with his red bronze or black skin, the freedom and grace of his
+ movements, the upright carriage of his fine figure, and the flickering
+ savagery playing in his eyes are very effective.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our men occupied their leisure variously and happily. A great deal of time
+ they spent before their tiny fires roasting meat and talking. This talk
+ was almost invariably of specific personal experiences. They bathed
+ frequently and with pleasure. They slept. Between times they fashioned
+ ingenious affairs of ornament or use: bows and arrows, throwing clubs,
+ snuff-boxes of the tips of antelope horns, bound prettily with bright
+ wire, wooden swords beautifully carved in exact imitation of the white
+ man's service weapon, and a hundred other such affairs. At this particular
+ time also they were much occupied in making sandals against the thorns.
+ These were flat soles of rawhide, the edges pounded to make them curl up a
+ trifle over the foot, fastened by thongs; very ingenious, and very useful.
+ To their task they brought song. The labour of Africa is done to song;
+ weird minor chanting starting high in the falsetto to trickle unevenly
+ down to the lower registers, or where the matter is one of serious effort,
+ an antiphony of solo and chorus. From all parts of the camp come these
+ softly modulated chantings, low and sweet, occasionally breaking into full
+ voice as the inner occasion swells, then almost immediately falling again
+ to the murmuring undertone of more concentrated attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The red blanket was generally worn knotted from one shoulder or bound
+ around the waist Malay fashion. When it turned into a cowl, with a
+ miserable and humpbacked expression, it became the Official Badge of
+ Illness. No matter what was the matter that was the proper thing to do-to
+ throw the blanket over the head and to assume as miserable a demeanour as
+ possible. A sore toe demanded just as much concentrated woe as a case of
+ pneumonia. Sick call was cried after the day's work was finished. Then
+ M'ganga or one of the askaris lifted up his voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;N'gonjwa! n'gonjwa!&rdquo; he shouted; and at the shout the red cowls gathered
+ in front of the tent. Three things were likely to be the matter: too much
+ meat, fever, or pus infection from slight wounds. To these in the rainy
+ season would be added the various sorts of colds. That meant either Epsom
+ salts, quinine, or a little excursion with the lancet and permanganate.
+ The African traveller gets to be heap big medicine man within these narrow
+ limits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the red cowls squatted miserably, oh, very miserably, in a row. The
+ headman stood over them rather fiercely. We surveyed the lot
+ contemplatively, hoping to heaven that nothing complicated was going to
+ turn up. One of the tent boys hovered in the background as dispensing
+ chemist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said F. at last, &ldquo;what's the matter with you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man indicated pointed to his head and the back of his neck and
+ groaned. If he had a slight headache he groaned just as much as though his
+ head were splitting. F. asked a few questions, and took his temperature.
+ The clinical thermometer is in itself considered big medicine, and often
+ does much good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Too much meat, my friend,&rdquo; remarked F. in English, and to his boy in
+ Swahili, &ldquo;bring the cup.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He put in this cup a triple dose of Epsom salts. The African requires
+ three times a white man's dose. This, pathologically, was all that was
+ required: but psychologically the job was just begun. Your African can do
+ wonderful things with his imagination. If he thinks he is going to die,
+ die he will, and very promptly, even though he is ailing of the most
+ trivial complaint. If he thinks he is going to get well, he is very apt to
+ do so in face of extraordinary odds. Therefore the white man desires not
+ only to start his patient's internal economy with Epsom salts, but also to
+ stir his faith. To this end F. added to that triple dose of medicine a
+ spoonful of Chutney, one of Worcestershire sauce, a few grains of quinine,
+ Sparklets water and a crystal or so of permanganate to turn the mixture a
+ beautiful pink. This assortment the patient drank with gratitude-and the
+ tears running down his cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He will carry a load to-morrow,&rdquo; F. told the attentive M'ganga.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next patient had fever. This one got twenty grains of quinine in
+ water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This man carries no load to-morrow,&rdquo; was the direction, &ldquo;but he must not
+ drop behind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two or three surgical cases followed. Then a big Kavirondo rose to his
+ feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nini?&rdquo; demanded F.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Homa-fever,&rdquo; whined the man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ F. clapped his hand on the back of the other's neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think,&rdquo; he remarked contemplatively in English, &ldquo;that you're a liar,
+ and want to get out of carrying your load.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clinical thermometer showed no evidence of temperature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm pretty near sure you're a liar,&rdquo; observed F. in the pleasantest
+ conversational tone and still in English, &ldquo;but you may be merely a poor
+ diagnostician. Perhaps your poor insides couldn't get away with that
+ rotten meat I saw you lugging around. We'll see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he mixed a pint of medicine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's Epsom salts for the real part of trouble,&rdquo; observed F., still
+ talking to himself, &ldquo;and here's a few things for the fake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then proceeded to concoct a mixture whose recoil was the exact measure
+ of his imagination. The imagination was only limited by the necessity of
+ keeping the mixture harmless. Every hot, biting, nauseous horror in camp
+ went into that pint measure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There,&rdquo; concluded F., &ldquo;if you drink that and come back again to-morrow
+ for treatment, I'll believe you ARE sick.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without undue pride I would like to record that I was the first to think
+ of putting in a peculiarly nauseous gun oil, and thereby acquired a
+ reputation of making tremendous medicine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So implicit is this faith in white man's medicine that at one of the
+ Government posts we were approached by one of the secondary chiefs of the
+ district. He was a very nifty savage, dressed for calling, with his hair
+ done in ropes like a French poodle's, his skin carefully oiled and
+ reddened, his armlets and necklets polished, and with the ceremonial ball
+ of black feathers on the end of his long spear. His gait was the peculiar
+ mincing teeter of savage conventional society. According to custom, he
+ approached unsmiling, spat carefully in his palm, and shook hands. Then he
+ squatted and waited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; we asked after it became evident he really wanted something
+ besides the pleasure of our company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;N'dowa-medicine,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why do you not go the Government dispensary?&rdquo; we demanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The doctor there is an Indian; I want REAL medicine, white man's
+ medicine,&rdquo; he explained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immensely flattered, of course, we wanted further to know what ailed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; said he blandly, &ldquo;nothing at all; but it seemed an excellent
+ chance to get good medicine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the clinic was all attended to, we retired to our tents and the
+ screeching-hot bath so grateful in the tropics. When we emerged, in our
+ mosquito boots and pajamas, the daylight was gone. Scores of little blazes
+ licked and leaped in the velvet blackness round about, casting the
+ undergrowth and the lower branches of the trees into flat planes like the
+ cardboard of a stage setting. Cheerful, squatted figures sat in silhouette
+ or in the relief of chance high light. Long switches of meat roasted
+ before the fires. A hum of talk, bursts of laughter, the crooning of minor
+ chants mingled with the crackling of thorns. Before our tents stood the
+ table set for supper. Beyond it lay the pile of firewood, later to be
+ burned on the altar of our safety against beasts. The moonlight was
+ casting milky shadows over the river and under the trees opposite. In
+ those shadows gleamed many fireflies. Overhead were millions of stars, and
+ a little breeze that wandered through upper branches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in Equatorial Africa the simple bands of velvet black, against the
+ spangled brightnesses that make up the visual night world, must give way
+ in interest to the other world of sound. The air hums with an undertone of
+ insects; the plain and hill and jungle are populous with voices furtive or
+ bold. In daytime one sees animals enough, in all conscience, but only at
+ night does he sense the almost oppressive feeling of the teeming life
+ about him. The darkness is peopled. Zebra bark, bucks blow or snort or
+ make the weird noises of their respective species; hyenas howl; out of an
+ immense simian silence a group of monkeys suddenly break into chatterings;
+ ostriches utter their deep hollow boom; small things scurry and squeak; a
+ certain weird bird of the curlew or plover sort wails like a lonesome
+ soul. Especially by the river, as here, are the boomings of the weirdest
+ of weird bullfrogs, and the splashings and swishings of crocodile and
+ hippopotamus. One is impressed with the busyness of the world surrounding
+ him; every bird or beast, the hunter and the hunted, is the centre of many
+ important affairs. The world swarms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then, some miles away a lion roars, the earth and air vibrating to the
+ sheer power of the sound. The world falls to a blank dead silence. For a
+ full minute every living creature of the jungle or of the veldt holds its
+ breath. Their lord has spoken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After dinner we sat in our canvas chairs, smoking. The guard fire in front
+ of our tent had been lit. On the other side of it stood one of our askaris
+ leaning on his musket. He and his three companions, turn about, keep the
+ flames bright against the fiercer creatures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a time we grew sleepy. I called Saa-sita and entrusted to him my
+ watch. On the crystal of this I had pasted a small piece of surgeon's
+ plaster. When the hour hand reached the surgeon's plaster, he must wake us
+ up. Saa-sita was a very conscientious and careful man. One day I took some
+ time hitching my pedometer properly to his belt: I could not wear it
+ effectively myself because I was on horseback. At the end of the ten-hour
+ march it registered a mile and a fraction. Saa-sita explained that he
+ wished to take especial care of it, so he had wrapped it in a cloth and
+ carried it all day in his hand!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We turned in. As I reached over to extinguish the lantern I issued my last
+ command for the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Watcha kalele, Saa-sita,&rdquo; I told the askari; at once he lifted up his
+ voice to repeat my words. &ldquo;Watcha kalele!&rdquo; Immediately from the
+ Responsible all over camp the word came back-from gunbearers, from
+ M'ganga, from tent boys-&ldquo;kalele! kalele! kalele!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus commanded, the boisterous fun, the croon of intimate talk, the gently
+ rising and falling tide of melody fell to complete silence. Only remained
+ the crackling of the fire and the innumerable voices of the tropical
+ night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII. THE RIVER JUNGLE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We camped along this river for several weeks, poking indefinitely and
+ happily around the country in all directions to see what we could see.
+ Generally we went together, for neither B. nor myself had been tried out
+ as yet on dangerous game-those easy rhinos hardly counted-and I think we
+ both preferred to feel that we had backing until we knew what our nerves
+ were going to do with us. Nevertheless, occasionally, I would take Memba
+ Sasa and go out for a little purposeless stroll a few miles up or down
+ river. Sometimes we skirted the jungle, sometimes we held as near as
+ possible to the river's bank, sometimes we cut loose and rambled through
+ the dry, crackling scrub over the low volcanic hills of the arid country
+ outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing can equal the intense interest of the most ordinary walk in
+ Africa. It is the only country I know of where a man is thoroughly and
+ continuously alive. Often when riding horseback with the dogs in my
+ California home I have watched them in envy of the keen, alert interest
+ they took in every stone, stick, and bush, in every sight, sound, and
+ smell. With equal frequency I have expressed that envy, but as something
+ unattainable to a human being's more phlegmatic make-up. In Africa one
+ actually rises to continuous alertness. There are dozy moments-except you
+ curl up in a safe place for the PURPOSE of dozing; again just like the
+ dog! Every bush, every hollow, every high tuft of grass, every deep shadow
+ must be scrutinized for danger. It will not do to pass carelessly any
+ possible lurking place. At the same time the sense of hearing must be on
+ guard; so that no break of twig or crash of bough can go unremarked.
+ Rhinoceroses conceal themselves most cannily, and have a deceitful habit
+ of leaping from a nap into their swiftest stride. Cobras and puff adders
+ are scarce, to be sure, but very deadly. Lions will generally give way, if
+ not shot at or too closely pressed; nevertheless there is always the
+ chance of cubs or too close a surprise. Buffalo lurk daytimes in the deep
+ thickets, but occasionally a rogue bull lives where your trail will lead.
+ These things do not happen often, but in the long run they surely do
+ happen, and once is quite enough provided the beast gets in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first this continual alertness and tension is rather exhausting; but
+ after a very short time it becomes second nature. A sudden rustle the
+ other side a bush no longer brings you up all standing with your heart in
+ your throat; but you are aware of it, and you are facing the possible
+ danger almost before your slower brain has issued any orders to that
+ effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In rereading the above, I am afraid that I am conveying the idea that one
+ here walks under the shadow of continual uneasiness. This is not in the
+ least so. One enjoys the sun, and the birds and the little things. He
+ cultivates the great leisure of mind that shall fill the breadth of his
+ outlook abroad over a newly wonderful world. But underneath it all is the
+ alertness, the responsiveness to quick reflexes of judgment and action,
+ the intimate correlations to immediate environment which must characterize
+ the instincts of the higher animals. And it is good to live these things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Along the edge of that river jungle were many strange and beautiful
+ affairs. I could slip along among the high clumps of the thicker bushes in
+ such a manner as to be continually coming around unexpected bends. Of such
+ maneouvres are surprises made. The graceful red impalla were here very
+ abundant. I would come on them, their heads up, their great ears flung
+ forward, their noses twitching in inquiry of something they suspected but
+ could not fully sense. When slightly alarmed or suspicious the does always
+ stood compactly in a herd, while the bucks remained discreetly in the
+ background, their beautiful, branching, widespread horns showing over the
+ backs of their harems. The impalla is, in my opinion, one of the most
+ beautiful and graceful of the African bucks, a perpetual delight to watch
+ either standing or running. These beasts are extraordinarily agile, and
+ have a habit of breaking their ordinary fast run by unexpectedly leaping
+ high in the air. At a distance they give somewhat the effect of dolphins
+ at sea, only their leaps are higher and more nearly perpendicular. Once or
+ twice I have even seen one jump over the back of another. On another
+ occasion we saw a herd of twenty-five or thirty cross a road of which,
+ evidently, they were a little suspicious. We could not find a single hoof
+ mark in the dust! Generally these beasts frequent thin brush country; but
+ I have three or four times seen them quite out in the open flat plains,
+ feeding with the hartebeeste and zebra. They are about the size of our
+ ordinary deer, are delicately fashioned, and can utter the most
+ incongruously grotesque of noises by way of calls or ordinary
+ conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lack of curiosity, or the lack of gallantry, of the impalla bucks was,
+ in my experience, quite characteristic. They were almost always the
+ farthest in the background and the first away when danger threatened. The
+ ladies could look out for themselves. They had no horns to save; and what
+ do the fool women mean by showing so little sense, anyway! They deserve
+ what they get! It used to amuse me a lot to observe the utter abandonment
+ of all responsibility by these handsome gentlemen. When it came time to
+ depart, they departed. Hang the girls! They trailed along after as fast as
+ they could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The waterbuck-a fine large beast about the size of our caribou, a
+ well-conditioned buck resembling in form and attitude the finest of
+ Landseer's stags-on the other hand, had a little more sense of
+ responsibility, when he had anything to do with the sex at all. He was
+ hardly what you might call a strictly domestic character. I have hunted
+ through a country for several days at a time without seeing a single
+ mature buck of this species, although there were plenty of does, in herds
+ of ten to fifty, with a few infants among them just sprouting horns. Then
+ finally, in some small grassy valley, I would come on the Men's Club.
+ There they were, ten, twenty, three dozen of them, having the finest kind
+ of an untramelled masculine time all by themselves. Generally, however, I
+ will say for them, they took care of their own peoples. There would quite
+ likely be one big old fellow, his harem of varying numbers, and the
+ younger subordinate bucks all together in a happy family. When some one of
+ the lot announced that something was about, and they had all lined up to
+ stare in the suspected direction, the big buck was there in the foreground
+ of inquiry. When finally they made me out, it was generally the big buck
+ who gave the signal. He went first, to be sure, but his going first was
+ evidently an act of leadership, and not merely a disgraceful desire to get
+ away before the rest did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the waterbuck had to yield in turn to the plains gazelles; especially
+ to the Thompson's gazelle, familiarly-and affectionately-known as the
+ &ldquo;Tommy.&rdquo; He is a quaint little chap, standing only a foot and a half tall
+ at the shoulder, fawn colour on top, white beneath, with a black,
+ horizontal stripe on his side, like a chipmunk, most lightly and
+ gracefully built. When he was first made, somebody told him that unless he
+ did something characteristic, like waggling his little tail, he was likely
+ to be mistaken by the undiscriminating for his bigger cousin, the Grant's
+ gazelle. He has waggled his tail ever since, and so is almost never
+ mistaken for a Grant's gazelle, even by the undiscriminating. Evidently
+ his religion is Mohammedan, for he always has a great many wives. He takes
+ good care of them, however. When danger appears, even when danger
+ threatens, he is the last to leave the field. Here and there he dashes
+ frantically, seeing that the women and children get off. And when the herd
+ tops the hill, Tommy's little horns bring up the rear of the procession. I
+ like Tommy. He is a cheerful, gallant, quaint little person, with the air
+ of being quite satisfied with his own solution of this complicated world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the low brush at the edge of the river jungle dwelt also the
+ dik-dik, the tiniest miniature of a deer you could possibly imagine. His
+ legs are lead pencil size, he stands only about nine inches tall, he
+ weighs from five to ten pounds; and yet he is a perfect little antelope,
+ horns and all. I used to see him singly or in pairs standing quite
+ motionless and all but invisible in the shade of bushes; or leaping
+ suddenly to his feet and scurrying away like mad through the dry grass.
+ His personal opinion of me was generally expressed in a loud clear
+ whistle. But then nobody in this strange country talks the language you
+ would naturally expect him to talk! Zebra bark, hyenas laugh, impallas
+ grunt, ostriches boom like drums, leopards utter a plaintive sigh,
+ hornbills cry like a stage child, bushbucks sound like a cross between a
+ dog and a squawky toy-and so on. There is only one safe rule of the novice
+ in Africa: NEVER BELIEVE A WORD THE JUNGLE AND VELDT PEOPLE TELL YOU.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two-the impalla and the waterbuck-were the principal buck we would
+ see close to the river. Occasionally, however, we came on a few oryx, down
+ for a drink, beautiful big antelope, with white and black faces, roached
+ manes, and straight, nearly parallel, rapier horns upward of three feet
+ long. A herd of these creatures, the light gleaming on their weapons, held
+ all at the same slant, was like a regiment of bayonets in the sun. And
+ there were also the rhinoceroses to be carefully espied and avoided. They
+ lay obliterated beneath the shade of bushes, and arose with a mighty
+ blow-off of steam. Whereupon we withdrew silently, for we wanted to shoot
+ no more rhinos, unless we had to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beneath all these obvious and startling things, a thousand other
+ interesting matters were afoot. In the mass and texture of the jungle grew
+ many strange trees and shrubs. One most scrubby, fat and leafless tree,
+ looking as though it were just about to give up a discouraged existence,
+ surprised us by putting forth, apparently directly from its bloated wood,
+ the most wonderful red blossoms. Another otherwise self-respecting tree
+ hung itself all over with plump bologna sausages about two feet long and
+ five inches thick. A curious vine hung like a rope, with Turk's-head knots
+ about a foot apart on its whole length, like the hand-over-hand ropes of
+ gymnasiums. Other ropes were studded all over with thick blunt bosses,
+ resembling much the outbreak on one sort of Arts-and-Crafts door: the sort
+ intended to repel Mail-clad Hosts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monkeys undoubtedly used such obvious highways through the trees.
+ These little people were very common. As we walked along, they withdrew
+ before us. We could make out their figures galloping hastily across the
+ open places, mounting bushes and stubs to take a satisfying backward look,
+ clambering to treetops, and launching themselves across the abysses
+ between limbs. If we went slowly, they retired in silence. If we hurried
+ at all, they protested in direct ratio to the speed of our advance. And
+ when later the whole safari, loads on heads, marched inconsiderately
+ through their jungle! We happened to be hunting on a parallel course a
+ half mile away, and we could trace accurately the progress of our men by
+ the outraged shrieks, chatterings, appeals to high heaven for at least
+ elemental justice to the monkey people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often, too, we would come on concourses of the big baboons. They certainly
+ carried on weighty affairs of their own according to a fixed polity. I
+ never got well enough acquainted with them to master the details of their
+ government, but it was indubitably built on patriarchal lines. When we
+ succeeded in approaching without being discovered, we would frequently
+ find the old men baboons squatting on their heels in a perfect circle,
+ evidently discussing matters of weight and portent. Seen from a distance,
+ their group so much resembled the council circles of native warriors that
+ sometimes, in a native country, we made that mistake. Outside this solemn
+ council, the women, young men and children went about their daily
+ business, whatever that was. Up convenient low trees or bushes roosted
+ sentinels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We never remained long undiscovered. One of the sentinels barked sharply.
+ At once the whole lot loped away, speedily but with a curious effect of
+ deliberation. The men folks held their tails in a proud high sideways
+ arch; the curious youngsters clambered up bushes to take a hasty look; the
+ babies clung desperately with all four feet to the thick fur on their
+ mothers' backs; the mothers galloped along imperturbably unheeding of
+ infantile troubles aloft. The side hill was bewildering with the big
+ bobbing black forms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this lower country the weather was hot, and the sun very strong. The
+ heated air was full of the sounds of insects; some of them comfortable,
+ like the buzzing of bees, some of them strange and unusual to us. One
+ cicada had a sustained note, in quality about like that of our own
+ August-day's friend, but in quantity and duration as the roar of a train
+ to the gentle hum of a good motor car. Like all cicada noises it did not
+ usurp the sound world, but constituted itself an underlying basis, so to
+ speak. And when it stopped the silence seemed to rush in as into a vacuum!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had likewise the aeroplane beetle. He was so big that he would have
+ made good wing-shooting. His manner of flight was the straight-ahead,
+ heap-of-buzz, plenty-busy, don't-stop-a-minute-or-you'll-come-down method
+ of the aeroplane; and he made the same sort of a hum. His first-cousin,
+ mechanically, was what we called the wind-up-the-watch insect. This
+ specimen possessed a watch-an old-fashioned Waterbury, evidently-that he
+ was continually winding. It must have been hard work for the poor chap,
+ for it sounded like a very big watch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these things were amusing. So were the birds. The African bird is
+ quite inclined to be didactic. He believes you need advice, and he means
+ to give it. To this end he repeats the same thing over and over until he
+ thinks you surely cannot misunderstand. One chap especially whom we called
+ the lawyer bird, and who lived in the treetops, had four phrases to
+ impart. He said them very deliberately, with due pause between each; then
+ he repeated them rapidly; finally he said them all over again with an
+ exasperated bearing-down emphasis. The joke of it is I cannot now remember
+ just how they went! Another feathered pedagogue was continually warning us
+ to go slow; very good advice near an African jungle. &ldquo;Poley-poley!
+ Poley-poley!&rdquo; he warned again and again; which is good Swahili for
+ &ldquo;slowly! slowly!&rdquo; We always minded him. There were many others, equally
+ impressed with their own wisdom, but the one I remember with most
+ amusement was a dilatory person who apparently never got around to his job
+ until near sunset. Evidently he had contracted to deliver just so many
+ warnings per diem; and invariably he got so busy chasing insects, enjoying
+ the sun, gossiping with a friend and generally footling about that the
+ late afternoon caught him unawares with never a chirp accomplished. So he
+ sat in a bush and said his say over and over just as fast as he could
+ without pause for breath or recreation. It was really quite a feat. Just
+ at dusk, after two hours of gabbling, he would reach the end of his
+ contracted number. With final relieved chirp he ended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been said that African birds are &ldquo;songless.&rdquo; This is a careless
+ statement that can easily be read to mean that African birds are silent.
+ The writer evidently must have had in mind as a criterion some of our own
+ or the English great feathered soloists. Certainly the African jungle
+ seems to produce no individual performers as sustained as our own
+ bob-o-link, our hermit thrush, or even our common robin. But the African
+ birds are vocal enough, for all that. Some of them have a richness and
+ depth of timbre perhaps unequalled elsewhere. Of such is the chime-bird
+ with his deep double note; or the bell-bird tolling like a cathedral in
+ the blackness of the forest; or the bottle bird that apparently pours
+ gurgling liquid gold from a silver jug. As the jungle is exceedingly
+ populous of these feathered specialists, it follows that the early morning
+ chorus is wonderful. Africa may not possess the soloists, but its full
+ orchestrial effects are superb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Naturally under the equator one expects and demands the &ldquo;gorgeous tropical
+ plumage&rdquo; of the books. He is not disappointed. The sun-birds of fifty odd
+ species, the brilliant blue starlings, the various parrots, the variegated
+ hornbills, the widower-birds, and dozens of others whose names would mean
+ nothing flash here and there in the shadow and in the open. With them are
+ hundreds of quiet little bodies just as interesting to one who likes
+ birds. From the trees and bushes hang pear-shaped nests plaited
+ beautifully of long grasses, hard and smooth as hand-made baskets, the
+ work of the various sorts of weaver-birds. In the tops of the trees
+ roosted tall marabout storks like dissipated, hairless old club-men in
+ well-groomed, correct evening dress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And around camp gathered the swift brown kites. They were robbers and
+ villains, but we could not hate them. All day long they sailed back and
+ forth spying sharply. When they thought they saw their chance, they
+ stooped with incredible swiftness to seize a piece of meat. Sometimes they
+ would snatch their prize almost from the hands of its rightful owner, and
+ would swoop triumphantly upward again pursued by polyglot maledictions and
+ a throwing stick. They were very skilful on their wings. I have many times
+ seen them, while flying, tear up and devour large chunks of meat. It seems
+ to my inexperience as an aviator rather a nice feat to keep your balance
+ while tearing with your beak at meat held in your talons. Regardless of
+ other landmarks, we always knew when we were nearing camp, after one of
+ our strolls, by the gracefully wheeling figures of our kites.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IX. THE FIRST LION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One day we all set out to make our discoveries: F., B., and I with our
+ gunbearers, Memba Sasa, Mavrouki, and Simba, and ten porters to bring in
+ the trophies, which we wanted very much, and the meat, which the men
+ wanted still more. We rode our horses, and the syces followed. This made
+ quite a field force-nineteen men all told. Nineteen white men would be
+ exceedingly unlikely to get within a liberal half mile of anything; but
+ the native has sneaky ways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first we followed between the river and the low hills, but when the
+ latter drew back to leave open a broad flat, we followed their line. At
+ this point they rose to a clifflike headland a hundred and fifty feet
+ high, flat on top. We decided to investigate that mesa, both for the
+ possibilities of game, and for the chance of a view abroad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The footing was exceedingly noisy and treacherous, for it was composed of
+ flat, tinkling little stones. Dried-up, skimpy bushes just higher than our
+ heads made a thin but regular cover. There seemed not to be a spear of
+ anything edible, yet we caught the flash of red as a herd of impalla
+ melted away at our rather noisy approach. Near the foot of the hill we
+ dismounted, with orders to all the men but the gunbearers to sit down and
+ make themselves comfortable. Should we need them we could easily either
+ signal or send word. Then we set ourselves toilsomely to clamber up that
+ volcanic hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not particularly easy going, especially as we were trying to walk
+ quietly. You see, we were about to surmount a skyline. Surmounting a
+ skyline is always most exciting anywhere, for what lies beyond is at once
+ revealed as a whole and contains the very essence of the unknown; but most
+ decidedly is this true in Africa. That mesa looked flat, and almost
+ anything might be grazing or browsing there. So we proceeded gingerly,
+ with due regard to the rolling of the loose rocks or the tinkling of the
+ little pebbles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But long before we had reached that alluring skyline we were halted by the
+ gentle snapping of Mavrouki's fingers. That, strangely enough, is a sound
+ to which wild animals seem to pay no attention, and is therefore most
+ useful as a signal. We looked back. The three gunbearers were staring to
+ the right of our course. About a hundred yards away, on the steep side
+ hill, and partly concealed by the brush, stood two rhinoceroses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were side by side, apparently dozing. We squatted on our heels for a
+ consultation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The obvious thing, as the wind was from them, was to sneak quietly by,
+ saying nuffin' to nobody. But although we wanted no more rhino, we very
+ much wanted rhino pictures. A discussion developed no really good reason
+ why we should not kodak these especial rhinos-except that there were two
+ of them. So we began to worm our way quietly through the bushes in their
+ direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ F. and B. deployed on the flanks, their double-barrelled rifles ready for
+ instant action. I occupied the middle with that dangerous weapon the 3A
+ kodak. Memba Sasa followed at my elbow, holding my big gun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the trouble with modern photography is that it is altogether too
+ lavish in its depiction of distances. If you do not believe it, take a
+ picture of a horse at as short a range as twenty-five yards. That equine
+ will, in the development, have receded to a respectable middle distance.
+ Therefore it had been agreed that the advance of the battle line was to
+ cease only when those rhinoceroses loomed up reasonably large in the
+ finder. I kept looking into the finder, you may be sure. Nearer and nearer
+ we crept. The great beasts were evidently basking in the sun. Their little
+ pig eyes alone gave any sign of life. Otherwise they exhibited the
+ complete immobility of something done in granite. Probably no other beast
+ impresses one with quite this quality. I suppose it is because even the
+ little motions peculiar to other animals are with the rhinoceros entirely
+ lacking. He is not in the least of a nervous disposition, so he does not
+ stamp his feet nor change his position. It is useless for him to wag his
+ tail; for, in the first place, the tail is absurdly inadequate; and, in
+ the second place, flies are not among his troubles. Flies wouldn't bother
+ you either, if you had a skin two inches thick. So there they stood, inert
+ and solid as two huge brown rocks, save for the deep, wicked twinkle of
+ their little eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, we were close enough to &ldquo;see the whites of their eyes,&rdquo; if they had
+ had any: and also to be within the range of their limited vision. Of
+ course we were now stalking, and taking advantage of all the cover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those rhinoceroses looked to me like two Dreadnaughts. The African
+ two-horned rhinoceros is a bigger animal anyway than our circus friend,
+ who generally comes from India. One of these brutes I measured went five
+ feet nine inches at the shoulder, and was thirteen feet six inches from
+ bow to stern. Compare these dimensions with your own height and with the
+ length of your motor car. It is one thing to take on such beasts in the
+ hurry of surprise, the excitement of a charge, or to stalk up to within a
+ respectable range of them with a gun at ready. But this deliberate
+ sneaking up with the hope of being able to sneak away again was a little
+ too slow and cold-blooded. It made me nervous. I liked it, but I knew at
+ the time I was going to like it a whole lot better when it was
+ triumphantly over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were now within twenty yards (they were standing starboard side on),
+ and I prepared to get my picture. To do so I would either have to step
+ quietly out into sight, trusting to the shadow and the slowness of my
+ movements to escape observation, or hold the camera above the bush,
+ directing it by guess work. It was a little difficult to decide. I knew
+ what I OUGHT to do&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without the slightest premonitory warning those two brutes snorted and
+ whirled in their tracks to stand facing in our direction. After the dead
+ stillness they made a tremendous row, what with the jerky suddenness of
+ their movements, their loud snorts, and the avalanche of echoing stones
+ and boulders they started down the hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the magnificent opportunity. At this point I should boldly have
+ stepped out from behind my bush, levelled my trusty 3A, and coolly snapped
+ the beasts, &ldquo;charging at fifteen yards.&rdquo; Then, if B.'s and F.'s shots went
+ absolutely true, or if the brutes didn't happen to smash the camera as
+ well as me, I, or my executors as the case might be, would have had a fine
+ picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I didn't. I dropped that expensive 3A Special on some hard rocks, and
+ grabbed my rifle from Memba Sasa. If you want really to know why, go
+ confront your motor car at fifteen or twenty paces, multiply him by two,
+ and endow him with an eagerly malicious disposition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They advanced several yards, halted, faced us for perhaps five or six
+ seconds, uttered snort, whirled with the agility of polo ponies, departed
+ at a swinging trot and with surprising agility along the steep side hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I recovered the camera, undamaged, and we continued our climb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The top of the mesa was disappointing as far as game was concerned. It was
+ covered all over with red stones, round, and as large as a man's head.
+ Thornbushes found some sort of sustenance in the interstices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we had gained to a magnificent view. Below us lay the narrow flat,
+ then the winding jungle of our river, then long rolling desert country,
+ gray with thorn scrub, sweeping upward to the base of castellated buttes
+ and one tremendous riven cliff mountain, dropping over the horizon to a
+ very distant blue range. Behind us eight or ten miles away was the low
+ ridge through which our journey had come. The mesa on which we stood broke
+ back at right angles to admit another stream flowing into our own. Beyond
+ this stream were rolling hills, and scrub country, the hint of blue peaks
+ and illimitable distances falling away to the unknown Tara Desert and the
+ sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There seemed to be nothing much to be gained here, so we made up our minds
+ to cut across the mesa, and from the other edge of it to overlook the
+ valley of the tributary river. This we would descend until we came to our
+ horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly we stumbled across a mile or so of those round and rolling
+ stones. Then we found ourselves overlooking a wide flat or pocket where
+ the stream valley widened. It extended even as far as the upward fling of
+ the barrier ranges. Thick scrub covered it, but erratically, so that here
+ and there were little openings or thin places. We sat down, manned our
+ trusty prism glasses, and gave ourselves to the pleasing occupation of
+ looking the country over inch by inch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is great fun. It is a game a good deal like puzzle pictures.
+ Re-examination generally develops new and unexpected beasts. We repeated
+ to each other aloud the results of our scrutiny, always without removing
+ the glasses from our eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oryx, one,&rdquo; said F.; &ldquo;oryx, two.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Giraffe,&rdquo; reported B., &ldquo;and a herd of impalla.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw another giraffe, and another oryx, then two rhinoceroses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three bearers squatted on their heels behind us, their fierce eyes
+ staring straight ahead, seeing with the naked eye what we were finding
+ with six-power glasses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We turned to descend the hill. In the very centre of the deep shade of a
+ clump of trees, I saw the gleam of a waterbuck's horns. While I was
+ telling of this, the beast stepped from his concealment, trotted a short
+ distance upstream and turned to climb a little ridge parallel to that by
+ which we were descending. About halfway up he stopped, staring in our
+ direction, his head erect, the slight ruff under his neck standing
+ forward. He was a good four hundred yards away. B., who wanted him,
+ decided the shot too chancy. He and F. slipped backward until they had
+ gained the cover of the little ridge, then hastened down the bed of the
+ ravine. Their purpose was to follow the course already taken by the
+ waterbuck until they should have sneaked within better range. In the
+ meantime I and the gunbearers sat down in full view of the buck. This was
+ to keep his attention distracted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We sat there a long time. The buck never moved but continued to stare at
+ what evidently puzzled him. Time passes very slowly in such circumstances,
+ and it seemed incredible that the beast should continue much longer to
+ hold his fixed attitude. Nevertheless B. and F. were working hard. We
+ caught glimpses of them occasionally slipping from bush to bush. Finally
+ B. knelt and levelled his rifle. At once I turned my glasses on the buck.
+ Before the sound of the rifle had reached me, I saw him start
+ convulsively, then make off at the tearing run that indicates a heart hit.
+ A moment later the crack of the rifle and the dull plunk of the hitting
+ bullet struck my ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We tracked him fifty yards to where he lay dead. He was a fine trophy, and
+ we at once set the boys to preparing it and taking the meat. In the
+ meantime we sauntered down to look at the stream. It was a small rapid
+ affair, but in heavy papyrus, with sparse trees, and occasional thickets,
+ and dry hard banks. The papyrus should make a good lurking place for
+ almost anything; but the few points of access to the water failed to show
+ many interesting tracks. Nevertheless we decided to explore a short
+ distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For an hour we walked among high thornbushes, over baking hot earth. We
+ saw two or three dik-dik and one of the giraffes. At that time it had
+ become very hot, and the sun was bearing down on us as with the weight of
+ a heavy hand. The air had the scorching, blasting quality of an opened
+ furnace door. Our mouths were getting dry and sticky in that peculiar
+ stage of thirst on which no luke-warm canteen water in necessarily limited
+ quantity has any effect. So we turned back, picked up the men with the
+ waterbuck, and plodded on down the little stream, or, rather, on the
+ red-hot dry valley bottom outside the stream's course, to where the syces
+ were waiting with our horses. We mounted with great thankfulness. It was
+ now eleven o'clock, and we considered our day as finished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The best way for a distance seemed to follow the course of the tributary
+ stream to its point of junction with our river. We rode along, rather
+ relaxed in the suffocating heat. F. was nearest the stream. At one point
+ it freed itself of trees and brush and ran clear, save for low papyrus,
+ ten feet down below a steep eroded bank. F. looked over and uttered a
+ startled exclamation. I spurred my horse forward to see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Below us, about fifteen yards away, was the carcass of a waterbuck half
+ hidden in the foot-high grass. A lion and two lionesses stood upon it,
+ staring up at us with great yellow eyes. That picture is a very vivid one
+ in my memory, for those were the first wild lions I had ever seen. My most
+ lively impression was of their unexpected size. They seemed to bulk fully
+ a third larger than my expectation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magnificent beasts stood only long enough to see clearly what had
+ disturbed them, then turned, and in two bounds had gained the shelter of
+ the thicket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the habit in Africa is to let your gunbearers carry all your guns. You
+ yourself stride along hand free. It is an English idea, and is pretty
+ generally adopted out there by every one, of whatever nationality. They
+ will explain it to you by saying that in such a climate a man should do
+ only necessary physical work, and that a good gunbearer will get a weapon
+ into your hand so quickly and in so convenient a position that you will
+ lose no time. I acknowledge the gunbearers are sometimes very skilful at
+ this, but I do deny that there is no loss of time. The instant of
+ distracted attention while receiving a weapon, the necessity of
+ recollecting the nervous correlations after the transfer, very often mark
+ just the difference between a sure instinctive snapshot and a lost
+ opportunity. It reasons that the man with the rifle in his hand reacts
+ instinctively, in one motion, to get his weapon into play. If the
+ gunbearer has the gun, HE must first react to pass it up, the master must
+ receive it properly, and THEN, and not until then, may go on from where
+ the other man began. As for physical labour in the tropics: if a grown man
+ cannot without discomfort or evil effects carry an eight-pound rifle, he
+ is too feeble to go out at all. In a long Western experience I have
+ learned never to be separated from my weapon; and I believe the
+ continuance of this habit in Africa saved me a good number of chances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At any rate, we all flung ourselves off our horses. I, having my rifle in
+ my hand, managed to throw a shot after the biggest lion as he vanished. It
+ was a snap at nothing, and missed. Then in an opening on the edge a
+ hundred yards away appeared one of the lionesses. She was trotting slowly,
+ and on her I had time to draw a hasty aim. At the shot she bounded high in
+ the air, fell, rolled over, and was up and into the thicket before I had
+ much more than time to pump up another shell from the magazine. Memba Sasa
+ in his eagerness got in the way-the first and last time he ever made a
+ mistake in the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time the others had got hold of their weapons. We fronted the
+ blank face of the thicket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wounded animal would stand a little waiting. We made a wide circle to
+ the other side of the stream. There we quickly picked up the trail of the
+ two uninjured beasts. They had headed directly over the hill, where we
+ speedily lost all trace of them on the flint-like surface of the ground.
+ We saw a big pack of baboons in the only likely direction for a lion to
+ go. Being thus thrown back on a choice of a hundred other unlikely
+ directions, we gave up that slim chance and returned to the thicket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This proved to be a very dense piece of cover. Above the height of the
+ waist the interlocking branches would absolutely prevent any progress, but
+ by stooping low we could see dimly among the simpler main stems to a
+ distance of perhaps fifteen or twenty feet. This combination at once
+ afforded the wounded lioness plenty of cover in which to hide, plenty of
+ room in which to charge home, and placed us under the disadvantage of a
+ crouched or crawling attitude with limited vision. We talked the matter
+ over very thoroughly. There was only one way to get that lioness out; and
+ that was to go after her. The job of going after her needed some planning.
+ The lion is cunning and exceeding fierce. A flank attack, once we were in
+ the thicket, was as much to be expected as a frontal charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We advanced to the thicket's edge with many precautions. To our relief we
+ found she had left us a definite trail. B. and I kneeling took up
+ positions on either side, our rifles ready. F. and Simba crawled by inches
+ eight or ten feet inside the thicket. Then, having executed this manoeuvre
+ safely, B. moved up to protect our rear while I, with Memba Sasa, slid
+ down to join F.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this point we moved forward alternately. I would crouch, all alert,
+ my rifle ready, while F. slipped by me and a few feet ahead. Then he get
+ organized for battle while I passed him. Memba Sasa and Simba, game as
+ badgers, their fine eyes gleaming with excitement, their faces shining,
+ crept along at the rear. B. knelt outside the thicket, straining his eyes
+ for the slightest movement either side of the line of our advance. Often
+ these wily animals will sneak back in a half circle to attack their
+ pursuers from behind. Two or three of the bolder porters crouched
+ alongside B., peering eagerly. The rest had quite properly retired to the
+ safe distance where the horses stood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We progressed very, very slowly. Every splash of light or mottled shadow,
+ every clump of bush stems, every fallen log had to be examined, and then
+ examined again. And how we did strain our eyes in a vain attempt to
+ penetrate the half lights, the duskinesses of the closed-in thicket not
+ over fifteen feet away! And then the movement forward of two feet would
+ bring into our field of vision an entirely new set of tiny vistas and
+ possible lurking places.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Speaking for myself, I was keyed up to a tremendous tension. I stared
+ until my eyes ached; every muscle and nerve was taut. Everything depended
+ on seeing the beast promptly, and firing quickly. With the manifest
+ advantage of being able to see us, she would spring to battle fully
+ prepared. A yellow flash and a quick shot seemed about to size up that
+ situation. Every few moments, I remember, I surreptitiously held out my
+ hand to see if the constantly growing excitement and the long-continued
+ strain had affected its steadiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The combination of heat and nervous strain was very exhausting. The sweat
+ poured from me; and as F. passed me I saw the great drops standing out on
+ his face. My tongue got dry, my breath came laboriously. Finally I began
+ to wonder whether physically I should be able to hold out. We had been
+ crawling, it seemed, for hours. I dared not look back, but we must have
+ come a good quarter mile. Finally F. stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm all in for water,&rdquo; he gasped in a whisper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somehow that confession made me feel a lot better. I had thought that I
+ was the only one. Cautiously we settled back on our heels. Memba Sasa and
+ Simba wiped the sweat from their faces. It seemed that they too had found
+ the work severe. That cheered me up still more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Simba grinned at us, and, worming his way backward with the sinuousity of
+ a snake, he disappeared in the direction from which we had come. F. cursed
+ after him in a whisper both for departing and for taking the risk. But in
+ a moment he had returned carrying two canteens of blessed water. We took a
+ drink most gratefully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I glanced at my watch. It was just under two hours since I had fired my
+ shot. I looked back. My supposed quarter mile had shrunk to not over fifty
+ feet!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After resting a few moments longer, we again took up our systematic
+ advance. We made perhaps another fifty feet. We were ascending a very
+ gentle slope. F. was for the moment ahead. Right before us the lion
+ growled; a deep rumbling like the end of a great thunder roll, fathoms and
+ fathoms deep, with the inner subterranean vibrations of a heavy train of
+ cars passing a man inside a sealed building. At the same moment over F.'s
+ shoulder I saw a huge yellow head rise up, the round eyes flashing anger,
+ the small black-tipped ears laid back, the great fangs snarling. The beast
+ was not over twelve feet distant. F. immediately fired. His shot, hitting
+ an intervening twig, went wild. With the utmost coolness he immediately
+ pulled the other trigger of his double barrel. The cartridge snapped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you will kindly stoop down-&rdquo; said I, in what I now remember to be
+ rather an exaggeratedly polite tone. As F.'s head disappeared, I placed
+ the little gold bead of my 405 Winchester where I thought it would do the
+ most good, and pulled trigger. She rolled over dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole affair had begun and finished with unbelievable swiftness. From
+ the growl to the fatal shot I don't suppose four seconds elapsed, for our
+ various actions had followed one another with the speed of the
+ instinctive. The lioness had growled at our approach, had raised her head
+ to charge, and had received her deathblow before she had released her
+ muscles in the spring. There had been no time to get frightened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We sat back for a second. A brown hand reached over my shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mizouri-mizouri sana!&rdquo; cried Memba Sasa joyously. I shook the hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good business!&rdquo; said F. &ldquo;Congratulate you on your first lion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We then remembered B., and shouted to him that all was over. He and the
+ other men wriggled in to where we were lying. He made this distance in
+ about fifteen seconds. It had taken us nearly an hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had the lioness dragged out into the open. She was not an especially
+ large beast, as compared to most of the others I killed later, but at that
+ time she looked to me about as big as they made them. As a matter of fact
+ she was quite big enough, for she stood three feet two inches at the
+ shoulder-measure that against the wall-and was seven feet and six inches
+ in length. My first bullet had hit her leg, and the last had reached her
+ heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every one shook me by the hand. The gunbearers squatted about the carcass,
+ skilfully removing the skin to an undertone of curious crooning that every
+ few moments broke out into one or two bars of a chant. As the body was
+ uncovered, the men crouched about to cut off little pieces of fat. These
+ they rubbed on their foreheads and over their chests, to make them brave,
+ they said, and cunning, like the lion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We remounted and took up our interrupted journey to camp. It was a little
+ after two, and the heat was at its worst. We rode rather sleepily, for the
+ reaction from the high tension of excitement had set in. Behind us marched
+ the three gunbearers, all abreast, very military and proud. Then came the
+ porters in single file, the one carrying the folded lion skin leading the
+ way; those bearing the waterbuck trophy and meat bringing up the rear.
+ They kept up an undertone of humming in a minor key; occasionally breaking
+ into a short musical phrase in full voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We rode an hour. The camp looked very cool and inviting under its wide
+ high trees, with the river slipping by around the islands of papyrus. A
+ number of black heads bobbed about in the shallows. The small fires sent
+ up little wisps of smoke. Around them our boys sprawled, playing simple
+ games, mending, talking, roasting meat. Their tiny white tents gleamed
+ pleasantly among the cool shadows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had thought of riding nonchalantly up to our own tents, of dismounting
+ with a careless word of greeting&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; I would say, &ldquo;we did have a good enough day. Pretty hot. Roy
+ got a fine waterbuck. Yes, I got a lion.&rdquo; (Tableau on part of Billy.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Memba Sasa used up all the nonchalance there was. As we entered camp
+ he remarked casually to the nearest man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bwana na piga simba-the master has killed a lion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man leaped to his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Simba! simba! simba!&rdquo; he yelled. &ldquo;Na piga simba!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every one in camp also leaped to his feet, taking up the cry. From the
+ water it was echoed as the bathers scrambled ashore. The camp broke into
+ pandemonium. We were surrounded by a dense struggling mass of men. They
+ reached up scores of black hands to grasp my own; they seized from me
+ everything portable and bore it in triumph before me-my water bottle, my
+ rifle, my camera, my whip, my field glasses, even my hat, everything that
+ was detachable. Those on the outside danced and lifted up their voices in
+ song, improvised for the most part, and in honor of the day's work. In a
+ vast swirling, laughing, shouting, triumphant mob we swept through the
+ camp to where Billy-by now not very much surprised-was waiting to get the
+ official news. By the measure of this extravagant joy could we gauge what
+ the killing of a lion means to these people who have always lived under
+ the dread of his rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ X. LIONS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A very large lion I killed stood three feet and nine inches at the
+ withers, and of course carried his head higher than that. The top of the
+ table at which I sit is only two feet three inches from the floor. Coming
+ through the door at my back that lion's head would stand over a foot
+ higher than halfway up. Look at your own writing desk; your own door.
+ Furthermore, he was nine feet and eleven inches in a straight line from
+ nose to end of tail, or over eleven feet along the contour of the back. If
+ he were to rise on his hind feet to strike a man down, he would stand
+ somewhere between seven and eight feet tall, depending on how nearly he
+ straightened up. He weighed just under six hundred pounds, or as much as
+ four well-grown specimens of our own &ldquo;mountain lion.&rdquo; I tell you this that
+ you may realize, as I did not, the size to which a wild lion grows. Either
+ menagerie specimens are stunted in growth, or their position and
+ surroundings tend to belittle them, for certainly until a man sees old Leo
+ in the wilderness he has not understood what a fine old chap he is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This tremendous weight is sheer strength. A lion's carcass when the skin
+ is removed is a really beautiful sight. The great muscles lie in ropes and
+ bands; the forearm thicker than a man's leg, the lithe barrel banded with
+ brawn; the flanks overlaid by the long thick muscles. And this power is
+ instinct with the nervous force of a highly organized being. The lion is
+ quick and intelligent and purposeful; so that he brings to his intenser
+ activities the concentration of vivid passion, whether of anger, of hunger
+ or of desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far the opinions of varied experience will jog along together. At this
+ point they diverge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as the lion is one of the most interesting and fascinating of beasts,
+ so concerning him one may hear the most diverse opinions. This man will
+ tell you that any lion is always dangerous. Another will hold the king of
+ beasts in the most utter contempt as a coward and a skulker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first place, generalization about any species of animal is an
+ exceedingly dangerous thing. I believe that, in the case of the higher
+ animals at least, the differences in individual temperament are quite
+ likely to be more numerous than the specific likenesses. Just as
+ individual men are bright or dull, nervous or phlegmatic, cowardly or
+ brave, so individual animals vary in like respect. Our own hunters will
+ recall from their personal experiences how the big bear may have sat down
+ and bawled harmlessly for mercy, while the little unconsidered fellow did
+ his best until finished off: how one buck dropped instantly to a wound
+ that another would carry five miles: how of two equally matched warriors
+ of the herd one will give way in the fight, while still uninjured, before
+ his perhaps badly wounded antagonist. The casual observer might-and often
+ does-say that all bears are cowardly, all bucks are easily killed, or the
+ reverse, according as the god of chance has treated him to one spectacle
+ or the other. As well try to generalize on the human race-as is a certain
+ ecclesiastical habit-that all men are vile or noble, dishonest or upright,
+ wise or foolish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The higher we go in the scale the truer this individualism holds. We are
+ forced to reason not from the bulk of observations, but from their
+ averages. If we find ten bucks who will go a mile wounded to two who
+ succumb in their tracks from similar hurts, we are justified in saying
+ tentatively that the species is tenacious of life. But as experience
+ broadens we may modify that statement; for strange indeed are runs of
+ luck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this reason a good deal of the wise conclusion we read in sportsmen's
+ narratives is worth very little. Few men have experience enough with lions
+ to rise to averages through the possibilities of luck. ESPECIALLY is this
+ true of lions. No beast that roams seems to go more by luck than felis
+ leo. Good hunters may search for years without seeing hide nor hair of one
+ of the beasts. Selous, one of the greatest, went to East Africa for the
+ express purpose of getting some of the fine beasts there, hunted six weeks
+ and saw none. Holmes of the Escarpment has lived in the country six years,
+ has hunted a great deal and has yet to kill his first. One of the railroad
+ officials has for years gone up and down the Uganda Railway on his
+ handcar, his rifle ready in hopes of the lion that never appeared; though
+ many are there seen by those with better fortune. Bronson hunted
+ desperately for this great prize, but failed. Rainsford shot no lions his
+ first trip, and ran into them only three years later. Read Abel Chapman's
+ description of his continued bad luck at even seeing the beasts.
+ MacMillan, after five years' unbroken good fortune, has in the last two
+ years failed to kill a lion, although he has made many trips for the
+ purpose. F. told me he followed every rumour of a lion for two years
+ before he got one. Again, one may hear the most marvellous of yarns the
+ other way about-of the German who shot one from the train on the way up
+ from Mombasa; of the young English tenderfoot who, the first day out, came
+ on three asleep, across a river, and potted the lot; and so on. The point
+ is, that in the case of lions the element of sheer chance seems to begin
+ earlier and last longer than is the case with any other beast. And, you
+ must remember, experience must thrust through the luck element to the
+ solid ground of averages before it can have much value in the way of
+ generalization. Before he has reached that solid ground, a man's opinions
+ depend entirely on what kind of lions he chances to meet, in what
+ circumstances, and on how matters happen to shape in the crowded moments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though lack of sufficiently extended experience has much to do with
+ these decided differences of opinion, I believe that misapprehension has
+ also its part. The sportsman sees lions on the plains. Likewise the lions
+ see him, and promptly depart to thick cover or rocky butte. He comes on
+ them in the scrub; they bound hastily out of sight. He may even meet them
+ face to face, but instead of attacking him, they turn to right and left
+ and make off in the long grass. When he follows them, they sneak cunningly
+ away. If, added to this, he has the good luck to kill one or two stone
+ dead at a single shot each, he begins to think there is not much in lion
+ shooting after all, and goes home proclaiming the king of beasts a
+ skulking coward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After all, on what grounds does he base this conclusion? In what way have
+ circumstances been a test of courage at all? The lion did not stand and
+ fight, to be sure; but why should he? What was there in it for lions?
+ Behind any action must a motive exist. Where is the possible motive for
+ any lion to attack on sight? He does not-except in unusual cases-eat men;
+ nothing has occurred to make him angry. The obvious thing is to avoid
+ trouble, unless there is a good reason to seek it. In that one evidences
+ the lion's good sense, but not his lack of courage. That quality has not
+ been called upon at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if the sportsman had done one of two or three things, I am quite sure
+ he would have had a taste of our friend's mettle. If he had shot at and
+ even grazed the beast; if he had happened upon him where an exit was not
+ obvious; or IF HE HAD EVEN FOLLOWED THE LION UNTIL THE LATTER HAD BECOME
+ TIRED OF THE ANNOYANCE, he would very soon have discovered that Leo is not
+ all good nature, and that once on his courage will take him in against any
+ odds. Furthermore, he may be astonished and dismayed to discover that of a
+ group of several lions, two or three besides the wounded animal are quite
+ likely to take up the quarrel and charge too. In other words, in my
+ opinion, the lion avoids trouble when he can, not from cowardice but from
+ essential indolence or good nature; but does not need to be cornered* to
+ fight to the death when in his mind his dignity is sufficiently assailed.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This is an important distinction in estimating the inherent
+ courage of man or beast. Even a mouse will fight when
+ cornered.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For of all dangerous beasts the lion, when once aroused, will alone face
+ odds to the end. The rhinoceros, the elephant, and even the buffalo can
+ often be turned aside by a shot. A lion almost always charges home.*
+ Slower and slower he comes, as the bullets strike; but he comes, until at
+ last he may be just hitching himself along, his face to the enemy, his
+ fierce spirit undaunted. When finally he rolls over, he bites the earth in
+ great mouthfuls; and so passes fighting to the last. The death of a lion
+ is a fine sight.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I seem to be generalizing here, but all these conclusions
+ must be understood to take into consideration the liability
+ of individual variation.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ No, I must confess, to me the lion is an object of great respect; and so,
+ I gather, he is to all who have had really extensive experience. Those
+ like Leslie Tarleton, Lord Delamere, W. N. MacMillan, Baron von Bronsart,
+ the Hills, Sir Alfred Pease, who are great lion men, all concede to the
+ lion a courage and tenacity unequalled by any other living beast. My own
+ experience is of course nothing as compared to that of these men. Yet I
+ saw in my nine months afield seventy-one lions. None of these offered to
+ attack when unwounded or not annoyed. On the other hand, only one turned
+ tail once the battle was on, and she proved to be a three quarters grown
+ lioness, sick and out of condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is of course indubitable that where lions have been much shot they
+ become warier in the matter of keeping out of trouble. They retire to
+ cover earlier in the morning, and they keep more than a perfunctory
+ outlook for the casual human being. When hunters first began to go into
+ the Sotik the lions there would stand imperturbable, staring at the
+ intruder with curiosity or indifference. Now they have learned that such
+ performances are not healthy-and they have probably satisfied their
+ curiosity. But neither in the Sotik, nor even in the plains around Nairobi
+ itself, does the lion refuse the challenge once it has been put up to him
+ squarely. Nor does he need to be cornered. He charges in quite blithely
+ from the open plain, once convinced that you are really an annoyance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to habits! The only sure thing about a lion is his originality. He has
+ more exceptions to his rules than the German language. Men who have been
+ mighty lion hunters for many years, and who have brought to their hunting
+ close observation, can only tell you what a lion MAY do in certain
+ circumstances. Following very broad principles, they may even predict what
+ he is APT to do, but never what he certainly WILL do. That is one thing
+ that makes lion hunting interesting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In general, then, the lion frequents that part of the country where feed
+ the great game herds. From them he takes his toll by night, retiring
+ during the day into the shallow ravines, the brush patches, or the rocky
+ little buttes. I have, however, seen lions miles from game, slumbering
+ peacefully atop an ant hill. Indeed, occasionally, a pack of lions likes
+ to live high in the tall-grass ridges where every hunt will mean for them
+ a four- or five-mile jaunt out and back again. He needs water, after
+ feeding, and so rarely gets farther than eight or ten miles from that
+ necessity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hunts at night. This is as nearly invariable a rule as can be
+ formulated in regard to lions. Yet once, and perhaps twice, I saw
+ lionesses stalking through tall grass as early as three o'clock in the
+ afternoon. This eagerness may, or may not, have had to do with the
+ possession of hungry cubs. The lion's customary harmlessness in the
+ daytime is best evidenced, however, by the comparative indifference of the
+ game to his presence then. From a hill we watched three of these beasts
+ wandering leisurely across the plains below. A herd of kongonis feeding
+ directly in their path, merely moved aside right and left, quite
+ deliberately, to leave a passage fifty yards or so wide, but otherwise
+ paid not the slightest attention. I have several times seen this incident,
+ or a modification of it. And yet, conversely, on a number of occasions we
+ have received our first intimation of the presence of lions by the wild
+ stampeding of the game away from a certain spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, the most of his hunting is done by dark. Between the hours of
+ sundown and nine o'clock he and his comrades may be heard uttering the
+ deep coughing grunt typical of this time of night. These curious, short,
+ far-sounding calls may be mere evidences of intention, or they may be a
+ sort of signal by means of which the various hunters keep in touch. After
+ a little they cease. Then one is quite likely to hear the petulant,
+ alarmed barking of zebra, or to feel the vibrations of many hoofs. There
+ is a sense of hurried, flurried uneasiness abroad on the veldt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lion generally springs on his prey from behind or a little off the
+ quarter. By the impetus his own weight he hurls his victim forward,
+ doubling its head under, and very neatly breaking its neck. I have never
+ seen this done, but the process has been well observed and attested; and
+ certainly, of the many hundreds of lion kills I have taken the pains to
+ inspect, the majority had had their necks broken. Sometimes, but
+ apparently more rarely, the lion kills its prey by a bite in the back of
+ the neck. I have seen zebra killed in this fashion, but never any of the
+ buck. It may be possible that the lack of horns makes it more difficult to
+ break a zebra's neck because of the corresponding lack of leverage when
+ its head hits the ground sidewise; the instances I have noted may have
+ been those in which the lion's spring landed too far back to throw the
+ victim properly; or perhaps they were merely examples of the great
+ variability in the habits of felis leo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once the kill is made, the lion disembowels the beast very neatly indeed,
+ and drags the entrails a few feet out of the way. He then eats what he
+ wants, and, curiously enough, seems often to be very fond of the skin. In
+ fact, lacking other evidence, it is occasionally possible to identify a
+ kill as being that of a lion by noticing whether any considerable portion
+ of the hide has been devoured. After eating he drinks. Then he is likely
+ to do one of two things: either he returns to cover near the carcass and
+ lies down, or he wanders slowly and with satisfaction toward his happy
+ home. In the latter case the hyenas, jackals, and carrion birds seize
+ their chance. The astute hunter can often diagnose the case by the general
+ actions and demeanour of these camp followers. A half dozen sour and
+ disgusted looking hyenas seated on their haunches at scattered intervals,
+ and treefuls of mournfully humpbacked vultures sunk in sadness, indicate
+ that the lion has decided to save the rest of his zebra until to-morrow
+ and is not far away. On the other hand, a grand flapping, snarling
+ Kilkenny-fair of an aggregation swirling about one spot in the grass means
+ that the principal actor has gone home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is ordinarily useless to expect to see the lion actually on his prey.
+ The feeding is done before dawn, after which the lion enjoys stretching
+ out in the open until the sun is well up, and then retiring to the nearest
+ available cover. Still, at the risk of seeming to be perpetually
+ qualifying, I must instance finding three lions actually on the stale
+ carcass of a waterbuck at eleven o'clock in the morning of a piping hot
+ day! In an undisturbed country, or one not much hunted, the early morning
+ hours up to say nine o'clock are quite likely to show you lions sauntering
+ leisurely across the open plains toward their lairs. They go a little,
+ stop a little, yawn, sit down a while, and gradually work their way home.
+ At those times you come upon them unexpectedly face to face, or, seeing
+ them from afar, ride them down in a glorious gallop. Where the country has
+ been much hunted, however, the lion learns to abandon his kill and seek
+ shelter before daylight, and is almost never seen abroad. Then one must
+ depend on happening upon him in his cover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the actual hunting of his game the lion is apparently very clever. He
+ understands the value of cooperation. Two or more will manoeuvre very
+ skilfully to give a third the chance to make an effective spring;
+ whereupon the three will share the kill. In a rough country, or one
+ otherwise favourable to the method, a pack of lions will often
+ deliberately drive game into narrow ravines or cul de sacs where the
+ killers are waiting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At such times the man favoured by the chance of an encampment within five
+ miles or so can hear a lion's roar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Otherwise I doubt if he is apt often to get the full-voiced, genuine
+ article. The peculiar questioning cough of early evening is resonant and
+ deep in vibration, but it is a call rather than a roar. No lion is fool
+ enough to make a noise when he is stalking. Then afterward, when full fed,
+ individuals may open up a few times, but only a few times, in sheer
+ satisfaction, apparently, at being well fed. The menagerie row at feeding
+ time, formidable as it sounds within the echoing walls, is only a mild and
+ gentle hint. But when seven or eight lions roar merely to see how much
+ noise they can make, as when driving game, or trying to stampede your oxen
+ on a wagon trip, the effect is something tremendous. The very substance of
+ the ground vibrates; the air shakes. I can only compare it to the effect
+ of a very large deep organ in a very small church. There is something
+ genuinely awe-inspiring about it; and when the repeated volleys rumble
+ into silence, one can imagine the veldt crouched in a rigid terror that
+ shall endure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XI. LIONS AGAIN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As to the dangers of lion hunting it is also difficult to write. There is
+ no question that a cool man, using good judgment as to just what he can or
+ cannot do, should be able to cope with lion situations. The modern rifle
+ is capable of stopping the beast, provided the bullet goes to the right
+ spot. The right spot is large enough to be easy to hit, if the shooter
+ keeps cool. Our definition of a cool man must comprise the elements of
+ steady nerves under super-excitement, the ability to think quickly and
+ clearly, and the mildly strategic quality of being able to make the best
+ use of awkward circumstances. Such a man, barring sheer accidents, should
+ be able to hunt lions with absolute certainty for just as long as he does
+ not get careless, slipshod or over-confident. Accidents-real accidents,
+ not merely unexpected happenings-are hardly to be counted. They can occur
+ in your own house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But to the man not temperamentally qualified, lion shooting is dangerous
+ enough. The lion, when he takes the offensive, intends to get his
+ antagonist. Having made up his mind to that, he charges home, generally at
+ great speed. The realization that it is the man's life or the beast's is
+ disconcerting. Also the charging lion is a spectacle much more
+ awe-inspiring in reality than the most vivid imagination can predict. He
+ looks very large, very determined, and has uttered certain rumbling,
+ blood-curdling threats as to what he is going to do about it. It suddenly
+ seems most undesirable to allow that lion to come any closer, not even an
+ inch! A hasty, nervous shot misses&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An unwounded lion charging from a distance is said to start rather slowly,
+ and to increase his pace only as he closes. Personally I have never been
+ charged by an unwounded beast, but I can testify that the wounded animal
+ comes very fast. Cuninghame puts the rate at about seven seconds to the
+ hundred yards. Certainly I should say that a man charged from fifty yards
+ or so would have little chance for a second shot, provided he missed the
+ first. A hit seemed, in my experience, to the animal, by sheer force of
+ impact, long enough to permit me to throw in another cartridge. A lioness
+ thus took four frontal bullets starting at about sixty yards. An initial
+ miss would probably have permitted her to close.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, as can be seen, is a great source of danger to a flurried or nervous
+ beginner. He does not want that lion to get an inch nearer; he fires at
+ too long a range, misses, and is killed or mauled before he can reload.
+ This happened precisely so to two young friends of MacMillan. They were
+ armed with double-rifles, let them off hastily as the beast started at
+ them from two hundred yards, and never got another chance. If they had
+ possessed the experience to have waited until the lion had come within
+ fifty yards they would have had the almost certainty of four barrels at
+ close range. Though I have seen a lion missed clean well inside those
+ limits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From such performances are so-called lion accidents built. During my stay
+ in Africa I heard of six white men being killed by lions, and a number of
+ others mauled. As far as possible I tried to determine the facts of each
+ case. In every instance the trouble followed either foolishness or loss of
+ nerve. I believe I should be quite safe in saying that from identically
+ the same circumstances any of the good lion men-Tarleton, Lord Delamere,
+ the Hills, and others-would have extricated themselves unharmed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This does not mean that accidents may not happen. Rifles jam, but
+ generally because of flurried manipulation! One may unexpectedly meet the
+ lion at too close quarters; a foot may slip, or a cartridge prove
+ defective. So may one fall downstairs or bump one's head in the dark.
+ Sufficient forethought and alertness and readiness would go far in either
+ case to prevent bad results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wounded beast, of course, offers the most interesting problem to the
+ lion hunter. If it sees the hunter, it is likely to charge him at once. If
+ hit while making off, however, it is more apt to take cover. Then one must
+ summon all his good sense and nerve to get it out. No rules can be given
+ for this; nor am I trying to write a text book for lion hunters. Any good
+ lion hunter knows a lot more about it than I do. But always a man must
+ keep in mind three things: that a lion can hide in cover so short that it
+ seems to the novice as though a jack-rabbit would find scant concealment
+ there; that he charges like lightning, and that he can spring about
+ fifteen feet. This spring, coming unexpectedly from an unseen beast, is
+ about impossible to avoid. Sheer luck may land a fatal shot; but even then
+ the lion will probably do his damage before he dies. The rush from a short
+ distance a good quick shot ought to be able to cope with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore the wise hunter assures himself of at least twenty
+ feet-preferably more-of neutral zone all about him. No matter how long it
+ takes, he determines absolutely that the lion is not within that distance.
+ The rest is alertness and quickness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I have said, the amount of cover necessary to conceal a lion is
+ astonishingly small. He can flatten himself out surprisingly; and his
+ tawny colour blends so well with the brown grasses that he is practically
+ invisible. A practised man does not, of course, look for lions at all. He
+ is after unusual small patches, especially the black ear tips or the black
+ of the mane. Once guessed at, it is interesting to see how quickly the
+ hitherto unsuspected animal sketches itself out in the cover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I should, before passing on to another aspect of the matter, mention the
+ dangerous poisons carried by the lion's claws. Often men have died from
+ the most trivial surface wounds. The grooves of the claws carry putrefying
+ meat from the kills. Every sensible man in a lion country carries a small
+ syringe, and either permanganate or carbolic. And those mild little
+ remedies he uses full strength!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great and overwhelming advantage is of course with the hunter. He
+ possesses as deadly a weapon: and that weapon will kill at a distance.
+ This is proper, I think. There are more lions than hunters; and, from our
+ point of view, the man is more important than the beast. The game is not
+ too hazardous. By that I mean that, barring sheer accident, a man is sure
+ to come out all right provided he does accurately the right thing. In
+ other words, it is a dangerous game of skill, but it does not possess the
+ blind danger of a forest in a hurricane, say. Furthermore, it is a game
+ that no man need play unless he wants to. In the lion country he may go
+ about his business-daytime business-as though he were home at the farm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such being the case, may I be pardoned for intruding one of my own small
+ ethical ideas at this point, with the full realization that it depends
+ upon an entirely personal point of view. As far as my own case goes, I
+ consider it poor sportsmanship ever to refuse a lion-chance merely because
+ the advantages are not all in my favour. After all, lion hunting is on a
+ different plane from ordinary shooting: it is a challenge to war, a
+ deliberate seeking for mortal combat. Is it not just a little shameful to
+ pot old felis leo at long range, in the open, near his kill, and wherever
+ we have him at an advantage-nine times, and then to back out because that
+ advantage is for once not so marked? I have so often heard the phrase, &ldquo;I
+ let him (or them) alone. It was not good enough,&rdquo; meaning that the game
+ looked a little risky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do not misunderstand. I am not advising that you bull ahead into the long
+ grass, or that alone you open fire on a half dozen lions in easy range.
+ Kind providence endowed you with strategy, and certainly you should never
+ go in where there is no show for you to use your weapon effectively. But
+ occasionally the odds will be against you and you will be called upon to
+ take more or less of a chance. I do not think it is quite square to quit
+ playing merely because for once your opponent has been dealt the better
+ cards. If here are too many of them see if you cannot manoeuvre them; if
+ the grass is long, try every means in your power to get them out. Stay
+ with them. If finally you fail, you will at least have the satisfaction of
+ knowing that circumstances alone have defeated you. If you do not like
+ that sort of a game, stay out of it entirely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XII. MORE LIONS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Nor do the last remarks of the preceding chapter mean that you shall not
+ have your trophy in peace. Perhaps excitement and a slight doubt as to
+ whether or not you are going to survive do not appeal to you; but
+ nevertheless you would like a lion skin or so. By all means shoot one
+ lion, or two, or three in the safest fashion you can. But after that you
+ ought to play the game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The surest way to get a lion is to kill a zebra, cut holes in him, fill
+ the holes with strychnine, and come back next morning. This method is
+ absolutely safe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next safest way is to follow the quarry with a pack of especially
+ trained dogs. The lion is so busy and nervous over those dogs that you can
+ walk up and shoot him in the ear. This method has the excitement of riding
+ and following, the joy of a grand and noisy row, and the fun of seeing a
+ good dog-fight. The same effect can be got chasing wart-hogs, hyenas,
+ jackals-or jack-rabbits. The objection is that it wastes a noble beast in
+ an inferior game. My personal opinion is that no man is justified in
+ following with dogs any large animal that can be captured with reasonable
+ certainty without them. The sport of coursing is another matter; but that
+ is quite the same in essence whatever the size of the quarry. If you want
+ to kill a lion or so quite safely, and at the same time enjoy a glorious
+ and exciting gallop with lots of accompanying row, by all means follow the
+ sport with hounds. But having killed one or two by that method, quit. Do
+ not go on and clean up the country. You can do it. Poison and hounds are
+ the SURE methods of finding any lion there may be about; and AFTER THE
+ FIRST FEW, one is about as justifiable as the other. If you want the
+ undoubtedly great joy of cross country pursuit, send your hounds in after
+ less noble game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The third safe method of killing a lion is nocturnal. You lay out a kill
+ beneath a tree, and climb the tree. Or better, you hitch out a pig or
+ donkey as live bait. When the lion comes to this free lunch, you try to
+ see him; and, if you succeed in that, you try to shoot him. It is not easy
+ to shoot at night; nor is it easy to see in the dark. Furthermore, lions
+ only occasionally bother to come to bait. You may roost up that tree many
+ nights before you get a chance. Once up, you have to stay up; for it is
+ most decidedly not safe to go home after dark. The tropical night in the
+ highlands is quite chilly. Branches seem to be quite as cramping and
+ abrasive under the equator as in the temperate zones. Still, it is one
+ method.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another is to lay out a kill and visit it in the early morning. There is
+ more to this, for you are afoot, must generally search out your beast in
+ nearby cover, and can easily find any amount of excitement in the process.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fourth way is to ride the lion. The hunter sees his quarry returning
+ home across the plains, perhaps; or jumps it from some small bushy ravine.
+ At once he spurs his horse in pursuit. The lion will run but a short
+ distance before coming to a stop, for he is not particularly long either
+ of wind or of patience. From this stand he almost invariably charges. The
+ astute hunter, still mounted, turns and flees. When the lion gets tired of
+ chasing, which he does in a very short time, the hunter faces about. At
+ last the lion sits down in the grass, waiting for the game to develop.
+ This is the time for the hunter to dismount and to take his shot. Quite
+ likely he must now stand a charge afoot, and drop his beast before it gets
+ to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is real fun. It has many elements of safety, and many of danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To begin with, the hunter at this game generally has companions to back
+ him: often he employs mounted Somalis to round the lion up and get it to
+ stand. The charging lion is quite apt to make for the conspicuous mounted
+ men-who can easily escape-ignoring the hunter afoot. As the game is
+ largely played in the open, the movements of the beast are easily
+ followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, there is room for mistake. The hunter, for example,
+ should never follow directly in the rear of his lion, but rather at a
+ parallel course off the beast's flank. Then, if the lion stops suddenly,
+ the man does not overrun before he can check his mount. He should never
+ dismount nearer than a hundred and fifty yards from the embayed animal;
+ and should never try to get off while the lion is moving in his direction.
+ Then, too, a hard gallop is not conducive to the best of shooting. It is
+ difficult to hold the front bead steady; and it is still more difficult to
+ remember to wait, once the lion charges, until he has come near enough for
+ a sure shot. A neglect in the inevitable excitement of the moment to
+ remember these and a dozen other small matters may quite possibly cause
+ trouble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two or three men together can make this one of the most exciting mounted
+ games on earth; with enough of the give and take of real danger and battle
+ to make it worth while. The hunter, however, who employs a dozen Somalis
+ to ride the beast to a standstill, after which he goes to the front, has
+ eliminated much of the thrill. Nor need that man's stay-at-home family
+ feel any excessive uneasiness over Father Killing Lions in Africa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The method that interested me more than any other is one exceedingly
+ difficult to follow except under favourable circumstances. I refer to
+ tracking them down afoot. This requires that your gunbearer should be an
+ expert trailer, for, outside the fact that following a soft-padded animal
+ over all sorts of ground is a very difficult thing to do, the hunter
+ should be free to spy ahead. It is necessary also to possess much patience
+ and to endure under many disappointments. But on the other hand there is
+ in this sport a continuous keen thrill to be enjoyed in no other; and he
+ who single handed tracks down and kills his lion thus, has well earned the
+ title of shikari-the Hunter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the last method of all is to trust to the God of Chance. The secret of
+ success is to be always ready to take instant advantage of what the moment
+ offers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An occasional hunting story is good in itself: and the following will also
+ serve to illustrate what I have just been saying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were after that prize, the greater kudu, and in his pursuit had
+ penetrated into some very rough country. Our hunting for the time being
+ was over broad bench, perhaps four or five miles wide, below a range of
+ mountains. The bench itself broke down in sheer cliffs some fifteen
+ hundred feet, but one did not appreciate that fact unless he stood fairly
+ on the edge of the precipice. To all intents and purposes we were on a
+ rolling grassy plain, with low hills and cliffs, and a most beautiful
+ little stream running down it beneath fine trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to now our hunting had gained us little beside information: that kudu
+ had occasionally visited the region, that they had not been there for a
+ month, and that the direction of their departure had been obscure. So we
+ worked our way down the stream, trying out the possibilities. Of other
+ game there seemed to be a fair supply: impalla, hartebeeste, zebra, eland,
+ buffalo, wart-hog, sing-sing, and giraffe we had seen. I had secured a
+ wonderful eland and a very fine impalla, and we had had a gorgeous
+ close-quarters fight with a cheetah.* Now C. had gone out, a three weeks'
+ journey, carrying to medical attendance a porter injured in the cheetah
+ fracas. Billy and I were continuing the hunt alone.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This animal quite disproved the assertion that cheetahs
+ never assume the aggressive. He charged repeatedly.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We had marched two hours, and were pitching camp under a single tree near
+ the edge of the bench. After seeing everything well under way, I took the
+ Springfield and crossed the stream, which here ran in a deep canyon. My
+ object was to see if I could get a sing-sing that had bounded away at our
+ approach. I did not bother to take a gunbearer, because I did not expect
+ to be gone five minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The canyon proved unexpectedly deep and rough, and the stream up to my
+ waist. When I had gained the top, I found grass growing patchily from six
+ inches to two feet high; and small, scrubby trees from four to ten feet
+ tall, spaced regularly, but very scattered. These little trees hardly
+ formed cover, but their aggregation at sufficient distance limited the
+ view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sing-sing had evidently found his way over the edge of the bench. I
+ turned to go back to camp. A duiker-a small grass antelope-broke from a
+ little patch of the taller grass, rushed, head down headlong after their
+ fashion, suddenly changed his mind, and dashed back again. I stepped
+ forward to see why he had changed his mind-and ran into two lions!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were about thirty yards away, and sat there on their haunches, side
+ by side, staring at me with expressionless yellow eyes. I stared back. The
+ Springfield is a good little gun, and three times before I had been forced
+ to shoot lions with it, but my real &ldquo;lion gun&rdquo; with which I had done best
+ work was the 405 Winchester. The Springfield is too light for such game.
+ Also there were two lions, very close. Also I was quite alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the game stood, it hardly looked like my move; so I held still and
+ waited. Presently one yawned, they looked at each other, turned quite
+ leisurely, and began to move away at a walk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a different matter. If I had fired while the two were facing me,
+ I should probably have had them both to deal with. But now that their
+ tails were turned toward me, I should very likely have to do with only the
+ one: at the crack of the rifle the other would run the way he was headed.
+ So I took a careful bead at the lioness and let drive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My aim was to cripple the pelvic bone, but, unfortunately, just as I
+ fired, the beast wriggled lithely sidewise to pass around a tuft of grass,
+ so that the bullet inflicted merely a slight flesh wound on the rump. She
+ whirled like a flash, and as she raised her head high to locate me, I had
+ time to wish that the Springfield hit a trifle harder blow. Also I had
+ time to throw another cartridge in the barrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moment she saw me she dropped her head and charged. She was thoroughly
+ angry and came very fast. I had just enough time to steady the gold bead
+ on her chest and to pull trigger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the shot, to my great relief, she turned bottom up, and I saw her tail
+ for an instant above the grass-an almost sure indication of a bad hit. She
+ thrashed around, and made a tremendous hullabaloo of snarls and growls. I
+ backed out slowly, my rifle ready. It was no place for me, for the grass
+ was over knee high.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once at a safe distance I blazed a tree with my hunting knife and departed
+ for camp, well pleased to be out of it. At camp I ate lunch and had a
+ smoke; then with Memba Sasa and Mavrouki returned to the scene of trouble.
+ I had now the 405 Winchester, a light and handy weapon delivering a
+ tremendous blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We found the place readily enough. My lioness had recovered from the first
+ shock and had gone. I was very glad I had gone first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trail was not very plain, but it could be followed a foot or so at a
+ time, with many faults and casts back. I walked a yard to one side while
+ the men followed the spoor. Owing to the abundance of cover it was very
+ nervous work, for the beast might be almost anywhere, and would certainly
+ charge. We tried to keep a neutral zone around ourselves by tossing stones
+ ahead of and on both sides of our line of advance. My own position was not
+ bad, for I had the rifle ready in my hand, but the men were in danger. Of
+ course I was protecting them as well as I could, but there was always a
+ chance that the lioness might spring on them in such a manner that I would
+ be unable to use my weapon. Once I suggested that as the work was
+ dangerous, they could quit if they wanted to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hapana!&rdquo; they both refused indignantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had proceeded thus for half a mile when to our relief, right ahead of
+ us, sounded the commanding, rumbling half-roar, half-growl of the lion at
+ bay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instantly Memba Sasa and Mavrouki dropped back to me. We all peered ahead.
+ One of the boys made her out first, crouched under a bush thirty-two yards
+ away. Even as I raised the rifle she saw us and charged. I caught her in
+ the chest before she had come ten feet. The heavy bullet stopped her dead.
+ Then she recovered and started forward slowly, very weak, but game to the
+ last. Another shot finished her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remarkable point of this incident was the action of the little
+ Springfield bullet. Evidently the very high velocity of this bullet from
+ its shock to the nervous system had delivered a paralyzing blow sufficient
+ to knock out the lioness for the time being. Its damage to tissue,
+ however, was slight. Inasmuch as the initial shock did not cause immediate
+ death, the lioness recovered sufficiently to be able, two hours later, to
+ take the offensive. This point is of the greatest interest to the student
+ of ballistics; but it is curious to even the ordinary reader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is a very typical example of finding lions by sheer chance. Generally
+ a man is out looking for the smallest kind of game when he runs up against
+ them. Now happened to follow an equally typical example of tracking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day after the killing of the lioness Memba Sasa, Kongoni and I
+ dropped off the bench, and hunted greater kudu on a series of terraces
+ fifteen hundred feet below. All we found were two rhino, some sing-sing, a
+ heard of impalla, and a tremendous thirst. In the meantime, Mavrouki had,
+ under orders, scouted the foothills of the mountain range at the back. He
+ reported none but old tracks of kudu, but said he had seen eight lions not
+ far from our encounter of the day before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore, as soon next morning as we could see plainly, we again crossed
+ the canyon and the waist-deep stream. I had with me all three of the gun
+ men, and in addition two of the most courageous porters to help with the
+ tracking and the looking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About eight o'clock we found the first fresh pad mark plainly outlined in
+ an isolated piece of soft earth. Immediately we began that most
+ fascinating of games-trailing over difficult ground. In this we could all
+ take part, for the tracks were some hours old, and the cover scanty. Very
+ rarely could we make out more than three successive marks. Then we had to
+ spy carefully for the slightest indication of direction. Kongoni in
+ especial was wonderful at this, and time and again picked up a broken
+ grass blade or the minutest inch-fraction of disturbed earth. We moved
+ slowly, in long hesitations and castings about, and in swift little dashes
+ forward of a few feet; and often we went astray on false scents, only to
+ return finally to the last certain spot. In this manner we crossed the
+ little plain with the scattered shrub trees and arrived at the edge of the
+ low bluff above the stream bottom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This bottom was well wooded along the immediate bank of the stream itself,
+ fringed with low thick brush, and in the open spaces grown to the edges
+ with high, green, coarse grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as we had managed to follow without fault to this grass, our
+ difficulties of trailing were at an end. The lions' heavy bodies had made
+ distinct paths through the tangle. These paths went forward sinuously,
+ sometimes separating one from the other, sometimes intertwining, sometimes
+ combining into one for a short distance. We could not determine accurately
+ the number of beasts that had made them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They have gone to drink water,&rdquo; said Memba Sasa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We slipped along the twisting paths, alert for indications; came to the
+ edge of the thicket, stooped through the fringe, and descended to the
+ stream under the tall trees. The soft earth at the water's edge was
+ covered with tracks, thickly overlaid one over the other. The boys felt of
+ the earth, examined, even smelled, and came to the conclusion that the
+ beasts must have watered about five o'clock. If so, they might be ten
+ miles away, or as many rods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had difficulty in determining just where the party left this place,
+ until finally Kongoni caught sight of suspicious indications over the way.
+ The lions had crossed the stream. We did likewise, followed the trail out
+ of the thicket, into the grass, below the little cliffs parallel to the
+ stream, back into the thicket, across the river once more, up the other
+ side, in the thicket for a quarter mile, then out into the grass on that
+ side, and so on. They were evidently wandering, rather idly, up the
+ general course of the stream. Certainly, unlike most cats, they did not
+ mind getting their feet wet, for they crossed the stream four times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the twining paths in the shoulder-high grass fanned out
+ separately. We counted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were right, Mavrouki,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;there were eight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of each path was a beaten-down little space where evidently the
+ beasts had been lying down. With an exclamation the three gunbearers
+ darted forward to investigate. The lairs were still warm! Their occupants
+ had evidently made off only at our approach!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not five minutes later we were halted by a low warning growl right ahead.
+ We stopped. The boys squatted on their heels close to me, and we consulted
+ in whispers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course it would be sheer madness to attack eight lions in grass so high
+ we could not see five feet in front of us. That went without saying. On
+ the other hand, Mavrouki swore that he had yesterday seen no small cubs
+ with the band, and our examination of the tracks made in soft earth seemed
+ to bear him out. The chances were therefore that, unless themselves
+ attacked or too close pressed, the lions would not attack us. By keeping
+ just in their rear we might be able to urge them gently along until they
+ should enter more open cover. Then we could see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore we gave the owner of that growl about five minutes to forget it,
+ and then advanced very cautiously. We soon found where the objector had
+ halted, and plainly read by the indications where he had stood for a
+ moment or so, and then moved on. We slipped along after.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For five hours we hung at the heels of that band of lions, moving very
+ slowly, perfectly willing to halt whenever they told us to, and going
+ forward again only when we became convinced that they too had gone on.
+ Except for the first half hour, we were never more than twenty or thirty
+ yards from the nearest lion, and often much closer. Three or four times I
+ saw slowly gliding yellow bodies just ahead of me, but in the
+ circumstances it would have been sheer stark lunacy to have fired.
+ Probably six or eight times-I did not count-we were commanded to stop, and
+ we did stop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was very exciting work, but the men never faltered. Of course I went
+ first, in case one of the beasts had the toothache or otherwise did not
+ play up to our calculations on good nature. One or the other of the
+ gunbearers was always just behind me. Only once was any comment made.
+ Kongoni looked very closely into my face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are very many lions,&rdquo; he remarked doubtfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very many lions,&rdquo; I agreed, as though assenting to a mere statement of
+ fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although I am convinced there was no real danger, as long as we stuck to
+ our plan of campaign, nevertheless it was quite interesting to be for so
+ long a period so near these great brutes. They led us for a mile or so
+ along the course of the stream, sometimes on one side, sometimes on the
+ other. Several times they emerged into better cover, and even into the
+ open, but always ducked back into the thick again before we ourselves had
+ followed their trail to the clear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At noon we were halted by the usual growl just as we had reached the edge
+ of the river. So we sat down on the banks and had lunch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally our chance came. The trail led us, for the dozenth time, from the
+ high grass into the thicket along the river. We ducked our heads to enter.
+ Memba Sasa, next my shoulder, snapped his fingers violently. Following the
+ direction of the brown arm that shot over my shoulder, I strained my eyes
+ into the dimness of the thicket. At first I could see nothing at all, but
+ at length a slight motion drew my eye. Then I made out the silhouette of a
+ lion's head, facing us steadily. One of the rear guard had again turned to
+ halt us, but this time where he and his surroundings could be seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luckily I always use a Sheard gold bead sight, and even in the dimness of
+ the tree-shaded thicket it showed up well. The beast was only forty yards
+ away, so I fired at his head. He rolled over without a sound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We took the usual great precautions in determining the genuineness of his
+ demise, then carried him into the open. Strangely enough the bullet had
+ gone so cleanly into his left eye that it had not even broken the edge of
+ the eyelid; so that when skinned he did not show a mark. He was a very
+ decent maned lion, three feet four inches at the shoulder, and nine feet
+ long as he lay. We found that he had indeed been the rear guard, and that
+ the rest, on the other side of the thicket, had made off at the shot. So
+ in spite of the APPARENT danger of the situation, our calculations had
+ worked out perfectly. Also we had enjoyed a half day's sport of an
+ intensity quite impossible to be extracted from any other method of
+ following the lion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In trying to guess how any particular lions may act, however, you will
+ find yourself often at fault. The lion is a very intelligent and crafty
+ beast, and addicted to tricks. If you follow a lion to a small hill, it is
+ well to go around that hill on the side opposite to that taken by your
+ quarry. You are quite likely to meet him for he is clever enough thus to
+ try to get in your rear. He will lie until you have actually passed him
+ before breaking off. He will circle ahead, then back to confuse his trail.
+ And when you catch sight of him in the distance, you would never suspect
+ that he knew of your presence at all. He saunters slowly, apparently
+ aimlessly, along pausing often, evidently too bored to take any interest
+ in life. You wait quite breathlessly for him to pass behind cover. Then
+ you are going to make a very rapid advance, and catch his leisurely
+ retreat. But the moment old Leo does pass behind the cover, his appearance
+ of idle stroller vanishes. In a dozen bounds he is gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is what makes lion hunting delightful. There are some regions, very
+ near settlements, where it is perhaps justifiable to poison these beasts.
+ If you are a true sportsman you will confine your hound-hunting to those
+ districts. Elsewhere, as far as playing fair with a noble beast is
+ concerned, you may as well toss a coin to see which you shall take-your
+ pack or a strychnine bottle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIII. ON THE MANAGING OF A SAFARI
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We made our way slowly down the river. As the elevation dropped, the
+ temperature rose. It was very hot indeed during the day, and in the
+ evening the air was tepid and caressing, and musical with the hum of
+ insects. We sat about quite comfortably in our pajamas, and took our
+ fifteen grains of quinine per week against the fever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The character of the jungle along the river changed imperceptibly, the
+ dhum palms crowding out the other trees; until, at our last camp, were
+ nothing but palms. The wind in them sounded variously like the patter or
+ the gathering onrush of rain. On either side the country remained
+ unchanged, however. The volcanic hills rolled away to the distant ranges.
+ Everywhere grew sparsely the low thornbrush, opening sometimes into clear
+ plains, closing sometimes into dense thickets. One morning we awoke to
+ find that many supposedly sober-minded trees had burst into blossom fairly
+ over night. They were red, and yellow and white that before were green, a
+ truly gorgeous sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then we turned sharp to the right and began to ascend a little tributary
+ brook coming down the wide flats from a cleft in the hills. This was
+ prettily named the Isiola, and, after the first mile or so, was not big
+ enough to afford the luxury of a jungle of its own. Its banks were
+ generally grassy and steep, its thickets few, and its little trees
+ isolated in parklike spaces. To either side of it, and almost at its
+ level, stretched plains, but plains grown with scattered brush and shrubs
+ so that at a mile or two one's vista was closed. But for all its scant ten
+ feet of width the Isiola stood upon its dignity as a stream. We discovered
+ that when we tried to cross. The men floundered waist-deep on uncertain
+ bottom; the syces received much unsympathetic comment for their handling
+ of the animals, and we had to get Billy over by a melodramatic &ldquo;bridge of
+ life&rdquo; with B., F., myself, and Memba Sasa in the title roles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then we pitched camp in the open on the other side, sent the horses back
+ from the stream until after dark, in fear of the deadly tsetse fly, and
+ prepared to enjoy a good exploration of the neighbourhood. Whereupon
+ M'ganga rose up to his gaunt and terrific height of authority, stretched
+ forth his bony arm at right angles, and uttered between eight and nine
+ thousand commands in a high dynamic monotone without a single pause for
+ breath. These, supplemented by about as many more, resulted in (a) a
+ bridge across the stream, and (b) a banda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A banda is a delightful African institution. It springs from nothing in
+ about two hours, but it takes twenty boys with a vitriolic M'ganga back of
+ them to bring it about. Some of them carry huge backloads of grass, or
+ papyrus, or cat-tail rushes, as the case may be; others lug in poles of
+ various lengths from where their comrades are cutting them by means of
+ their panga. A panga, parenthetically, is the safari man's substitute for
+ axe, shovel, pick, knife, sickle, lawn-mower, hammer, gatling gun, world's
+ library of classics, higher mathematics, grand opera, and toothpicks. It
+ looks rather like a machete with a very broad end and a slight curved
+ back. A good man can do extraordinary things with it. Indeed, at this
+ moment, two boys are with this apparently clumsy implement delicately
+ peeling some of the small thorn trees, from the bared trunks of which they
+ are stripping long bands of tough inner bark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these three raw materials-poles, withes, and grass-M'ganga and his
+ men set to work. They planted their corner and end poles, they laid their
+ rafters, they completed their framework, binding all with the tough
+ withes; then deftly they thatched it with the grass. Almost before we had
+ settled our own affairs, M'ganga was standing before us smiling. Gone now
+ was his mien of high indignation and swirling energy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Banda naquisha,&rdquo; he informed us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And we moved in our table and our canvas chairs; hung up our water
+ bottles; Billy got out her fancy work. Nothing could be pleasanter nor
+ more appropriate to the climate than this wide low arbour, open at either
+ end to the breezes, thatched so thickly that the fierce sun could nowhere
+ strike through.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men had now settled down to a knowledge of what we were like; and
+ things were going smoothly. At first the African porter will try it on to
+ see just how easy you are likely to prove. If he makes up his mind that
+ you really are easy, then you are in for infinite petty annoyance, and
+ possibly open mutiny. Therefore, for a little while, it is necessary to be
+ extremely vigilant, to insist on minute performance in all circumstances
+ where later you might condone an omission. For the same reason punishment
+ must be more frequent and more severe at the outset. It is all a matter of
+ watching the temper of the men. If they are cheerful and willing, you are
+ not nearly as particular as you would be were their spirit becoming
+ sullen. Then the infraction is not so important in itself as an excuse for
+ the punishment. For when your men get sulky, you watch vigilantly for the
+ first and faintest EXCUSE to inflict punishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This game always seemed to me very fascinating, when played right. It is
+ often played wrong. People do not look far enough. Because they see that
+ punishment has a most salutary effect on morale, and is sometimes
+ efficacious in getting things done that otherwise would lag, they jump to
+ the conclusion that the only effective way to handle a safari is by
+ penalties. By this I do not at all mean that they act savagely, or punish
+ to brutal excess. Merely they hold rigidly to the letter of the work and
+ the day's discipline. Because it is sometimes necessary to punish severely
+ slight infractions when the men's tempers need sweetening, they ALWAYS
+ punish slight infractions severely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in ordinary circumstances this method undoubtedly results in a very
+ efficient safari. Things are done smartly, on time, with a snap. The day's
+ march begins without delay; there is a minimum of straggling; on arrival
+ the tents are immediately got up and the wood and water fetched. But in a
+ tight place, men so handled by invariable rule are very apt to sit down
+ apathetically, and put the whole thing up to the white man. When it comes
+ time to help out they are not there. The contrast with a well-disposed
+ safari cannot be appreciated by one who has not seen both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The safari-man loves a master. He does not for a moment understand any
+ well-meant but misplaced efforts on your part to lighten his work below
+ the requirements of custom. Always he will beg you to ease up on him, to
+ accord him favour; and always he will despise you if you yield. The
+ relations of man to man, of man to work, are all long since established by
+ immemorial distauri-custom-and it is not for you or him to change them
+ lightly. If you know what he should or can do, and hold him rigidly to it,
+ he will respect and follow you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in order to keep him up to the mark, it is not always advisable to
+ light into him with a whip, necessary as the whip often is. If he is
+ sullen, or inclined to make mischief, then that is the crying requirement.
+ But if he is merely careless, or a little slow, or tired, you can handle
+ him in other ways. Ridicule before his comrades is very effective: a sort
+ of good-natured guying, I mean. &ldquo;Ah! very tired!&rdquo; uttered in the right
+ tone of voice has brought many a loiterer to his feet as effectively as
+ the kick some men feel must always be bestowed, and quite without anger,
+ mind you! For days at a time we have kept our men travelling at good speed
+ by commenting, as though by the way, after we had arrived in camp, on
+ which tribe happened to come in at the head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! Kavirondos came in first to-night,&rdquo; we would remark. &ldquo;Last night the
+ Monumwezis were ahead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And once, actually, by this method we succeeded in working up such a
+ feeling of rivalry that the Kikuyus, the unambitious, weak and despised
+ Kikuyus, led the van!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the first hint of insubordination, of intended insolence, of willful
+ shirking must be met by instant authority. Occasionally, when the
+ situation is of the quick and sharp variety, the white man may have to mix
+ in the row himself. He must never hesitate an instant; for the only reason
+ he alone can control so many is that he has always controlled them. F. had
+ a very effective blow, or shove, which I found well worth adopting. It is
+ delivered with the heel of the palm to the man's chin, and is more of a
+ lifting, heaving shove than an actual blow. Its effect is immediately
+ upsetting. Impertinence is best dealt with in this manner on the spot.
+ Evidently intended slowness in coming when called is also best treated by
+ a flick of the whip-and forgetfulness. And so with a half dozen others.
+ But any more serious matter should be decided from the throne of the
+ canvas chair, witness should be heard, judgment formally pronounced, and
+ execution intrusted to the askaris or gunbearers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is, as I have said, a most interesting game. It demands three sorts of
+ knowledge: first what a safari man is capable of doing; second, what he
+ customarily should or should not do; third, an ability to read the actual
+ intention or motive back of his actions. When you are able to punish or
+ hold your hand on these principles, and not merely because things have or
+ have not gone smoothly or right, then you are a good safari manager. There
+ are mighty few of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for punishment, that is quite simply the whip. The average writer on
+ the country speaks of this with hushed voice and averted face as a
+ necessity but as something to be deprecated and passed over as quickly as
+ possible. He does this because he thinks he ought to. As a matter of fact,
+ such an attitude is all poppycock. In the flogging of a white man, or a
+ black who suffers from such a punishment in his soul as well as his body,
+ this is all very well. But the safari man expects it, it doesn't hurt his
+ feelings in the least, it is ancient custom. As well sentimentalize over
+ necessary schoolboy punishment, or over father paddy-whacking little
+ Willie when little Willie has been a bad boy. The chances are your porter
+ will leap to his feet, crack his heels together and depart with a whoop of
+ joy, grinning from ear to ear. Or he may draw himself up and salute you,
+ military fashion, again with a grin. In any case his &ldquo;soul&rdquo; is not
+ &ldquo;scared&rdquo; a little bit, and there is no sense in yourself feeling about it
+ as though it were.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At another slant the justice you will dispense to your men differs from
+ our own. Again this is because of the teaching long tradition has made
+ part of their mental make-up. Our own belief is that it is better to let
+ two guilty men go than to punish one innocent. With natives it is the
+ other way about. If a crime is committed the guilty MUST be punished.
+ Preferably he alone is to be dealt with; but in case it is impossible to
+ identify him, then all the members of the first inclusive unit must be
+ brought to account. This is the native way of doing things; is the only
+ way the native understands; and is the only way that in his mind true
+ justice is answered. Thus if a sheep is stolen, the thief must be caught
+ and punished. Suppose, however it is known to what family the thief
+ belongs, but the family refuses to disclose which of its members committed
+ the theft: then each member must be punished for sheep stealing; or, if
+ not the family, then the tribe must make restitution. But punishment MUST
+ be inflicted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is an essential justice to recommend this, outside the fact that it
+ has with the native all the solidity of accepted ethics, and it certainly
+ helps to run the real criminal to earth. The innocent sometimes suffers
+ innocently, but not very often; and our own records show that in that
+ respect with us it is the same. This is not the place to argue the right
+ or wrong of the matter from our own standpoint but to recognize the fact
+ that it is right from theirs, and to act accordingly. Thus in cast of
+ theft of meat, or something that cannot be traced, it is well to call up
+ the witnesses, to prove the alibis, and then to place the issue squarely
+ up to those that remain. There may be but two, or there may be a dozen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know you did not all steal the meat,&rdquo; you must say, &ldquo;but I know that
+ one of you did. Unless I know which one that is by to-morrow morning, I
+ will kiboko all of you. Bass!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps occasionally you may have to kiboko the lot, in the full knowledge
+ that most are innocent. That seems hard; and your heart will misgive you.
+ Harden it. The &ldquo;innocent&rdquo; probably know perfectly well who the guilty man
+ is. And the incident builds for the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had intended nowhere to comment on the politics or policies of the
+ country. Nothing is more silly than the casual visitor's snap judgments on
+ how a country is run. Nevertheless, I may perhaps be pardoned for
+ suggesting that the Government would strengthen its hand, and aid its few
+ straggling settlers by adopting this native view of retributions. For
+ instance, at present it is absolutely impossible to identify individual
+ sheep and cattle stealers. They operate stealthily and at night. If the
+ Government cannot identify the actual thief, it gives the matter up. As a
+ consequence a great hardship is inflicted on the settler and an evil
+ increases. If, however, the Government would hold the village, the
+ district, or the tribe responsible, and exact just compensation from such
+ units in every case, the evil would very suddenly come to an end. And the
+ native's respect for the white man would climb in the scale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once the safari man gets confidence in his master, that confidence is
+ complete. The white man's duties are in his mind clearly defined. His job
+ is to see that the black man is fed, is watered, is taken care of in every
+ way. The ordinary porter considers himself quite devoid of responsibility.
+ He is also an improvident creature, for he drinks all his water when he
+ gets thirsty, no matter how long and hot the journey before him; he eats
+ his rations all up when he happens to get hungry, two days before next
+ distribution time; he straggles outrageously at times and has to be
+ rounded up; he works three months and, on a whim, deserts two days before
+ the end of his journey, thus forfeiting all his wages. Once two porters
+ came to us for money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What for?&rdquo; asked C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To buy a sheep,&rdquo; said they.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For two months we had been shooting them all the game meat they could eat,
+ but on this occasion two days had intervened since the last kill. If they
+ had been on trading safari they would have had no meat at all. A sheep
+ cost six rupees in that country, and they were getting but ten rupees a
+ month as wages. In view of the circumstances, and for their own good, we
+ refused. Another man once insisted on purchasing a cake of violet-scented
+ soap for a rupee. Their chief idea of a wild time in Nairobi, after return
+ from a long safari, is to SIT IN A CHAIR and drink tea. For this they pay
+ exorbitantly at the Somali so-called &ldquo;hotels.&rdquo; It is a strange sight. But
+ then, I have seen cowboys off the range or lumberjacks from the river do
+ equally extravagant and foolish things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand they carry their loads well, they march tremendously,
+ they know their camp duties and they do them. Under adverse circumstances
+ they are good-natured. I remember C. and I, being belated and lost in a
+ driving rain. We wandered until nearly midnight. The four or five men with
+ us were loaded heavily with the meat and trophy of a roan. Certainly they
+ must have been very tired; for only occasionally could we permit them to
+ lay down their loads. Most of the time we were actually groping, over
+ boulders, volcanic rocks, fallen trees and all sorts of tribulation. The
+ men took it as a huge joke, and at every pause laughed consumedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In making up a safari one tries to mix in four or five tribes. This
+ prevents concerted action in case of trouble, for no one tribe will help
+ another. They vary both in tribal and individual characteristics, of
+ course. For example, the Kikuyus are docile but mediocre porters; the
+ Kavirondos strong carriers but turbulent and difficult to handle. You are
+ very lucky if you happen on a camp jester, one of the sort that sings,
+ shouts, or jokes while on the march. He is probably not much as a porter,
+ but he is worth his wages nevertheless. He may or may not aspire to his
+ giddy eminence. We had one droll-faced little Kavirondo whose very
+ expression made one laugh, and whose rueful remarks on the harshness of
+ his lot finally ended by being funny. His name got to be a catchword in
+ camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mualo! Mualo!&rdquo; the men would cry, as they heaved their burdens to their
+ heads; and all day long their war cry would ring out, &ldquo;Mualo!&rdquo; followed by
+ shrieks of laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the other type was Sulimani, a big, one-eyed Monumwezi, who had a
+ really keen wit coupled with an earnest, solemn manner. This man was no
+ buffoon, however; and he was a good porter, always at or near the head of
+ the procession. In the great jungle south of Kenia we came upon
+ Cuninghame. When the head of our safari reached the spot Sulimani left the
+ ranks and, his load still aloft danced solemnly in front of Cuninghame,
+ chanting something in a loud tone of voice. Then with a final deep
+ &ldquo;Jambo!&rdquo; to his old master he rejoined the safari. When the day had
+ stretched to weariness and the men had fallen to a sullen plodding,
+ Sulimani's vigorous song could always set the safari sticks tapping the
+ sides of the chop boxes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He carried part of the tent, and the next best men were entrusted with the
+ cook outfit and our personal effects. It was a point of honour with these
+ men to be the first in camp. The rear, the very extreme and straggling
+ rear, was brought up by worthless porters with loads of cornmeal-and the
+ weary askaris whose duty it was to keep astern and herd the lot in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIV. A DAY ON THE ISIOLA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Early one morning-we were still on the Isiola-we set forth on our horses
+ to ride across the rolling, brush-grown plain. Our intention was to
+ proceed at right angles to our own little stream until we had reached the
+ forest growth of another, which we could dimly make out eight or ten miles
+ distant. Billy went with us, so there were four a-horseback. Behind us
+ trudged the gunbearers, and the syces, and after them straggled a dozen or
+ fifteen porters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun was just up, and the air was only tepid as yet. From patches of
+ high grass whirred and rocketed grouse of two sorts. They were so much
+ like our own ruffed grouse and prairie chicken that I could with no effort
+ imagine myself once more a boy in the coverts of the Middle West. Only
+ before us we could see the stripes of trotting zebra disappearing; and
+ catch the glint of light on the bayonets of the oryx. Two giraffes
+ galumphed away to the right. Little grass antelope darted from clump to
+ clump of grass. Once we saw gerenuk-oh, far away in an impossible
+ distance. Of course we tried to stalk them; and as usual we failed. The
+ gerenuk we had come to look upon as our Lesser Hoodoo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beast is a gazelle about as big as a black-tailed deer. His
+ peculiarity is his excessively long neck, a good deal on the giraffe
+ order. With it he crops browse above high tide mark of other animals,
+ especially when as often happens he balances cleverly on his hind legs. By
+ means of it also he can, with his body completely concealed, look over the
+ top of ordinary cover and see you long before you have made out his
+ inconspicuous little head. Then he departs. He seems to have a lamentable
+ lack of healthy curiosity about you. In that respect he should take
+ lessons from the kongoni. After that you can follow him as far as you
+ please; you will get only glimpses at three or four hundred yards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We remounted sadly and rode on. The surface of the ground was rather soft,
+ scattered with round rocks the size of a man's head, and full of pig
+ holes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cheerful country to ride over at speed,&rdquo; remarked Billy. Later in the day
+ we had occasion to remember that statement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plains led us ever on. First would be a band of scattered brush
+ growing singly and in small clumps: then a little open prairie; then a
+ narrow, long grass swale; then perhaps a low, long hill with small single
+ trees and rough, volcanic footing. Ten thousand things kept us interested.
+ Game was everywhere, feeding singly, in groups, in herds, game of all
+ sizes and descriptions. The rounded ears of jackals pointed at us from the
+ grass. Hundreds of birds balanced or fluttered about us, birds of all
+ sizes from the big ground hornbill to the littlest hummers and sun birds.
+ Overhead, across the wonderful variegated sky of Africa the broad-winged
+ carrion hunters and birds of prey wheeled. In all our stay on the Isiola
+ we had not seen a single rhino track, so we rode quite care free and
+ happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, across a glade, not over a hundred and fifty yards away, we saw a
+ solitary bull oryx standing under a bush. B. wanted an oryx. We discussed
+ this one idly. He looked to be a decent oryx, but nothing especial.
+ However, he offered a very good shot; so B., after some hesitation,
+ decided to take it. It proved to be by far the best specimen we shot, the
+ horns measuring thirty-six and three fourths inches! Almost immediately
+ after, two of the rather rare striped hyenas leaped from the grass and
+ departed rapidly over the top of a hill. We opened fire, and F. dropped
+ one of them. By the time these trophies were prepared, the sun had mounted
+ high in the heavens, and it was getting hot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly we abandoned that still distant river and swung away in a wide
+ circle to return to camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several minor adventures brought us to high noon and the heat of the day.
+ B. had succeeded in drawing a prize, one of the Grevy's or mountain zebra.
+ He and the gunbearers engaged themselves with that, while we sat under the
+ rather scanty shade of a small thorn tree and had lunch. Here we had a
+ favourable chance to observe that very common, but always wonderful
+ phenomenon, the gathering of the carrion birds. Within five minutes after
+ the stoop of the first vulture above the carcass, the sky immediately over
+ that one spot was fairly darkened with them. They were as thick as
+ midges-or as ducks used to be in California. All sizes were there from the
+ little carrion crows to the great dignified vultures and marabouts and
+ eagles. The small fry flopped and scolded, and rose and fell in a dense
+ mass; the marabouts walked with dignified pace to and fro through the
+ grass all about. As far as the eye could penetrate the blue, it could make
+ out more and yet more of the great soarers stooping with half bent wings.
+ Below we could see uncertainly through the shimmer of the mirage the bent
+ forms of the men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We ate and waited; and after a little we dozed. I was awakened suddenly by
+ a tremendous rushing roar, like the sound of a not too distant waterfall.
+ The group of men were plodding toward us carrying burdens. And like
+ plummets the birds were dropping straight down from the heavens, spreading
+ wide their wings at the last moment to check their speed. This made the
+ roaring sound that had awakened me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A wide spot in the shimmer showed black and struggling against the ground.
+ I arose and walked over, meeting halfway B. and the men carrying the meat.
+ It took me probably about two minutes to reach the place where the zebra
+ had been killed. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of the great birds were
+ standing idly about; a dozen or so were flapping and scrambling in the
+ centre. I stepped into view. With a mighty commotion they all took wing
+ clumsily, awkwardly, reluctantly. A trampled, bloody space and the larger
+ bones, picked absolutely clean, was all that remained! In less than two
+ minutes the job had been done!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're certainly good workmen!&rdquo; I exclaimed, &ldquo;but I wonder how you all
+ make a living!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We started the men on to camp with the meat, and ourselves rested under
+ the shade. The day had been a full and interesting one; but we considered
+ it as finished. Remained only the hot journey back to camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a half hour we mounted again and rode on slowly. The sun was very
+ strong and a heavy shimmer clothed the plain. Through this shimmer we
+ caught sight of something large and black and flapping. It looked like a
+ crow-or, better, a scare-crow-crippled, half flying, half running, with
+ waving wings or arms, now dwindling, now gigantic as the mirage caught it
+ up or let it drop. As we watched, it developed, and we made it out to be a
+ porter, clad in a long, ragged black overcoat, running zigzag through the
+ bushes in our direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moment we identified it we spurred our horses forward. As my horse
+ leaped, Memba Sasa snatched the Springfield from my left hand and forced
+ the 405 Winchester upon me. Clever Memba Sasa! He no more than we knew
+ what was up, but shrewdly concluded that whatever it was it needed a heavy
+ gun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we galloped to meet him, the porter stopped. We saw him to be a very
+ long-legged, raggedy youth whom we had nicknamed the Marabout because of
+ his exceedingly long, lean legs, the fact that his breeches were white,
+ short and baggy, and because he kept his entire head shaved close. He
+ called himself Fundi, which means The Expert, a sufficient indication of
+ his confidence in himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He awaited us leaning on his safari stick, panting heavily, the sweat
+ running off his face in splashes. &ldquo;Simba!&rdquo;* said he, and immediately set
+ off on a long, easy lope ahead of us. We pulled down to a trot and
+ followed him.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Lion
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At the end of a half mile we made out a man up a tree. Fundi, out of
+ breath, stopped short and pointed to this man. The latter, as soon as he
+ had seen us, commenced to scramble down. We spurred forward to find out
+ where the lions had been last seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Billy covered herself with glory by seeing them first. She apprised
+ us of that fact with some excitement. We saw the long, yellow bodies of
+ two of them disappearing in the edge of the brush about three hundred
+ yards away. With a wild whoop we tore after them at a dead run.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then began a wild ride. Do you remember Billy's remark about the nature of
+ the footing? Before long we closed in near enough to catch occasional
+ glimpses of the beasts, bounding easily along. At that moment B.'s horse
+ went down in a heap. None of us thought for a moment of pulling up. I
+ looked back to see B. getting up again, and thought I caught fragments of
+ encouraging-sounding language. Then my horse went down. I managed to hold
+ my rifle clear, and to cling to the reins. Did you ever try to get on a
+ somewhat demoralized horse in a frantic hurry, when all your friends were
+ getting farther away every minute, and so lessening your chances of being
+ in the fun? I began to understand perfectly B.'s remarks of a moment
+ before. However, on I scrambled, and soon overtook the hunt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We dodged in and out of bushes, and around and over holes. Every few
+ moments we would catch a glimpse of one of those silently bounding lions,
+ and then we would let out a yell. Also every few moments one or the other
+ of us would go down in a heap, and would scramble up and curse, and
+ remount hastily. Billy had better luck. She had no gun, and belonged a
+ little in the rear anyway, but was coming along game as a badger for all
+ that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My own horse had the legs of the others quite easily, and for that reason
+ I was ahead far enough to see the magnificent sight of five lions sideways
+ on, all in a row, standing in the grass gazing at me with a sort of calm
+ and impersonal dignity. I wheeled my horse immediately so as to be ready
+ in case of a charge, and yelled to the others to hurry up. While I sat
+ there, they moved slowly off one after the other, so that by the time the
+ men had come, the lions had gone. We now had no difficulty in running into
+ them again. Once more my better animal brought me to the lead, so that for
+ the second time I drew up facing the lions, and at about one hundred yards
+ range. One by one they began to leave as before, very leisurely and
+ haughtily, until a single old maned fellow remained. He, however, sat
+ there, his great round head peering over the top of the grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he seemed to say, &ldquo;here I am, what do you intend to do about it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The others arrived, and we all dismounted. B. had not yet killed his lion,
+ so the shot was his. Billy very coolly came up behind and held his horse.
+ I should like here to remark that Billy is very terrified of spiders. F.
+ and I stood at the ready, and B. sat down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Riding fast an exciting mile or so, getting chucked on your head two or
+ three times, and facing your first lion are none of them conducive to
+ steady shooting. The first shot therefore went high, but the second hit
+ the lion square in the chest, and he rolled over dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We all danced a little war dance, and congratulated B. and turned to get
+ the meaning of a queer little gurgling gasp behind us. There was Fundi!
+ That long-legged scarecrow, not content with running to get us and then
+ back again, had trailed us the whole distance of our mad chase over broken
+ ground at terrific speed in order to be in at the death. And he was just
+ about all in at the death. He could barely gasp his breath, his eyes stuck
+ out; he looked close to apoplexy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bwana! bwana!&rdquo; was all he could say. &ldquo;Master! master!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We shook hands with Fundi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My son,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;you're a true sport, and you'll surely get yours
+ later.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not understand me, but he grinned. The gunbearers began to drift
+ in, also completely pumped. They set up a feeble shout when they saw the
+ dead lion. It was a good maned beast, three feet six inches at the
+ shoulder, and nine feet long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We left Fundi with the lion, instructing him to stay there until some of
+ the other men came up. We remounted and pushed on slowly in hopes of
+ coming on one of the others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here and there we rode, our courses interweaving, looking eagerly. And lo!
+ through a tiny opening in the brush we espied one of those elusive gerenuk
+ standing not over one hundred yards away. Whereupon I dismounted and did
+ some of the worst shooting I perpetrated in Africa, for I let loose three
+ times at him before I landed. But land I did, and there was one Lesser
+ Hoodoo broken. Truly this was our day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We measured him and started to prepare the trophy, when to us came
+ Mavrouki and a porter, quite out of breath, but able to tell us that they
+ had been scouting around and had seen two of the lions. Then, instead of
+ leaving one up a tree to watch, both had come pell-mell to tell us all
+ about it. We pointed this out to them, and called their attention to the
+ fact that the brush was wide, that lions are not stationary objects, and
+ that, unlike the leopard, they can change their spots quite readily.
+ However, we remounted and went to take a look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course there was nothing. So we rode on, rather aimlessly, weaving in
+ and out of the bushes and open spaces. I think we were all a little tired
+ from the long day and the excitement, and hence a bit listless. Suddenly
+ we were fairly shaken out of our saddles by an angry roar just ahead.
+ Usually a lion growls, low and thunderous, when he wants, to warn you that
+ you have gone about far enough; but this one was angry all through at
+ being followed about so much, and he just plain yelled at us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He crouched near a bush forty yards away, and was switching his tail. I
+ had heard that this was a sure premonition of an instant charge, but I had
+ not before realized exactly what &ldquo;switching the tail&rdquo; meant. I had thought
+ of it as a slow sweeping from side to side, after the manner of the
+ domestic cat. This lion's tail was whirling perpendicularly from right to
+ left, and from left to right with the speed and energy of a flail actuated
+ by a particularly instantaneous kind of machinery. I could see only the
+ outline of the head and this vigorous tail; but I took instant aim and let
+ drive. The whole affair sank out of sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We made a detour around the dead lion without stopping to examine him,
+ shouting to one of the men to stay and watch the carcass. Billy alone
+ seemed uninfected with the now prevalent idea that we were likely to find
+ lions almost anywhere. Her skepticism was justified. We found no more
+ lions; but another miracle took place for all that. We ran across the
+ second imbecile gerenuk, and B. collected it! These two were the only ones
+ we ever got within decent shot of, and they sandwiched themselves neatly
+ with lions. Truly, it WAS our day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a time we gave it up, and went back to measure and photograph our
+ latest prize. It proved to be a male, maneless, two inches shorter than
+ that killed by B., and three feet five and one half inches tall at the
+ shoulder. My bullet had reached the brain just over the left eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, toward sunset, we headed definitely toward camp. The long shadows and
+ beautiful lights of evening were falling across the hills far the other
+ side the Isiola. A little breeze with a touch of coolness breathed down
+ from distant unseen Kenia. We plodded on through the grass quite happily,
+ noting the different animals coming out to the cool of the evening. The
+ line of brush that marked the course of the Isiola came imperceptibly
+ nearer until we could make out the white gleam of the porters' tents and
+ wisps of smoke curling upward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then a small black mass disengaged itself from the camp and came slowly
+ across the prairie in our direction. As it approached we made it out to be
+ our Monumwezis, twenty strong. The news of the lions had reached them, and
+ they were coming to meet us. They were huddled in a close knot, their
+ heads inclined toward the centre. Each man carried upright a peeled white
+ wand. They moved in absolute unison and rhythm, on a slanting zigzag in
+ our direction: first three steps to the right, then three to the left,
+ with a strong stamp of the foot between. Their bodies swayed together.
+ Sulimani led them, dancing backward, his wand upheld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sheeka!&rdquo; he enunciated in a piercing half whistle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the swaying men responded in chorus, half hushed, rumbling, with
+ strong aspiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Goom zoop! goom zoop!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When fifty yards from us, however, the formation broke and they rushed us
+ with a yell. Our horses plunged in astonishment, and we had hard work to
+ prevent their bolting, small blame to 'em! The men surrounded us, shaking
+ our hands frantically. At once they appropriated everything we or our
+ gunbearers carried. One who got left otherwise insisted on having Billy's
+ parasol. Then we all broke for camp at full speed, yelling like fiends,
+ firing our revolvers in the air. It was a grand entry, and a grand
+ reception. The rest of the camp poured out with wild shouts. The dark
+ forms thronged about us, teeth flashing, arms waving. And in the
+ background, under the shadows of the trees were the Monumwezis, their
+ formation regained, close gathered, heads bent, two steps swaying to the
+ right-stamp! two steps swaying to the left-stamp!-the white wands
+ gleaming, and the rumble of their lion song rolling in an undertone:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Goom zoop! goom zoop!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XV. THE LION DANCE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We took our hot baths and sat down to supper most gratefully, for we were
+ tired. The long string of men, bearing each a log of wood, filed in from
+ the darkness to add to our pile of fuel. Saa-sita and Shamba knelt and
+ built the night fire. In a moment the little flame licked up through the
+ carefully arranged structure. We finished the meal, and the boys whisked
+ away the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then out in the blackness beyond our little globe of light we became aware
+ of a dull confusion, a rustling to and fro. Through the shadows the eye
+ could guess at movement. The confusion steadied to a kind of rhythm, and
+ into the circle of the fire came the group of Monumwezis. Again they were
+ gathered together in a compact little mass; but now they were bent nearly
+ double, and were stripped to the red blankets about their waists. Before
+ them writhed Sulimani, close to earth, darting irregularly now to right,
+ now to left, wriggling, spreading his arms abroad. He was repeating over
+ and over two phrases; or rather the same phrase in two such different
+ intonations that they seemed to convey quite separate meanings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ka soompeele?&rdquo; he cried with a strongly appealing interrogation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ka soompeele!&rdquo; he repeated with the downward inflection of decided
+ affirmation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the bent men, their dark bodies gleaming in the firelight, stamping in
+ rhythm every third step, chorused in a deep rumbling bass:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Goom zoop! goom zoop!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus they advanced; circled between us and the fire, and withdrew to the
+ half darkness, where tirelessly they continued the same reiterations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hardly had they withdrawn when another group danced forward in their
+ places. These were the Kikuyus. They had discarded completely their safari
+ clothes, and now came forth dressed out in skins, in strips of white
+ cloth, with feathers, shells and various ornaments. They carried white
+ wands to represent spears, and they sang their tribal lion song. A soloist
+ delivered the main argument in a high wavering minor and was followed by a
+ deep rumbling emphatic chorus of repetition, strongly accented so that the
+ sheer rhythm of it was most pronounced:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An-gee a Ka ga An-gee a Ka ga An-gee a Ka ga Ki ya Ka ga Ka ga an gee
+ ya!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Solemnly and loftily, their eyes fixed straight before them they made the
+ circle of the fire, passed before our chairs, and withdrew to the half
+ light. There, a few paces from the stamping, crouching Monumwezis, they
+ continued their performance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next to appear were the Wakambas. These were more histrionic. They too
+ were unrecognizable as our porters, for they too had for the lion
+ discarded their work-a-day garments in favour of savage. They produced a
+ pantomime of the day's doings, very realistic indeed, ending with a half
+ dozen of dark swaying bodies swinging and shuddering in the long grass as
+ lions, while the &ldquo;horses&rdquo; wove in and out among the crouching forms, all
+ done to the beat of rhythm. Past us swept the hunt, and in its turn melted
+ into the half light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Kavirondos next appeared, the most fantastically caparisoned of the
+ lot, fine big black men, their eyes rolling with excitement. They had
+ captured our flag from its place before the big tent, and were rallied
+ close about this, dancing fantastically. Before us they leaped and stamped
+ and shook their spears and shouted out their full-voiced song, while the
+ other three tribes danced each its specialty dimly in the background.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dance thus begun lasted for fully two hours. Each tribe took a turn
+ before us, only to give way to the next. We had leisure to notice
+ minutiae, such as the ingenious tail one of the &ldquo;lions&rdquo; had constructed
+ from a sweater. As time went on, the men worked themselves to a frenzy.
+ From the serried ranks every once in a while one would break forth with a
+ shriek to rush headlong into the fire, to beat the earth about him with
+ his club, to rush over to shake one of us violently by the hand, or even
+ to seize one of our feet between his two palms. Then with equal abruptness
+ back he darted to regain his place among the dancers. Wilder and wilder
+ became the movements, higher rose the voices. The mock lion hunt grew more
+ realistic, and the slaughter on both sides something tremendous. Lower and
+ lower crouched the Monumwezi, drawing apart with their deep &ldquo;goom&rdquo;;
+ drawing suddenly to a common centre with the sharp &ldquo;zoop!&rdquo; Only the
+ Kikuyus held their lofty bearing as they rolled forth their chant, but the
+ mounting excitement showed in their tense muscles and the rolling of their
+ eyes. The sweat glistened on naked black and bronze bodies. Among the
+ Monumwezi to my astonishment I saw Memba Sasa, stripped like the rest, and
+ dancing with all abandon. The firelight leaped high among the logs that
+ eager hands cast on it; and the shadows it threw from the swirling,
+ leaping figures wavered out into a great, calm darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night guard understood a little of the native languages, so he stood
+ behind our chairs and told us in Swahili the meaning of some of the
+ repeated phrases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This has been a glorious day; few safaris have had so glorious a day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The masters looked upon the fierce lions and did not run away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Brave men without other weapons will nevertheless kill with a knife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The masters' mothers must be brave women, the masters are so brave.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The white woman went hunting, and so were many lions killed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last one pleased Billy. She felt that at last she was appreciated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We sat there spellbound by the weird savagery of the spectacle-the great
+ licking fire, the dancing, barbaric figures, the rise and fall of the
+ rhythm, the dust and shuffle, the ebb and flow of the dance, the dim,
+ half-guessed groups swaying in the darkness-and overhead the calm tropic
+ night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, fairly exhausted, they stopped. Some one gave a signal. The men
+ all gathered in one group, uttered a final yell, very like a cheer, and
+ dispersed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We called up the heroes of the day-Fundi and his companion-and made a
+ little speech, and bestowed appropriate reward. Then we turned in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVI. FUNDI
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Fundi, as I have suggested, was built very much on the lines of the
+ marabout stork. He was about twenty years old, carried himself very erect,
+ and looked one straight in the eye. His total assets when he came to us
+ were a pair of raggedy white breeches, very baggy, and an old mesh
+ undershirt, ditto ditto. To this we added a jersey, a red blanket, and a
+ water bottle. At the first opportunity he constructed himself a pair of
+ rawhide sandals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout the first part of the trip he had applied himself to business
+ and carried his load. He never made trouble. Then he and his companion saw
+ five lions; and the chance Fundi had evidently long been awaiting came to
+ his hand. He ran himself almost into coma, exhibited himself game, and so
+ fell under our especial and distinguished notice. After participating
+ whole-heartedly in the lion dance he and his companion were singled out
+ for Our Distinguished Favour, to the extent of five rupees per. Thus far
+ Fundi's history reads just like the history of any ordinary Captain of
+ Industry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning, after the interesting ceremony of rewarding the worthy, we
+ moved on to a new camp. When the line-up was called for, lo! there stood
+ Fundi, without a load, but holding firmly my double-barrelled rifle.
+ Evidently he had seized the chance of favour-and the rifle-and intended to
+ be no longer a porter but a second gunbearer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This looked interesting, so we said nothing. Fundi marched the day through
+ very proudly. At evening he deposited the rifle in the proper place, and
+ set to work with a will at raising the big tent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day following he tried it again. It worked. The third day he marched
+ deliberately up past the syce to take his place near me. And the fourth
+ day, as we were going hunting, Fundi calmly fell in with the rest. Nothing
+ had been said, but Fundi had definitely grasped his chance to rise from
+ the ranks. In this he differed from his companion in glory. That worthy
+ citizen pocketed his five rupees and was never heard from again; I do not
+ even remember his name nor how he looked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I killed a buck of some sort, and Memba Sasa, as usual, stepped forward to
+ attend to the trophy. But I stopped him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fundi,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;if you are a gunbearer, prepare this beast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stepped up confidently and set to work. I watched him closely. He did
+ it very well, without awkwardness, though he made one or two minor
+ mistakes in method.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you done this before?&rdquo; I inquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, bwana.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did you learn to do it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have watched the gunbearers when I was a porter bringing in meat.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Except in the greatest emergencies a gunbearer would never
+ think of carrying any sort of a burden.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This was pleasing, but it would never do, at this stage of the game, to
+ let him think so, neither on his own account nor that of the real
+ gunbearers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will bring in meat today also,&rdquo; said I, for I was indeed a little
+ shorthanded, &ldquo;and you will learn how to make the top incision straighter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we had reached camp I handed him the Springfield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Clean this,&rdquo; I told him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He departed with it, returning it after a time for my inspection. It
+ looked all right. I catechized him on the method he had employed-for high
+ velocities require very especial treatment-and found him letter perfect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You learned this also by watching?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, bwana, I watched the gunbearers by the fire, evenings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evidently Fundi had been preparing for his chance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day, as he walked alongside, I noticed that he had not removed the
+ leather cap, or sight protector, that covers the end of the rifle and is
+ fastened on by a leather thong. Immediately I called a halt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fundi,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;do you know that the cover should be in your pocket?
+ Suppose a rhinoceros jumps up very near at hand: how can you get time to
+ unlace the thong and hand me the rifle?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He thrust the rifle at me suddenly. In some magical fashion the sight
+ cover had disappeared!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have thought of this,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and I have tied the thong, so, in
+ order that it come away with one pull; and I snatch it off, so, with my
+ left hand while I am giving you the gun with my right hand. It seemed good
+ to keep the cover on, for there are many branches, and the sight is very
+ easy to injure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course this was good sense, and most ingenious; Fundi bade fair to be
+ quite a boy, but the native African is very easily spoiled. Therefore,
+ although my inclination was strongly to praise him, I did nothing of the
+ sort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A gunbearer carries the gun away from the branches,&rdquo; was my only comment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shortly after occurred an incident by way of deeper test. We were all
+ riding rather idly along the easy slope below the foothills. The grass was
+ short, so we thought we could see easily everything there was to be seen;
+ but, as we passed some thirty yards from a small tree, an unexpected and
+ unnecessary rhinoceros rose from an equally unexpected and unnecessary
+ green hollow beneath the tree, and charged us. He made straight for Billy.
+ Her mule, panic-stricken, froze with terror in spite of Billy's attack
+ with a parasol. I spurred my own animal between her and the charging
+ brute, with some vague idea of slipping off the other side as the rhino
+ struck. F. and B. leaped from their own animals, and F., with a little.28
+ calibre rifle, took a hasty shot at the big brute. Now, of course a.28
+ calibre rifle would hardly injure a rhino, but the bullet happened to
+ catch his right shoulder just as he was about to come down on his right
+ foot. The shock tripped him up as neatly as though he had been upset by a
+ rope. At the same instant Billy's mule came to its senses and bolted,
+ whereupon I too jumped off. The whole thing took about two finger snaps of
+ time. At the instant I hit the ground, Fundi passed the double rifle
+ across the horse's back to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Note two things to the credit of Fundi: in the first place, he had not
+ bolted; in the second place, instead of running up to the left side of my
+ mount and perhaps colliding with and certainly confusing me, he had come
+ up on the right side and passed the rifle to me ACROSS the horse. I do not
+ know whether or not he had figured this out beforehand, but it was
+ cleverly done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rhinoceros rolled over and over, like a shot rabbit, kicked for a
+ moment, and came to his feet. We were now all ready for him, in battle
+ array, but he had evidently had enough. He turned at right angles and
+ trotted off, apparently-and probably-none the worse for the little bullet
+ in his shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fundi now began acquiring things that he supposed befitting to his
+ dignity. The first of these matters was a faded fez, in which he stuck a
+ long feather. From that he progressed in worldly wealth. How he got it
+ all, on what credit, or with what hypnotic power, I do not know. Probably
+ he hypothecated his wages, certainly he had his five rupees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At any rate he started out with a ragged undershirt and a pair of white,
+ baggy breeches. He entered Nairobi at the end of the trip with a cap, a
+ neat khaki shirt, two water bottles, a cartridge belt, a sash with a
+ tassel, a pair of spiral puttees, an old pair of shoes, and a personal
+ private small boy, picked up en route from some of the savage tribes, to
+ carry his cooking pot, make his fires, draw his water, and generally
+ perform his lordly behests. This was indeed
+ &ldquo;more-than-oriental-splendour!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From now on Fundi considered himself my second gunbearer. I had no use for
+ him, but Fundi's development interested me, and I wanted to give him a
+ chance. His main fault at first was eagerness. He had to be rapped pretty
+ sharply and a good number of times before he discovered that he really
+ must walk in the rear. His habit of calling my attention to perfectly
+ obvious things I cured by liberal sarcasm. His intense desire to take his
+ own line as perhaps opposed to mine when we were casting about on trail, I
+ abated kindly but firmly with the toe of my boot. His evident but mistaken
+ tendency to consider himself on an equality with Memba Sasa we both
+ squelched by giving him the hard and dirty work to do. But his faults were
+ never those of voluntary omission, and he came on surprisingly; in fact so
+ surprisingly that he began to get quite cocky over it. Not that he was
+ ever in the least aggressive or disrespectful or neglectful-it would have
+ been easy to deal with that sort of thing-but he carried his head pretty
+ high, and evidently began to have mental reservations. Fundi needed a
+ little wholesome discipline. He was forgetting his porter days, and was
+ rapidly coming to consider himself a full-fledged gunbearer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The occasion soon arose. We were returning from a buffalo hunt and ran
+ across two rhinoceroses, one of which carried a splendid horn. B. wanted a
+ well developed specimen very much, so we took this chance. The approach
+ was easy enough, and at seventy yards or so B. knocked her flat with a
+ bullet from his.465 Holland. The beast was immediately afoot, but was as
+ promptly smothered by shots from us all. So far the affair was very
+ simple, but now came complication. The second rhinoceros refused to leave.
+ We did not want to kill it, so we spent a lot of time and pains shooing it
+ away. We showered rocks and clods of earth in his direction; we yelled
+ sharply and whistled shrilly. The brute faced here and there, his pig eyes
+ blinking, his snout upraised, trying to locate us, and declining to budge.
+ At length he gave us up as hopeless, and trotted away slowly. We let him
+ go, and when we thought he had quite departed, we approached to examine
+ B.'s trophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whereupon the other craftily returned; and charged us, snorting like an
+ engine blowing off steam. This was a genuine premeditated charge, as
+ opposed to a blind rush, and it is offered as a good example of the sort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rhinoceros had come fairly close before we got into action. He headed
+ straight for F. and myself, with B. a little to one side. Things happened
+ very quickly. F. and I each planted a heavy bullet in his head; while B.
+ sent a lighter Winchester bullet into the ribs. The rhino went down in a
+ heap eleven yards away, and one of us promptly shot him in the spine to
+ finish him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Personally I was entirely concentrated in the matter at hand-as is always
+ the way in crises requiring action-and got very few impressions from
+ anything outside. Nevertheless I imagined, subconsciously that I had heard
+ four shots. F. and B. disclaimed more than one apiece, so I concluded
+ myself mistaken, exchanged my heavy rifle with Fundi for the lighter
+ Winchester, and we started for camp, leaving all the boys to attend to the
+ dead rhinos. At camp I threw down the lever of my Winchester-and drew out
+ an exploded shell!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was a double crime on Fundi's part. In the first place, he had fired
+ the gun, a thing no bearer is supposed ever to do in any circumstances
+ short of the disarmament and actual mauling of his master. Naturally this
+ is so, for the white man must be able in an emergency to depend ABSOLUTELY
+ on his second gun being loaded and ready for his need. In the second
+ place, Fundi had given me an empty rifle to carry home. Such a weapon is
+ worse than none in case of trouble; at least I could have gone up a tree
+ in the latter case. I would have looked sweet snapping that old cartridge
+ at anything dangerous!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore after supper we stationed ourselves in a row before the fire,
+ seated in our canvas chairs, and with due formality sent word that we
+ wanted all the gunbearers. They came and stood before us. Memba Sasa
+ erect, military, compact, looking us straight in the eye; Mavrouki
+ slightly bent forward, his face alive with the little crafty, calculating
+ smile peculiar to him; Simba, tall and suave, standing with much social
+ ease; and Fundi, a trifle frightened, but uncertain as to whether or not
+ he had been found out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We stated the matter in a few words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gunbearers, this man Fundi, when the rhinoceros charged, fired Winchi.
+ Was this the work of a gunbearer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three seasoned men looked at each other with shocked astonishment that
+ such depravity could exist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And being frightened, he gave back Winchi with the exploded cartridge in
+ her. Was that the work of a gunbearer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, bwana,&rdquo; said Fundi humbly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You, the gunbearers, have been called because we wish to know what should
+ be done with this man Fundi.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It should be here explained that it is not customary to kiboko, or flog,
+ men of the gunbearer class. They respect themselves and their calling, and
+ would never stand that sort of punishment. When one blunders, a sarcastic
+ scolding is generally sufficient; a more serious fault may be punished on
+ the spot by the white man's fist; or a really bad dereliction may cause
+ the man's instant degradation from the post. With this in mind we had
+ called the council of gunbearers. Memba Sasa spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bwana,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;this man is not a true gunbearer. He is no longer a
+ true porter. He carries a gun in the field, like a gunbearer; and he knows
+ much of the duty of gunbearer. Also he does not run away nor climb trees.
+ But he carries in the meat; and he is not a real gunbearer. He is half
+ porter and half gunbearer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What punishment shall he have?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kiboko,&rdquo; said they.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you. Bass!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They went, leaving Fundi. We surveyed him, quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You a gunbearer!&rdquo; said we at last. &ldquo;Memba Sasa says you are half
+ gunbearer. He was wrong. You are all porter; and you know no more than
+ they do. It is in our mind to put you back to carrying a load. If you do
+ not wish to taste the kiboko, you can take a load to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The kiboko, bwana,&rdquo; pleaded Fundi, very abashed and humble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Furthermore,&rdquo; we added crushingly, &ldquo;you did not even hit the rhinoceros!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So with all ceremony he got the kiboko. The incident did him a lot of
+ good, and toned down his exuberance somewhat. Nevertheless he still
+ required a good deal of training, just as does a promising bird dog in its
+ first season. Generally his faults were of over-eagerness. Indeed, once he
+ got me thoroughly angry in face of another rhinoceros by dancing just out
+ of reach with the heavy rifle, instead of sticking close to me where I
+ could get at him. I temporarily forgot the rhino, and advanced on Fundi
+ with the full intention of knocking his fool head off. Whereupon this six
+ feet something of most superb and insolent pride wilted down to a small
+ boy with his elbow before his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't hit, bwana! Don't hit!&rdquo; he begged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole thing was so comical, especially with Memba Sasa standing by
+ virtuous and scornful, that I had hard work to keep from laughing.
+ Fortunately the rhinoceros behaved himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proud moment of Fundi's life was when safari entered Nairobi at the
+ end of the first expedition. He had gone forth with a load on his head,
+ rags on his back, and his only glory was the self-assumed one of the name
+ he had taken-Fundi, the Expert. He returned carrying a rifle, rigged from
+ top to toe in new garments and fancy accoutrements, followed by a toro, or
+ small boy, he had bought from some of the savage tribes to carry his
+ blanket and cooking pot for him. To the friends who darted out to the line
+ of march, he was gracious, but he held his head high, and had no time for
+ mere persiflage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did not take Fundi on my second expedition, for I had no real use for a
+ second gunbearer. Several times subsequently I saw him on the streets of
+ Nairobi. Always he came up to greet me, and ask solicitously if I would
+ not give him a job. This I was unable to do. When we paid off, I had made
+ an addition to his porter's wages, and had written him a chit. This said
+ that the boy had the makings of a gunbearer with further training. It
+ would have been unfair to possible white employers to have said more.
+ Fundi was, when I left the country, precisely in the position of any young
+ man who tries to rise in the world. He would not again take a load as
+ porter, and he was not yet skilled enough or known enough to pick up more
+ than stray jobs as gunbearer. Before him was struggle and hard times, with
+ a certainty of a highly considered profession if he won through. Behind
+ him was steady work without outlets for ambition. It was distinctly up to
+ him to prove whether he had done well to reach for ambition, or whether he
+ would have done better in contentment with his old lot. And that is in
+ essence a good deal like our own world isn't it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVII. NATIVES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Up to this time, save for a few Masai at the very beginning of our trip,
+ we had seen no natives at all. Only lately, the night of the lion dance,
+ one of the Wanderobo-the forest hunters-had drifted in to tell us of
+ buffalo and to get some meat. He was a simple soul, small and capable, of
+ a beautiful red-brown, with his hair done up in a tight, short queue. He
+ wore three skewers about six inches long thrust through each of his ears,
+ three strings of blue beads on his neck, a bracelet tight around his upper
+ arm, a bangle around his ankle, a pair of rawhide sandals, and about a
+ half yard of cotton cloth which he hung from one shoulder. As weapons he
+ carried a round-headed, heavy club, or runga, and a long-bladed spear. He
+ led us to buffalo, accepted a thirty-three cent blanket, and made fire
+ with two sticks in about thirty seconds. The only other evidences of human
+ life we had come across were a few beehives suspended in the trees. These
+ were logs, bored hollow and stopped at either end. Some of them were very
+ quaintly carved. They hung in the trees like strange fruits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, however, after leaving the Isiola, we were to quit the game country
+ and for days travel among the swarming millions of the jungle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few preliminary and entirely random observations may be permitted me by
+ way of clearing the ground for a conception of these people. These
+ observations do not pretend to be ethnological, nor even common logical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first thing for an American to realize is that our own negro
+ population came mainly from the West Coast, and differed utterly from
+ these peoples of the highlands in the East. Therefore one must first of
+ all get rid of the mental image of our own negro &ldquo;dressed up&rdquo; in savage
+ garb. Many of these tribes are not negro at all-the Somalis, the Nandi,
+ and the Masai, for example-while others belong to the negroid and Nilotic
+ races. Their colour is general cast more on the red-bronze than the black,
+ though the Kavirondos and some others are black enough. The texture of
+ their skin is very satiny and wonderful. This perfection is probably due
+ to the constant anointing of the body with oils of various sorts. As a
+ usual thing they are a fine lot physically. The southern Masai will
+ average between six and seven feet in height, and are almost invariably
+ well built. Of most tribes the physical development is remarkably strong
+ and graceful; and a great many of the women will display a rounded, firm,
+ high-breasted physique in marked contrast to the blacks of the lowlands.
+ Of the different tribes possibly the Kikuyus are apt to count the most
+ weakly and spindly examples: though some of these people, perhaps a
+ majority, are well made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Furthermore, the native differentiates himself still further in impression
+ from our negro in his carriage and the mental attitude that lies behind
+ it. Our people are trying to pattern themselves on white men, and succeed
+ in giving a more or less shambling imitation thereof. The native has
+ standards, ideas, and ideals that perfectly satisfy him, and that
+ antedated the white man's coming by thousands of years. The consciousness
+ of this reflects itself in his outward bearing. He does not shuffle; he is
+ not either obsequious or impudent. Even when he acknowledges the white
+ man's divinity and pays it appropriate respect, he does not lose the poise
+ of his own well-worked-out attitude toward life and toward himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are fond of calling these people primitive. In the world's standard of
+ measurement they are primitive, very primitive indeed. But ordinarily by
+ that term, we mean also undeveloped, embryonic. In that sense we are
+ wrong. Instead of being at the very dawn of human development, these
+ people are at the end-as far as they themselves are concerned. The
+ original racial impulse that started them down the years toward
+ development has fulfilled its duty and spent its force. They have worked
+ out all their problems, established all their customs, arranged the world
+ and its phenomena in a philosophy to their complete satisfaction. They
+ have lived, ethnologists tell us, for thousands, perhaps hundreds of
+ thousands of years, just as we find them to-day. From our standpoint that
+ is in a hopeless intellectual darkness, for they know absolutely nothing
+ of the most elementary subjects of knowledge. From their standpoint,
+ however, they have reached the highest DESIRABLE pinnacle of human
+ development. Nothing remains to be changed. Their customs, religions, and
+ duties have been worked out and immutably established long ago; and nobody
+ dreams of questioning either their wisdom or their imperative necessity.
+ They are the conservatives of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor must we conclude-looking at them with the eyes of our own
+ civilization-that the savage is, from his standpoint, lazy and idle. His
+ life is laid out more rigidly than ours will be for a great many thousands
+ of years. From childhood to old age he performs his every act in accord
+ with prohibitions and requirements. He must remember them all; for
+ ignorance does not divert consequences. He must observe them all; in pain
+ of terrible punishments. For example, never may he cultivate on the site
+ of a grave; and the plants that spring up from it must never be cut.* He
+ must make certain complicated offerings before venturing to harvest a
+ crop. On crossing the first stream of a journey he must touch his lips
+ with the end of his wetted bow, wade across, drop a stone on the far side,
+ and then drink. If he cuts his nails, he must throw the parings into a
+ thicket. If he drink from a stream, and also cross it, he must eject a
+ mouthful of water back into the stream. He must be particularly careful
+ not to look his mother-in-law in the face. Hundreds of omens by the manner
+ of their happening may modify actions, as, on what side of the road a
+ woodpecker calls, or in which direction a hyena or jackal crosses the
+ path, how the ground hornbill flies or alights, and the like. He must
+ notice these things, and change his plans according to their occurrence.
+ If he does not notice them, they exercise their influence just the same.
+ This does not encourage a distrait mental attitude. Also it goes far to
+ explain otherwise unexplainable visitations. Truly, as Hobley says in his
+ unexcelled work on the A-Kamba, &ldquo;the life of a savage native is a complex
+ matter, and he is hedged round by all sorts of rules and prohibitions, the
+ infringement of which will probably cause his death, if only by the
+ intense belief he has in the rules which guide his life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Customs are not universal among the different tribes. I am
+ merely illustrating.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For these rules and customs he never attempts to give a reason. They are;
+ and that is all there is to it. A mere statement: &ldquo;This is the custom&rdquo;
+ settles the matter finally. There is no necessity, nor passing thought
+ even, of finding any logical cause. The matter was worked out in the
+ mental evolution of remote ancestors. At that time, perhaps, insurgent and
+ Standpatter, Conservative and Radical fought out the questions of the day,
+ and the Muckrakers swung by their tails and chattered about it. Those days
+ are all long since over. The questions of the world are settled forever.
+ The people have passed through the struggles of their formative period to
+ the ultimate highest perfection of adjustment to material and spiritual
+ environment of which they were capable under the influence of their
+ original racial force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parenthetically, it is now a question whether or not an added impulse can
+ be communicated from without. Such an impulse must (a) unsettle all the
+ old beliefs, (b) inspire an era of skepticism, (c) reintroduce the old
+ struggle of ideas between the Insurgent and the Standpatter, and Radical
+ and the Conservative, (d) in the meantime furnish, from the older
+ civilization, materials, both in the thought-world and in the
+ object-world, for building slowly a new set of customs more closely
+ approximating those we are building for ourselves. This is a longer and
+ slower and more complicated affair than teaching the native to wear
+ clothes and sing hymns; or to build houses and drink gin; but it is what
+ must be accomplished step by step before the African peoples are really
+ civilized. I, personally, do not think it can be done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now having, a hundred thousand years or so ago, worked out the highest
+ good of the human race, according to them, what must they say to
+ themselves and what must their attitude be when the white man has come and
+ has unrolled his carpet of wonderful tricks? The dilemma is evident.
+ Either we, as black men, must admit that our hundred-thousand-year-old
+ ideas as to what constitutes the highest type of human relation to
+ environment is all wrong, or else we must evolve a new attitude toward
+ this new phenomena. It is human nature to do the latter. Therefore the
+ native has not abandoned his old gods; nor has he adopted a new. He still
+ believes firmly that his way is the best way of doing things, but he
+ acknowledges the Superman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the Superman, with all races, anything is possible. Only our Superman
+ is an idea, and ideal. The native has his Superman before him in the
+ actual flesh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will suppose that our own Superman has appeared among us, accomplishing
+ things that apparently contravene all our established tenets of skill, of
+ intellect, of possibility. It will be readily acknowledged that such an
+ individual would at first create some astonishment. He wanders into a
+ crowded hotel lobby, let us say, evidently with the desire of going to the
+ bar. Instead of pushing laboriously through the crowd, he floats just
+ above their heads, gets his drink, and floats out again! That is
+ levitation, and is probably just as simple to him as striking a match is
+ to you and me. After we get thoroughly accustomed to him and his life, we
+ are no longer vastly astonished, though always interested, at the various
+ manifestations of his extraordinary powers. We go right along using the
+ marvellous wireless, aeroplanes, motor cars, constructive machinery, and
+ the like that make us confident-justly, of course-in that we are about the
+ smartest lot of people on earth. And if we see red, white, and blue
+ streamers of light crossing the zenith at noon, we do not manifest any
+ very profound amazement. &ldquo;There's that confounded Superman again,&rdquo; we
+ mutter, if we happen to be busy. &ldquo;I wonder what stunt he's going to do
+ now!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A consideration of the above beautiful fable may go a little way toward
+ explaining the supposed native stolidity in the face of the white man's
+ wonders. A few years ago some misguided person brought a balloon to
+ Nairobi. The balloon interested the white people a lot, but everybody was
+ chiefly occupied wondering what the natives would do when they saw THAT!
+ The natives did not do anything. They gathered in large numbers, and most
+ interestedly watched it go up, and then went home again. But they were not
+ stricken with wonder to any great extent. So also with locomotives, motor
+ cars, telephones, phonographs-any of our modern ingenuities. The native is
+ pleased and entertained, but not astonished. &ldquo;Stupid creature, no
+ imagination,&rdquo; say we, because our pride in showing off is a wee bit hurt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should he be astonished? His mental revolution took place when he saw
+ the first match struck. It is manifestly impossible for any one to make
+ fire instantaneously by rubbing one small stick. When for the first time
+ he saw it done, he was indeed vastly astounded. The immutable had been
+ changed. The law had been transcended. The impossible had been
+ accomplished. And then, as logical sequence, his mind completed the
+ syllogism. If the white man can do this impossibility, why not all the
+ rest? To defy the laws of nature by flying in the air or forcing great
+ masses of iron to transport one, is no more wonderful than to defy them by
+ striking a light. Since the white man can provedly do one, what earthly
+ reason exists why he should not do anything else that hits his fancy?
+ There is nothing to get astonished at.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This does not necessarily mean that the native looks on the white man as a
+ god. On the contrary, your African is very shrewd in the reading of
+ character. But indubitably white men possess great magic, uncertain in its
+ extent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is as far as I should care to go, without much deeper acquaintance,
+ into the attitude of the native mind toward the whites. A superficial
+ study of it, beyond the general principals I have enunciated, discloses
+ many strange contradictions. The native respects the white man's warlike
+ skill, he respects his physical prowess, he certainly acknowledges tacitly
+ his moral superiority in the right to command. In case of dispute he likes
+ the white man's adjudication; in case of illness the man's medicine; in
+ case of trouble the white man's sustaining hand. Yet he almost never
+ attempts to copy the white man's appearance or ways of doing things. His
+ own savage customs and habits he fulfils with as much pride as ever in
+ their eternal fitness. Once I was badgering Memba Sasa, asking him whether
+ he thought the white skin or the black skin the more ornamental. &ldquo;You are
+ not white,&rdquo; he retorted at last. &ldquo;That,&rdquo; pointing to a leaf of my
+ notebook, &ldquo;is white. You are red. I do not like the looks of red people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They call our speech the &ldquo;snake language,&rdquo; because of its hissing sound.
+ Once this is brought to your attention, indeed, you cannot help noticing
+ the superabundance of the sibilants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A queer melange the pigeonholes of an African's brain must contain-fear
+ and respect, strongly mingled with clear estimate of intrinsic character
+ of individuals and a satisfaction with his own standards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor, I think, do we realize sufficiently the actual fundamental
+ differences between the African and our peoples. Physically they must be
+ in many ways as different from our selves as though they actually belonged
+ to a different species. The Masai are a fine big race, enduring, well
+ developed and efficient. They live exclusively on cow's milk mixed with
+ blood; no meat, no fruit, no vegetables, no grain; just that and nothing
+ more. Obviously they must differ from us most radically, or else all our
+ dietetic theories are wrong. It is a well-known fact that any native
+ requires a triple dose of white man's medicine. Furthermore a native's
+ sensitiveness to pain is very much less than the white man's. This is
+ indubitable. For example, the Wakamba file-or, rather, chip, by means of a
+ small chisel-all their front teeth down to needle points, When these
+ happen to fall out, the warrior substitutes an artificial tooth which he
+ drives down into the socket. If the savage got the same effects from such
+ a performance that a white man's dental system would arouse, even &ldquo;savage
+ stoicism&rdquo; would hardly do him much good. There is nothing to be gained by
+ multiplying examples. Every African traveller can recall a thousand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Incidentally, and by the way, I want to add to the milk-and-blood joke on
+ dietetics another on the physical culturists. We are all familiar with the
+ wails over the loss of our toe nails. You know what I mean; they run
+ somewhat like this: shoes are the curse of civilization; if we wear them
+ much longer we shall not only lose the intended use of our feet, but we
+ shall lose our toe nails as well; the savage man, etc., etc., etc. Now I
+ saw a great many of said savage men in Africa, and I got much interested
+ in their toe nails, because I soon found that our own civilized
+ &ldquo;imprisoned&rdquo; toe nails were very much better developed. In fact, a large
+ number of the free and untramelled savages have hardly any toe nails at
+ all! Whether this upsets a theory, nullifies a sentimental protest, or
+ merely stands as an exception, I should not dare guess. But the fact is
+ indubitable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVIII. IN THE JUNGLE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ (a) THE MARCH TO MERU
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, one day we left the Isiola River and cut across on a long upward
+ slant to the left. In a very short time we had left the plains, and were
+ adrift in an ocean of brown grass that concealed all but the bobbing loads
+ atop the safari, and over which we could only see when mounted. It was
+ glorious feed, apparently, but it contained very few animals for all that.
+ An animal could without doubt wax fat and sleek therein: but only to
+ furnish light and salutary meals to beasts of prey. Long grass makes easy
+ stalking. We saw a few ostriches, some giraffe, and three or four singly
+ adventurous oryx. The ripening grasses were softer than a rippling field
+ grain; and even more beautiful in their umber and browns. Although
+ apparently we travelled a level, nevertheless in the extreme distance the
+ plains of our hunting were dropping below, and the far off mountains were
+ slowly rising above the horizon. On the other side were two very green
+ hills, looking nearly straight up and down, and through a cleft the
+ splintered snow-clad summit of Mt. Kenia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length this gentle foothill slope broke over into rougher country.
+ Then, in the pass, we came upon many parallel beaten paths, wider and
+ straighter than the game trails-native tracks. That night we camped in a
+ small, round valley under some glorious trees, with green grass around us;
+ a refreshing contrast after the desert brown. In the distance ahead stood
+ a big hill, and at its base we could make out amid the tree-green, the
+ straight slim smoke of many fires and the threads of many roads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We began our next morning's march early, and we dropped over the hill into
+ a wide, cultivated valley. Fields of grain, mostly rape, were planted
+ irregularly among big scattered trees. The morning air, warming under the
+ sun, was as yet still, and carried sound well. The cooing, chattering and
+ calling of thousands of birds mingled with shouts and the clapping
+ together of pieces of wood. As we came closer we saw that every so often
+ scaffolds had been erected overlooking the grain, and on these scaffolds
+ naked boys danced and yelled and worked clappers to scare the birds from
+ the crops. They seemed to put a great deal of rigour into the job; whether
+ from natural enthusiasm or efficient direful supervision I could not say.
+ Certainly they must have worked in watches, however; no human being could
+ keep up that row continuously for a single day, let alone the whole season
+ of ripening grain. As we passed they fell silent and stared their fill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the banks of a boggy little stream that we had to flounder across we
+ came on a gentleman and lady travelling. They were a tall, well formed
+ pair, mahogany in colour, with the open, pleasant expression of most of
+ these jungle peoples. The man wore a string around his waist into which
+ was thrust a small leafy branch; the woman had on a beautiful skirt made
+ by halving a banana leaf, using the stem as belt, and letting the leaf
+ part hang down as a skirt. Shortly after meeting these people we turned
+ sharp to the right on a well beaten road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For nearly two weeks we were to follow this road, so it may be as well to
+ get an idea of it. Its course was a segment of about a sixth of the circle
+ of Kenia's foothills. With Kenia itself as a centre, this road swung among
+ the lower elevations about the base of that great mountain. Its course was
+ mainly down and up hundreds of the canyons radiating from the main peak,
+ and over the ridges between them. No sooner were we down, than we had to
+ climb up; and no sooner were we up, than once more down we had to plunge.
+ At times, however, we crossed considerable plateaus. Most of this country
+ was dense jungle, so dense that we could not see on either side more than
+ fifteen or twenty feet. Occasionally, atop the ridges, however, we would
+ come upon small open parks. In these jungles live millions of human
+ beings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At once, as soon as we had turned into the main road, we began to meet
+ people. In the grain fields of the valley we saw only the elevated boys,
+ and a few men engaged in weaving a little house perched on stilts. We came
+ across some of these little houses all completed, with conical roofs. They
+ were evidently used for granaries. As we mounted the slope on the other
+ side, however, the trees closed in, and we found ourselves marching down
+ the narrow aisle of the jungle itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a dense and beautiful jungle, with very tall trees and the deepest
+ shade; and the impenetrable tangle to the edge of the track. Among the
+ trees were the broad leaves of bananas and palms, the fling of leafy
+ vines. Over the track these leaned, so that we rode through splashing and
+ mottling shade. Nothing could have seemed wilder than this apparently
+ impenetrable and yet we had ridden but a short distance before we realized
+ that we were in fact passing through cultivated land. It was, again, only
+ a difference in terms. Native cultivation in this district rarely consists
+ of clearing land and planting crops in due order, but in leaving the
+ forest proper as it is, and in planting foodstuffs haphazard wherever a
+ tiny space can be made for even three hills of corn or a single banana.
+ Thus they add to rather than subtract from the typical density of the
+ jungle. At first, we found, it took some practice to tell a farm when we
+ saw it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the track narrow little paths wound immediately out of sight.
+ Sometimes we saw a wisp of smoke rising above the undergrowth and eddying
+ in the tops of the trees. Long vine ropes swung from point to point, hung
+ at intervals with such matters as feathers, bones, miniature shields,
+ carved sticks, shells and clappers: either as magic or to keep off the
+ birds. From either side the track we were conscious always of bright black
+ eyes watching us. Sometimes we caught a glimpse of their owners crouched
+ in the bush, concealed behind banana leaves, motionless and straight
+ against a tree trunk. When they saw themselves observed they vanished
+ without a sound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The upper air was musical with birds, and bright with the flutter of their
+ wings. Rarely did we see them long enough to catch a fair idea of their
+ size and shape. They flashed from shade to shade, leaving only an
+ impression of brilliant colour. There were some exceptions: as the
+ widower-bird, dressed all in black, with long trailing wing-plumes of
+ which he seemed very proud; and the various sorts of green pigeons and
+ parrots. There were many flowering shrubs and trees, and the air was laden
+ with perfume. Strange, too, it seemed to see tall trees with leaves three
+ or four feet long and half as many wide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were riding a mile or so ahead of the safari. At first we were
+ accompanied only by our gunbearers and syces. Before long, however, we
+ began to accumulate a following.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This consisted at first of a very wonderful young man, probably a chief's
+ son. He carried a long bright spear, wore a short sword thrust through a
+ girdle, had his hair done in three wrapped queues, one over each temple
+ and one behind, and was generally brought to a high state of polish by
+ means of red earth and oil. About his knee he wore a little bell that
+ jingled pleasingly at every step. From one shoulder hung a goat-skin cloak
+ embroidered with steel beads. A small package neatly done up in leaves
+ probably contained his lunch. He teetered along with a mincing up and down
+ step, every movement, and the expression of his face displaying a fatuous
+ self-satisfaction. When we looked back again this youth had magically
+ become two. Then appeared two women and a white goat. All except the goat
+ were dressed for visiting, with long chains of beads, bracelets and
+ anklets, and heavy ornaments in the distended ear lobes. The manner people
+ sprang apparently out of the ground was very disconcerting. It was a good
+ deal like those fairy-story moving pictures where a wave of the wand
+ produces beautiful ladies. By half an hour we had acquired a long
+ retinue-young warriors, old men, women and innumerable children. After we
+ had passed, the new recruits stepped quietly from the shadow of the jungle
+ and fell in. Every one with nothing much to do evidently made up his mind
+ he might as well go to Meru now as any other time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Also we met a great number of people going in the other direction. Women
+ were bearing loads of yams. Chiefs' sons minced along, their spears poised
+ in their left hands at just the proper angle, their bangles jingling,
+ their right hands carried raised in a most affected manner. Their social
+ ease was remarkable, especially in contrast with the awkwardness of the
+ lower poverty-stricken or menial castes. The latter drew one side to let
+ us pass, and stared. Our chiefs' sons, on the other hand, stepped
+ springingly and beamingly forward; spat carefully in their hands (we did
+ the same); shook hands all down the line: exchanged a long-drawn
+ &ldquo;moo-o-ga!&rdquo; with each of us; and departed at the same springing rapid
+ gait. The ordinary warriors greeted us, but did not offer to shake hands,
+ thank goodness! There were a great many of them. Across the valleys and
+ through the open spaces the sun, as it struck down the trail, was always
+ flashing back from distant spears. Twice we met flocks of sheep being
+ moved from one point to another. Three or four herdsmen and innumerable
+ small boys seemed to be in charge. Occasionally we met a real chief or
+ headman of a village, distinguished by the fact that he or a servant
+ carried a small wooden stool. With these dignitaries we always stopped to
+ exchange friendly words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These comprised the travelling public. The resident public also showed
+ itself quite in evidence. Once our retainers had become sufficiently
+ numerous to inspire confidence, the jungle people no longer hid. On the
+ contrary, they came out to the very edge of the track to exchange
+ greetings. They were very good-natured, exceedingly well-formed, and quite
+ jocular with our boys. Especially did our suave and elegant Simba sparkle.
+ This resident public, called from its daily labours and duties, did not
+ always show as gaudy a make-up as did the dressed-up travelling public.
+ Banana leaves were popular wear, and seemed to us at once pretty and
+ fresh. To be sure some had rather withered away; but even wool will
+ shrink. We saw some grass skirts, like the Sunday-school pictures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At noon we stopped under a tree by a little stream for lunch. Before long
+ a dozen women were lined up in front of us staring at Billy with all their
+ might. She nodded and smiled at them. Thereupon they sent one of their
+ number away. The messenger returned after a few moments carrying a bunch
+ of the small eating bananas which she laid at our feet. Billy fished some
+ beads out of her saddle bags, and presented them. Friendly relations
+ having been thus fully established, two or three of the women scurried
+ hastily away, to return a few moments later each with her small child. To
+ these infants they carefully and earnestly pointed out Billy and her
+ wonders, talking in a tongue unknown to us. The admonition undoubtedly ran
+ something like this:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, my child, look well at this: for when you get to be a very old
+ person you will be able to look back at the day when with your own eyes
+ you beheld a white woman. See all the strange things she wears-and HASN'T
+ she a funny face?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We offered these bung-eyed and totally naked youngsters various bribes in
+ the way of beads, the tinfoil from chocolate, and even a small piece of
+ the chocolate itself. Most of them howled and hid their faces against
+ their mothers. The mothers looked scandalized, and hypocritically
+ astounded, and mortified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They made remarks, still in an unknown language, but which much past
+ experience enabled me to translate very readily:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know what has got into little Willie,&rdquo; was the drift of it. &ldquo;I
+ have never known him to act this way before. Why, only yesterday I was
+ saying to his father that it really seemed as though that child NEVER
+ cried-&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It made me feel quite friendly and at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now at last came two marvellous and magnificent personages before whom the
+ women and children drew back to a respectful distance. These potentates
+ squatted down and smiled at us engagingly. Evidently this was a really
+ important couple, so we called up Simba, who knew the language, and had a
+ talk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were old men, straight, and very tall, with the hawk-faced,
+ high-headed dignity of the true aristocrat. Their robes were voluminous,
+ of some short-haired skins, beautifully embroidered. Around their arms
+ were armlets of polished buffalo horn. They wore most elaborate ear
+ ornaments, and long cased marquise rings extending well beyond the first
+ joints of the fingers. Very fine old gentlemen. They were quite unarmed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After appropriate greetings, we learned that these were the chief and his
+ prime minister of a nearby village hidden in the jungle. We exchanged
+ polite phrases; then offered tobacco. This was accepted. From the jungle
+ came a youth carrying more bananas. We indicated our pleasure. The old men
+ arose with great dignity and departed, sweeping the women and children
+ before them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We rode on. Our acquired retinue, which had waited at a respectful
+ distance, went on too. I suppose they must have desired the prestige of
+ being attached to Our Persons. In the depths of the forest Billy succumbed
+ to the temptation to bargain, and made her first trade. Her prize was a
+ long water gourd strapped with leather and decorated with cowry shells.
+ Our boys were completely scandalized at the price she paid for it, so I
+ fear the wily savage got ahead of her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the middle of the afternoon we sat down to wait for the safari to
+ catch up. It would never do to cheat our boys out of their anticipated
+ grand entrance to the Government post at Meru. We finally debouched from
+ the forest to the great clearing at the head of a most impressive
+ procession, flags flying, oryx horns blowing, boys chanting and beating
+ the sides of their loads with the safari sticks. As there happened to be
+ gathered, at this time, several thousand of warriors for the purpose of a
+ council, or shauri, with the District Commissioner we had just the
+ audience to delight our barbaric hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (b) MERU
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Government post at Meru is situated in a clearing won from the forest
+ on the first gentle slopes of Kenia's ranges. The clearing is a very large
+ one, and on it the grass grows green and short, like a lawn. It resembles,
+ as much as anything else, the rolling, beautiful downs of a first-class
+ country club, and the illusion is enhanced by the Commissioner's house
+ among some trees atop a hill. Well-kept roadways railed with rustic fences
+ lead from the house to the native quarters lying in the hollow and to the
+ Government offices atop another hill. Then also there are the quarters of
+ the Nubian troops; round low houses with conical grass roofs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These, and the presence everywhere of savages, rather take away from the
+ first country-club effect. A corral seemed full of a seething mob of
+ natives; we found later that this was the market, a place of exchange.
+ Groups wandered idly here and there across the greensward; and other
+ groups sat in circles under the shade of trees, each man's spear stuck in
+ the ground behind him. At stated points were the Nubians, fine, tall,
+ black, soldierly men, with red fez, khaki shirt, and short breeches, bare
+ knees and feet, spiral puttees, and a broad red sash of webbing. One of
+ these soldiers assigned us a place to camp. We directed our safari there,
+ and then immediately rode over to pay our respects to the Commissioner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter, Horne by name, greeted us with the utmost cordiality, and
+ offered us cool drinks. Then we accompanied him to a grand shauri or
+ council of chiefs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Horne was a little chap, dressed in flannels and a big slouch hat,
+ carrying only a light rawhide whip, with very little of the dignity and
+ &ldquo;side&rdquo; usually considered necessary in dealing with wild natives. The post
+ at Meru had been established only two years, among a people that had
+ always been very difficult, and had only recently ceased open hostilities.
+ Nevertheless in that length of time Horne's personal influence had won
+ them over to positive friendliness. He had, moreover, done the entire
+ construction work of the post itself; and this we now saw to be even more
+ elaborate than we had at first realized. Irrigating ditches ran in all
+ directions brimming with clear mountain water; the roads and paths were
+ rounded, graded and gravelled; the houses were substantial, well built and
+ well kept; fences, except of course the rustic, were whitewashed; the
+ native quarters and &ldquo;barracks&rdquo; were well ranged and in perfect order. The
+ place looked ten years old instead of only two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We followed Horne to an enclosure, outside the gate of which were stacked
+ a great number of spears. Inside we found the owners of those spears
+ squatted before the open side of a small, three-walled building containing
+ a table and a chair. Horne placed himself in the chair, lounged back, and
+ hit the table smartly with his rawhide whip. From the centre of the throng
+ an old man got up and made quite a long speech. When he had finished
+ another did likewise. All was carried out with the greatest decorum. After
+ four or five had thus spoken, Horne, without altering his lounging
+ attitude, spoke twenty or thirty words, rapped again on the table with his
+ rawhide whip, and immediately came over to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said he cheerfully, &ldquo;we'll have a game of golf.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was amusing, but not astonishing. Most of us have at one time or
+ another laid out a scratch hole or so somewhere in the vacant lot. We
+ returned to the house, Horne produced a sufficiency of clubs, and we
+ sallied forth. Then came the surprise of our life! We played eighteen
+ holes-eighteen, mind you-over an excellently laid-out and kept-up course!
+ The fair greens were cropped short and smooth by a well-managed small herd
+ of sheep; the putting greens were rolled, and in perfect order; bunkers
+ had been located at the correct distances; there were water hazards in the
+ proper spots. In short, it was a genuine, scientific, well-kept golf
+ course. Over it played Horne, solitary except on the rare occasions when
+ he and his assistant happened to be at the post at the same time. The
+ nearest white man was six days' journey; the nearest small civilization
+ 196 miles.* The whole affair was most astounding.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Which was, in turn, over three hundred miles from the
+ next.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Our caddies were grinning youngsters a good deal like the Gold Dust Twins.
+ They wore nothing but our golf bags. Afield were other supernumerary
+ caddies: one in case we sliced, one in case we pulled, and one in case we
+ drove straight ahead. Horne explained that unlimited caddies were easier
+ to get than unlimited golf balls. I can well believe it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ F. joined forces with Horne against B. and me for a grand international
+ match. I regret to state that America was defeated by two holes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We returned to find our camp crowded with savages. In a short time we had
+ established trade relations and were doing a brisk business. Two years
+ before we should have had to barter exclusively; but now, thanks to
+ Horne's attempt to collect an annual hut tax, money was some good. We had,
+ however, very good luck with bright blankets and cotton cloth. Our beads
+ did not happen here to be in fashion. Probably three months earlier or
+ later we might have done better with them. The feminine mind here differs
+ in no basic essential from that of civilization. Fashions change as
+ rapidly, as often and as completely in the jungle as in Paris. The trader
+ who brings blue beads when blue beads have &ldquo;gone out&rdquo; might just as well
+ have stayed at home. We bought a number of the pretty &ldquo;marquise&rdquo; rings for
+ four cents apiece (our money), some war clubs or rungas for the same,
+ several spears, armlets, stools and the like. Billy thought one of the
+ short, soft skin cloaks embroidered with steel beads might be nice to hang
+ on the wall. We offered a youth two rupees for one. This must have been a
+ high price, for every man in hearing of the words snatched off his cloak
+ and rushed forward holding it out. As that reduced his costume to a few
+ knick-knacks, Billy retired from the busy mart until we could arrange
+ matters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We dined with Horne. His official residence was most interesting. The main
+ room was very high to beams and a grass-thatched roof, with a well-brushed
+ earth floor covered with mats. It contained comfortable furniture, a small
+ library, a good phonograph, tables, lamps and the like. When the mountain
+ chill descended, Horne lit a fire in a coal-oil can with a perforated
+ bottom. What little smoke was produced by the clean burning wood lost
+ itself far aloft. Leopard skins and other trophies hung on the wall. We
+ dined in another room at a well-appointed table. After dinner we sat up
+ until the unheard of hour of ten o'clock discussing at length many matters
+ that interested us. Horne told us of his personal bodyguard consisting of
+ one son from each chief of his wide district. These youths were encouraged
+ to make as good an appearance as possible, and as a consequence turned out
+ in the extreme of savage gorgeousness. Horne spoke of them carelessly as a
+ &ldquo;matter of policy in keeping the different tribes well disposed,&rdquo; but I
+ thought he was at heart a little proud of them. Certainly, later and from
+ other sources, we heard great tales of their endurance, devotion and
+ efficiency. Also we heard that Horne had cut in half his six months' leave
+ (earned by three years' continuous service in the jungle) to hurry back
+ from England because he could not bear the thought of being absent from
+ the first collection of the hut tax! He is a good man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We said good-night to him and stepped from the lighted house into the vast
+ tropical night. The little rays of our lantern showed us the inequalities
+ of the ground, and where to step across the bubbling, little irrigation
+ streams. But thousands of stars insisted on a simplification. The broad,
+ rolling meadows of the clearing lay half guessed in the dim light; and
+ about its edge was the velvet band of the forest, dark and mysterious,
+ stretching away for leagues into the jungle. From it near at hand, far
+ away, came the rhythmic beating of solemn great drums, and the rising and
+ falling chants of the savage peoples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (C) THE CHIEFS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We left Meru well observed by a very large audience, much to the delight
+ of our safari boys, who love to show off. We had acquired fourteen more
+ small boys, or totos, ranging in age from eight to twelve years. These had
+ been fitted out by their masters to alleviate their original shenzi
+ appearance of savagery. Some had ragged blankets, which they had already
+ learned to twist turban wise around their heads; others had ragged old
+ jerseys reaching to their knees, or the wrecks of full-grown undershirts;
+ one or two even sported baggy breeches a dozen sizes too large. Each
+ carried his little load, proudly, atop his head like a real porter,
+ sufurias or cooking pots, the small bags of potio, and the like. Inside a
+ mile they had gravitated together and with the small boy's relish for
+ imitation and for playing a game, had completed a miniature safari
+ organization of their own. Thenceforth they marched in a compact little
+ company, under orders of their &ldquo;headman.&rdquo; They marched very well, too,
+ straight and proud and tireless. Of course we inspected their loads to see
+ that they were not required to carry too much for their strength; but, I
+ am bound to say, we never discovered an attempt at overloading. In fact,
+ the toto brigade was treated very well indeed. M'ganga especially took
+ great interest in their education and welfare. One of my most vivid camp
+ recollections is that of M'ganga, very benign and didactic, seated on a
+ chop box and holding forth to a semicircle of totos squatted on the ground
+ before him. On reaching camp totos had several clearly defined duties:
+ they must pick out good places for their masters' individual camps, they
+ must procure cooking stones, they must collect kindling wood and start
+ fires, they must fill the sufurias with water and set them over to boil.
+ In the meantime, their masters were attending to the pitching of the
+ bwana's camp. The rest of the time the toto played about quite happily,
+ and did light odd jobs, or watched most attentively while his master
+ showed him small details of a safari-boy's duty, or taught him simple
+ handicraft. Our boys seemed to take great pains with their totos and to
+ try hard to teach them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Also at Meru we had acquired two cocks and four hens of the ridiculously
+ small native breed. These rode atop the loads: their feet were tied to the
+ cords and there they swayed and teetered and balanced all day long,
+ apparently quite happy and interested. At each new camp site they were
+ released and went scratching and clucking around among the tents. They
+ lent our temporary quarters quite a settled air of domesticity. We named
+ the cocks Gaston and Alphonse and somehow it was rather fine, in the
+ blackness before dawn, to hear these little birds crowing stout-heartedly
+ against the great African wilderness. Neither Gaston, Alphonse nor any of
+ their harem were killed and eaten by their owners; but seemed rather to
+ fulfil the function of household pets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Along the jungle track we met swarms of people coming in to the post. One
+ large native safari composed exclusively of women were transporting loads
+ of trade goods for the Indian trader. They carried their burdens on their
+ backs by means of a strap passing over the top of the head; our own &ldquo;tump
+ line&rdquo; method. The labour seemed in no way to have dashed their spirits,
+ for they grinned at us, and joked merrily with our boys. Along the way,
+ every once in a while, we came upon people squatted down behind small
+ stocks of sugarcane, yams, bananas, and the like. With these our boys did
+ a brisk trade. Little paths led mysteriously into the jungle. Down them
+ came more savages to greet us. Everybody was most friendly and cheerful,
+ thanks to Horne's personal influence. Two years before this same lot had
+ been hostile. From every hidden village came the headmen or chiefs. They
+ all wanted to shake hands-the ordinary citizen never dreamed of aspiring
+ to that honour-and they all spat carefully into their palms before they
+ did so. This all had to be done in passing; for ordinary village headmen
+ it was beneath Our Dignity to draw rein. Once only we broke over this
+ rule. That was in the case of an old fellow with white hair who managed to
+ get so tangled up in the shrubbery that he could not get to us. He was so
+ frantic with disappointment that we made an exception and waited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About three miles out, we lost one of our newly acquired totos. Reason: an
+ exasperated parent who had followed from Meru for the purpose of
+ reclaiming his runaway offspring. The latter was dragged off howling.
+ Evidently he, like some of his civilized cousins, had &ldquo;run away to join
+ the circus.&rdquo; As nearly as we could get at it, the rest of the totos, as
+ well as the nine additional we picked up before we quitted the jungle, had
+ all come with their parents' consent. In fact, we soon discovered that we
+ could buy any amount of good sound totos, not house broke however, for an
+ average of half a rupee (16-1/2 cents) apiece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The road was very much up and down hill over the numerous ridges that
+ star-fish out from Mt. Kenia. We would climb down steep trails from 200 to
+ 800 feet (measured by aneroid), cross an excellent mountain stream of
+ crystalline dashing water, and climb out again. The trails of course had
+ no notion of easy grades. It was very hard work, especially for men with
+ loads; and it would have been impossible on account of the heat were it
+ not for the numerous streams. On the slopes and in the bottoms were
+ patches of magnificent forest; on the crests was the jungle, and
+ occasionally an outlook over extended views. The birds and the strange
+ tropical big-leaved trees were a constant delight-exotic and strange.
+ Billy was in a heaven of joy, for her specialty in Africa was plants,
+ seeds and bulbs, for her California garden. She had syces, gunbearers and
+ tent boys all climbing, shaking branches, and generally pawing about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This idiosyncracy of Billy's puzzled our boys hugely. At first they tried
+ telling her that everything was poisonous; but when that did not work,
+ they resigned themselves to their fate. In fact, some of the most
+ enterprising like Memba Sasa, Kitaru, and, later, Kongoni used of their
+ own accord to hunt up and bring in seeds and blossoms. They did not in the
+ least understand what it was for; and it used to puzzle them hugely until
+ out of sheer pity for their uneasiness, I implied that the Memsahib
+ collected &ldquo;medicine.&rdquo; That was rational, so the wrinkled brow of care was
+ smoothed. From this botanical trait, Billy got her native name of &ldquo;Beebee
+ Kooletta&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;The Lady Who Says: Go Get That.&rdquo; For in Africa every white man
+ has a name by which he is known among the native people. If you would get
+ news of your friends, you must know their local cognomens-their own white
+ man names will not do at all. For example, I was called either Bwana
+ Machumwani or Bwana N'goma. The former means merely Master Four-eyes,
+ referring to my glasses. The precise meaning of the latter is a matter
+ much disputed between myself and Billy. An N'goma is a native dance,
+ consisting of drum poundings, chantings, and hoppings around. Therefore I
+ translate myself (most appropriately) as the Master who Makes Merry. On
+ the other hand, Billy, with true feminine indirectness, insists that it
+ means &ldquo;The Master who Shouts and Howls.&rdquo; I leave it to any fairminded
+ reader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the middle of the morning we met a Government runner, a proud youth,
+ young, lithe, with many ornaments and bangles; his red skin glistening;
+ the long blade of his spear, bound around with a red strip to signify his
+ office, slanting across his shoulder; his buffalo hide shield slung from
+ it over his back; the letter he was bearing stuck in a cleft stick and
+ carried proudly before him as a priest carries a cross to the heathen-in
+ the pictures. He was swinging along at a brisk pace, but on seeing us drew
+ up and gave us a smart military salute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At one point where the path went level and straight for some distance, we
+ were riding in an absolute solitude. Suddenly from the jungle on either
+ side and about fifty yards ahead of us leaped a dozen women. They were
+ dressed in grass skirts, and carried long narrow wooden shields painted
+ white and brown. These they clashed together, shrieked shrilly, and
+ charged down on us at full speed. When within a few yards of our horses
+ noses they came to a sudden halt, once more clashed their shields,
+ shrieked, turned and scuttled away as fast as their legs could carry them.
+ At a hundred yards they repeated the performance; and charged back at us
+ again. Thus advancing and retreating, shrieking high, hitting the wooden
+ shields with resounding crash, they preceded our slow advance for a half
+ mile or so. Then at some signal unperceived by us they vanished abruptly
+ into the jungle. Once more we rode forward in silence and in solitude. Why
+ they did it I could not say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of this tissue were our days made. At noon our boys plucked us each two or
+ three banana leaves which they spread down for us to lie on. Then we dozed
+ through the hot hours in great comfort, occasionally waking to blue sky
+ through green trees, or to peer idly into the tangled jungle. At two
+ o'clock or a little later we would arouse ourselves reluctantly and move
+ on. The safari we had dimly heard passing us an hour before. In this
+ country of the direct track we did not attempt to accompany our men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The end of the day's march found us in a little clearing where we could
+ pitch camp. Generally this was atop a ridge, so that the boys had some
+ distance to carry water; but that disadvantage was outweighed by the
+ cleared space. Sometimes we found ourselves hemmed in by a wall of jungle.
+ Again we enjoyed a broad outlook. One such in especial took in the
+ magnificent, splintered, snow-capped peak of Kenia on the right, a
+ tremendous gorge and rolling forested mountains straight ahead, and a
+ great drop to a plain with other and distant mountains to the left. It was
+ as fine a panoramic view as one could imagine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our tents pitched, and ourselves washed and refreshed, we gave audience to
+ the resident chief, who had probably been waiting. With this potentate we
+ conversed affably, after the usual expectoratorial ceremonies. Billy,
+ being a mere woman, did not always come in for this; but nevertheless she
+ maintained what she called her &ldquo;quarantine gloves,&rdquo; and kept them very
+ handy. We had standing orders with our boys for basins of hot water to be
+ waiting always behind our tents. After the usual polite exchanges we
+ informed the chief of our needs-firewood, perhaps, milk, a sheep or the
+ like. These he furnished. When we left we made him a present of a few
+ beads, a knife, a blanket or such according to the value of his
+ contribution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To me these encounters were some of the most interesting of our many
+ experiences, for each man differed radically from every other in his
+ conceptions of ceremony, in his ideas, and in his methods. Our coming was
+ a good deal of an event, always, and each chief, according to his
+ temperament and training, tried to do things up properly. And in that
+ attempt certain basic traits of human nature showed in the very strongest
+ relief. Thus there are three points of view to take in running any
+ spectacle: that of the star performer, the stage manager, or the truly
+ artistic. We encountered well-marked specimens of each. I will tell you
+ about them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The star performer knew his stagecraft thoroughly; and in the exposition
+ of his knowledge he showed incidentally how truly basic are the principles
+ of stagecraft anywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were seated under a tree near the banks of a stream eating our lunch.
+ Before us appeared two tall and slender youths, wreathed in smiles,
+ engaging, and most attentive to the small niceties of courtesy. We
+ returned their greeting from our recumbent positions, whereupon they made
+ preparation to squat down beside us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you sultans?&rdquo; we demanded sternly, &ldquo;that you attempt to sit in Our
+ Presence,&rdquo; and we lazily kicked the nearest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not at all abashed, but favourably impressed with our transcendent
+ importance-as we intended-they leaned gracefully on their spears and
+ entered into conversation. After a few trifles of airy persiflage they got
+ down to business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This,&rdquo; said they, indicating the tiny flat, &ldquo;is the most beautiful place
+ to camp in all the mountains.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We doubted it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is excellent water.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We agreed to that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And there is no more water for a journey.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are liars,&rdquo; we observed politely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And near is the village of our chief, who is a great warrior, and will
+ bring you many presents; the greatest man in these parts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now you're getting to it,&rdquo; we observed in English; &ldquo;you want trade.&rdquo; Then
+ in Swahili, &ldquo;We shall march two hours longer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a few polite phrases they went away. We finished lunch, remounted,
+ and rode up the trail. At the edge of the canyon we came to a wide
+ clearing, at the farther side of which was evidently the village in
+ question. But the merry villagers, down to the last toro, were drawn up at
+ the edge of the track in a double line through which we rode. They were
+ very wealthy savages, and wore it all. Bright neck, arm, and leg
+ ornaments, yards and yards of cowry shells in strings, blue beads of all
+ sizes (blue beads were evidently &ldquo;in&rdquo;), odd scraps and shapes of
+ embroidered skins, clean shaves and a beautiful polish characterized this
+ holiday gathering. We made our royal progress between the serried ranks.
+ About eight or ten seconds after we had passed the last villager-just the
+ proper dramatic pause, you observe-the bushes parted and a splendid,
+ straight, springy young man came into view and stepped smilingly across
+ the space that separated us. And about eight or ten seconds after his
+ emergence-again just the right dramatic pause-the bushes parted again to
+ give entrance to four of the quaintest little dolls of wives. These
+ advanced all abreast, parted, and took up positions two either side the
+ smiling chief. This youth was evidently in the height of fashion, his hair
+ braided in a tight queue bound with skin, his ears dangling with
+ ornaments, heavy necklaces around his neck, and armlets etc., ad lib. His
+ robe was of fine monkey skin embroidered with rosettes of beads, and his
+ spear was very long, bright and keen. He was tall and finely built carried
+ himself with a free, lithe swing. As the quintette came to halt, the
+ villagers fell silent and our shauri began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We drew up and dismounted. We all expectorated as gentlemen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These,&rdquo; said he proudly, &ldquo;are my beebees.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We replied that they seemed like excellent beebees and politely inquired
+ the price of wives thereabout, and also the market for totos. He gave us
+ to understand that such superior wives as these brought three cows and
+ twenty sheep apiece, but that you could get a pretty good toto for half a
+ rupee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When we look upon our women,&rdquo; he concluded grandly, &ldquo;we find them good;
+ but when we look upon the white women they are as nothing!&rdquo; He completely
+ obliterated the poor little beebees with a magnificent gesture. They
+ looked very humble and abashed. I was, however, a bit uncertain as to
+ whether this was intended as a genuine tribute to Billy, or was meant to
+ console us for having only one to his four.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now observe the stagecraft of all this: entrance of diplomats, preliminary
+ conversation introducing the idea of the greatness of N'Zahgi (for that
+ was his name), chorus of villagers, and, as climax, dramatic entrance of
+ the hero and heroines. It was pretty well done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again we stopped about the middle of the afternoon in an opening on the
+ rounded top of a hill. While waiting for the safari to come up, Billy
+ wandered away fifty or sixty yards to sit under a big tree. She did not
+ stay long. Immediately she was settled, a dozen women and young girls
+ surrounded her. They were almost uproariously good-natured, but Billy was
+ probably the first white woman they had ever seen, and they intended to
+ make the most of her. Every item of her clothes and equipment they
+ examined minutely, handled and discussed. When she told them with great
+ dignity to go away, they laughed consumedly, fairly tumbling into each
+ other's arms with excess of joy. Billy tried to gather her effects for a
+ masterly retreat, but found the press of numbers too great. At last she
+ had to signal for help. One of us wandered over with a kiboko with which
+ lightly he flicked the legs of such damsels as he could reach. They
+ scattered like quail, laughing hilariously. Billy was escorted back to
+ safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shortly after the Chief and his Prime Minister came in. He was a little
+ old gray-haired gentleman, as spry as a cricket, quite nervous, and very
+ chatty. We indicated our wants to him, and he retired after enunciating
+ many words. The safari came in, made camp. We had tea and a bath. The
+ darkness fell; and still no Chief, no milk, no firewood, no promises
+ fulfilled. There were plenty of natives around camp, but when we suggested
+ that they get out and rustle on our behalf, they merely laughed
+ good-naturedly. We seriously contemplated turning the whole lot out of
+ camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally we gave it up, and sat down to our dinner. It was now quite dark.
+ The askaris had built a little campfire out in front.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, far in the distance of the jungle's depths, we heard a faint
+ measured chanting as of many people coming nearer. From another direction
+ this was repeated. The two processions approached each other; their paths
+ converged; the double chanting became a chorus that grew moment by moment.
+ We heard beneath the wild weird minors the rhythmic stamping of feet, and
+ the tapping of sticks. The procession debouched from the jungle's edge
+ into the circle of the firelight. Our old chief led, accompanied by a
+ bodyguard in all the panoply of war: ostrich feather circlets enclosing
+ the head and face, shields of bright heraldry, long glittering spears.
+ These were followed by a dozen of the quaintest solemn dolls of beebees
+ dressed in all the white cowry shells, beads and brass the royal treasury
+ afforded, very earnest, very much on inspection, every little head
+ uplifted, singing away just as hard as ever they could. Each carried a
+ gourd of milk, a bunch of bananas, some sugarcane, yams or the like.
+ Straight to the fire marched the pageant. Then the warriors dividing right
+ and left, drew up facing each other in two lines, struck their spears
+ upright in the ground, and stood at attention. The quaint brown little
+ women lined up to close the end of this hollow square, of which our group
+ was, roughly speaking, the fourth side. Then all came to attention. The
+ song now rose to a wild and ecstatic minor chanting. The beebees, still
+ singing, one by one cast their burdens between the files and at our feet
+ in the middle of the hollow square. Then they continued their chant,
+ singing away at the tops of their little lungs, their eyes and teeth
+ showing, their pretty bodies held rigidly upright. The warriors, very
+ erect and military, stared straight ahead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the chief? Was he the centre of the show, the important leading man,
+ to the contemplation of whom all these glories led? Not at all! This
+ particular chief did not have the soul of a leading man, but rather the
+ soul of a stage manager. Quite forgetful of himself and his part in the
+ spectacle, his brow furrowed with anxiety, he was flittering from one to
+ another of the performers. He listened carefully to each singer in turn,
+ holding his hand behind his ear to catch the individual note, striking one
+ on the shoulder in admonition, nodding approval at another. He darted
+ unexpectedly across to scrutinize a warrior, in the chance of catching a
+ flicker of the eyelid even. Nary a flicker! They did their stage manager
+ credit, and stood like magnificent bronzes. He even ran across to peer
+ into our own faces to see how we liked it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a sudden crescendo the music stopped. Involuntarily we broke into
+ handclapping. The old boy looked a bit startled at this, but we explained
+ to him, and he seemed very pleased. We then accepted formally the heap of
+ presents, by touching them-and in turn passed over a blanket, a box of
+ matches, and two needles, together with beads for the beebees. Then F., on
+ an inspiration, produced his flashlight. This made a tremendous sensation.
+ The women tittered and giggled and blinked as its beams were thrown
+ directly into their eyes; the chief's sons grinned and guffawed; the chief
+ himself laughed like a pleased schoolboy, and seemed never to weary of the
+ sudden shutting on and off of the switch. But the trusty Spartan warriors,
+ standing still in their formation behind their planted spears, were not to
+ be shaken. They glared straight in front of them, even when we held the
+ light within a few inches of their eyes, and not a muscle quivered!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is wonderful! wonderful!&rdquo; the old man repeated. &ldquo;Many Government men
+ have come here, but none have had anything like that! The bwanas must be
+ very great sultans!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the departure of our friends, we went rather grandly to bed. We
+ always did after any one had called us sultans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But our prize chief was an individual named M'booley.* Our camp here also
+ was on a fine cleared hilltop between two streams. After we had traded for
+ a while with very friendly and prosperous people M'booley came in. He was
+ young, tall, straight, with a beautiful smooth lithe form, and his face
+ was hawklike and cleverly intelligent. He carried himself with the
+ greatest dignity and simplicity, meeting us on an easy plane of
+ familiarity. I do not know how I can better describe his manner toward us
+ than to compare it to the manner the member of an exclusive golf club
+ would use to one who is a stranger, but evidently a guest. He took our
+ quality for granted; and supposed we must do the same by him, neither
+ acting as though he considered us &ldquo;great white men,&rdquo; nor yet standing
+ aloof and too respectful. And as the distinguishing feature of all, he was
+ absolutely without personal ornament.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Pronounce each o separately.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Pause for a moment to consider what a real advance in esthetic taste that
+ one little fact stands for. All M'booley's attendants were the giddiest
+ and gaudiest savages we had yet seen, with more colobus fur, sleighbells,
+ polished metal, ostrich plumes, and red paint than would have fitted out
+ any two other royal courts of the jungle. The women too were wealthy and
+ opulent without limit. It takes considerable perception among our
+ civilized people to realize that severe simplicity amid ultra magnificence
+ makes the most effective distinguishing of an individual. If you do not
+ believe it, drop in at the next ball to which you are invited. M'booley
+ had fathomed this, and what was more he had the strength of mind to act on
+ it. Any savage loves finery for its own sake. His hair was cut short, and
+ shaved away at the edges to leave what looked like an ordinary
+ close-fitting skull cap. He wore one pair of plain armlets on his left
+ upper arm and small simple ear-rings. His robe was black. He had no trace
+ of either oil or paint, nor did he even carry a spear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He greeted us with good-humoured ease, and inquired conversationally if we
+ wanted anything. We suggested wood and milk, whereupon still smiling, he
+ uttered a few casual words in his own language to no one in particular.
+ There was no earthly doubt that he was chief. Three of the most gorgeous
+ and haughty warriors ran out of camp. Shortly long files of women came in
+ bringing loads of firewood; and others carrying bananas, yams, sugarcane
+ and a sheep. Truly M'booley did things on a princely scale. We thanked
+ him. He accepted the thanks with a casual smile, waved his hand and went
+ on to talk of something else. In due order our M'ganga brought up one of
+ our best trade blankets, to which we added a half dozen boxes of matches
+ and a razor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now into camp filed a small procession: four women, four children, and two
+ young men. These advanced to where M'booley was standing smoking with
+ great satisfaction one of B's tailor-made cigarettes. M'booley advanced
+ ten feet to meet them, and brought them up to introduce them one by one in
+ the most formal fashion. These were of course his family, and we had to
+ confess that they &ldquo;saw&rdquo; N'Zahgi's outfit of ornaments and &ldquo;raised&rdquo; him
+ beyond the ceiling. We gave them each in turn the handshake of ceremony,
+ first with the palms as we do it, and then each grasping the other's
+ upright thumb. The &ldquo;little chiefs&rdquo; were proud, aristocratic little
+ fellows, holding themselves very straight and solemn. I think one would
+ have known them for royalty anywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was quite a social occasion. None of our guests was in the least ill at
+ ease; in fact, the young ladies were quite coy and flirtatious. We had a
+ great many jokes. Each of the little ladies received a handful of
+ prevailing beads. M'booley smiled benignly at these delightful
+ femininities. After a time he led us to the edge of the hill and showed us
+ his houses across the cation, perched on a flat about halfway up the wall.
+ They were of the usual grass-thatched construction, but rather larger and
+ neater than most. Examining them through the glasses we saw that a little
+ stream had been diverted to flow through the front yard. M'booley waved
+ his hand abroad and gave us to understand that he considered the outlook
+ worth looking at. It was; but an appreciation of that fact is foreign to
+ the average native. Next morning, when we rode by very early, we found the
+ little flat most attractively cleared and arranged. M'booley was out to
+ shake us by the hand in farewell, shivering in the cold of dawn. The
+ flirtatious and spoiled little beauties were not in evidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day after two very deep canyons we emerged from the forest jungle into
+ an up and down country of high jungle bush-brush. From the top of a ridge
+ it looked a good deal like a northern cut-over pine country grown up very
+ heavily to blackberry vines; although, of course, when we came nearer, the
+ &ldquo;blackberry vines&rdquo; proved to be ten or twenty feet high. This was a
+ district of which Horne had warned us. The natives herein were reported
+ restless and semi-hostile; and in fact had never been friendly. They
+ probably needed the demonstration most native tribes seem to require
+ before they are content to settle down and be happy. At any rate safaris
+ were not permitted in their district; and we ourselves were allowed to go
+ through merely because we were a large party, did not intend to linger,
+ and had a good reputation with natives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is very curious how abruptly, in Central Africa, one passes from one
+ condition to another, from one tribe or race to the next. Sometimes, as in
+ the present case, it is the traversing of a deep cation; at others the
+ simple crossing of a tiny brook is enough. Moreover the line of
+ demarcation is clearly defined, as boundaries elsewhere are never defined
+ save in wartime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus we smiled our good-bye to a friendly numerous people, descended a
+ hill, and ascended another into a deserted track. After a half mile we
+ came unexpectedly on to two men carrying each a load of reeds. These they
+ abandoned and fled up the hillside through the jungle, in spite of our
+ shouted assurances. A moment later they reappeared at some distance above
+ us, each with a spear he had snatched from somewhere; they were unarmed
+ when we first caught sight of them. Examined through the glasses they
+ proved to be sullen looking men, copper coloured, but broad across the
+ cheekbones, broad in the forehead, more decidedly of the negro type than
+ our late hosts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aside from these two men we travelled through an apparently deserted
+ jungle. I suspect, however, that we were probably well watched; for when
+ we stopped for noon we heard the gunbearers beyond the screen of leaves
+ talking to some one. On learning from our boys that these were some of the
+ shenzis, we told them to bring the savages in for a shauri; but in this
+ our men failed, nor could they themselves get nearer than fifty yards or
+ so to the wild people. So until evening our impression remained that of
+ two distant men, and the indistinct sound of voices behind a leafy screen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We made camp comparatively early in a wide open space surrounded by low
+ forest. Almost immediately then the savages commenced to drift in, very
+ haughty and arrogant. They were fully armed. Besides the spear and
+ decorated shield, some of them carried the curious small grass spears.
+ These are used to stab upward from below, the wielder lying flat in the
+ grass. Some of these men were fantastically painted with a groundwork
+ ochre, on which had been drawn intricate wavy designs on the legs, like
+ stockings, and varied stripes across the face. One particularly ingenious
+ individual, stark naked, had outlined a roughly entire skeleton! He was a
+ gruesome object! They stalked here and there through the camp, looking at
+ our men and their activities with a lofty and silent contempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You may be sure we had our arrangements, though they did not appear on the
+ surface. The askaris, or native soldiers, were posted here and there with
+ their muskets; the gunbearers also kept our spare weapons by them. The
+ askaris could not hit a barn, but they could make a noise. The gunbearers
+ were fair shots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course the chief and his prime minister came in. They were evil-looking
+ savages. To them we paid not the slightest attention, but went about our
+ usual business as though they did not exist. At the end of an hour they of
+ their own initiative greeted us. We did not hear them. Half an hour later
+ they disappeared, to return after an interval, followed by a string of
+ young men bearing firewood. Evidently our bearing had impressed them, as
+ we had intended. We then unbent far enough to recognize them, carried on a
+ formal conversation for a few moments, gave them adequate presents and
+ dismissed them. Then we ordered the askaris to clear camp and to keep it
+ clear. No women had appeared. Even the gifts of firewood had been carried
+ by men, a most unusual proceeding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as dark fell the drums began roaring in the forest all about our
+ clearing, and the chanting to rise. We instructed our men to shoot first
+ and inquire afterward, if a shenzi so much as showed himself in the
+ clearing. This was not as bad as it sounded; the shenzi stood in no
+ immediate danger. Then we turned in to a sleep rather light and broken by
+ uncertainty. I do not think we were in any immediate danger of a
+ considered attack, for these people were not openly hostile; but there was
+ always a chance that the savages might by their drum pounding and dancing
+ work themselves into a frenzy. Then we might have to do a little rapid
+ shooting. Not for one instant the whole night long did those misguided
+ savages cease their howling and dancing. At any rate we cost them a
+ night's sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning we took up our march through the deserted tracks once more.
+ Not a sign of human life did we encounter. About ten o'clock we climbed
+ down a tremendous gash of a box canyon with precipitous cliffs. From below
+ we looked back to see, perched high against the skyline, the motionless
+ figures of many savages watching us from the crags. So we had had company
+ after all, and we had not known it. This canyon proved to be the boundary
+ line. With the same abruptness we passed again into friendly country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (d) OUT THE OTHER SIDE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We left the jungle finally when we turned on a long angle away from Kenia.
+ At first the open country of the foothills was closely cultivated with
+ fields of rape and maize. We saw some of the people breaking new soil by
+ means of long pointed sticks. The plowmen quite simply inserted the
+ pointed end in the ground and pried. It was very slow hard work. In other
+ fields the grain stood high and good. From among the stalks, as from a
+ miniature jungle, the little naked totos stared out, and the good-natured
+ women smiled at us. The magnificent peak of Kenia had now shaken itself
+ free of the forests. On its snow the sunrises and sunsets kindled their
+ fires. The flames of grass fires, too, could plainly be made out,
+ incredible distances away, and at daytime, through the reek, were
+ fascinating suggestions of distant rivers, plains, jungles, and hills. You
+ see, we were still practically on the wide slope of Kenia's base, though
+ the peak was many days away, and so could look out over wide country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last half day of this we wandered literally in a rape field. The
+ stalks were quite above our heads, and we could see but a few yards in any
+ direction. In addition the track had become a footpath not over two feet
+ wide. We could occasionally look back to catch glimpses of a pack or so
+ bobbing along on a porter's head. From our own path hundreds of other
+ paths branched; we were continually taking the wrong fork and moving back
+ to set the safari right before it could do likewise. This we did by
+ drawing a deep double line in the earth across the wrong trail. Then we
+ hustled on ahead to pioneer the way a little farther; our difficulties
+ were further complicated by the fact that we had sent our horses back to
+ Nairobi for fear of the tsetse fly, so we could not see out above the
+ corn. All we knew was that we ought to go down hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the ends of some of our false trails we came upon fascinating little
+ settlements: groups of houses inside brush enclosures, with low wooden
+ gateways beneath which we had to stoop to enter. Within were groups of
+ beehive houses with small naked children and perhaps an old woman or old
+ man seated cross-legged under a sort of veranda. From them we obtained
+ new-and confusing-directions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After three o'clock we came finally out on the edge of a cliff fifty or
+ sixty feet high, below which lay uncultivated bottom lands like a great
+ meadow and a little meandering stream. We descended the cliff, and camped
+ by the meandering stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time we were fairly tired from long walking in the heat, and so
+ were content to sit down under our tent-fly before our little table, and
+ let Mahomet bring us sparklets and lime juice. Before us was the flat of a
+ meadow below the cliffs and the cliffs themselves. Just below the rise lay
+ a single patch of standing rape not over two acres in extent, the only
+ sign of human life. It was as though this little bit had overflowed from
+ the countless millions on the plateau above. Beyond it arose a thin signal
+ of smoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We sipped our lime juice and rested. Soon our attention was attracted by
+ the peculiar actions of a big flock of very white birds. They rose
+ suddenly from one side of the tiny rape field, wheeled and swirled like
+ leaves in the wind, and dropped down suddenly on the other side the patch.
+ After a few moments they repeated the performance. The sun caught the
+ dazzling white of their plumage. At first we speculated on what they might
+ be, then on what they were doing, to behave in so peculiar a manner. The
+ lime juice and the armchair began to get in their recuperative work.
+ Somehow the distance across that flat did not seem quite as tremendous as
+ at first. Finally I picked up the shotgun and sauntered across to
+ investigate. The cause of action I soon determined. The owner of that rape
+ field turned out to be an emaciated, gray-haired but spry old savage. He
+ was armed with a spear; and at the moment his chief business in life
+ seemed to be chasing a large flock of white birds off his grain. Since he
+ had no assistance, and since the birds held his spear in justifiable
+ contempt as a fowling piece, he was getting much exercise and few results.
+ The birds gave way before his direct charge, flopped over to the other
+ side, and continued their meal. They had already occasioned considerable
+ damage; the rape heads were bent and destroyed for a space of perhaps ten
+ feet from the outer edge of the field. As this grain probably constituted
+ the old man's food supply for a season, I did not wonder at the vehemence
+ with which he shook his spear at his enemies, nor the apparent flavour of
+ his language, though I did marvel at his physical endurance. As for the
+ birds, they had become cynical and impudent; they barely fluttered out of
+ the way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I halted the old gentleman and hastened to explain that I was neither a
+ pirate, a robber, nor an oppressor of the poor. This as counter-check to
+ his tendency to flee, leaving me in sole charge. He understood a little
+ Swahili, and talked a few words of something he intended for that
+ language. By means of our mutual accomplishment in that tongue, and
+ through a more efficient sign language, I got him to understand the plan
+ of campaign. It was very simple. I squatted down inside the rape, while he
+ went around the other side to scare them up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The white birds uttered their peculiarly derisive cackle at the old man
+ and flapped over to my side. Then they were certainly an astonished lot of
+ birds. I gave them both barrels and dropped a pair; got two more shots as
+ they swung over me and dropped another pair, and brought down a straggling
+ single as a grand finale. The flock, with shrill, derogatory remarks, flew
+ in an airline straight away. They never deviated, as far as I could follow
+ them with the eye. Even after they had apparently disappeared, I could
+ catch an occasional flash of white in the sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the old gentleman came whooping around with long, undignified bounds
+ to fall on his face and seize my foot in an excess of gratitude. He rose
+ and capered about, he rushed out and gathered in the slain one by one and
+ laid them in a pile at my feet. Then he danced a jig-step around them and
+ reviled them, and fell on his face once more, repeating the word &ldquo;Bwana!
+ bwana! bwana!&rdquo; over and over-&ldquo;Master! master! master!&rdquo; We returned to camp
+ together, the old gentleman carrying the birds, and capering about like a
+ small boy, pouring forth a flood of his sort of Swahili, of which I could
+ understand only a word here and there. Memba Sasa, very dignified and
+ scornful of such performances, met us halfway and took my gun. He seemed
+ to be able to understand the old fellow's brand of Swahili, and said it
+ over again in a brand I could understand. From it I gathered that I was
+ called a marvellously great sultan, a protector of the poor, and other
+ Arabian Nights titles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The birds proved to be white egrets. Now at home I am strongly against the
+ killing of these creatures, and have so expressed myself on many
+ occasions. But, looking from the beautiful white plumage of these
+ villainous mauraders, to the wrinkled countenance of the grateful weary
+ old savage, I could not fan a spark of regret. And from the straight line
+ of their retreating flight I like to think that the rest of the flock
+ never came back, but took their toll from the wider fields of the plateau
+ above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day we reentered the game-haunted wilderness, nor did we see any more
+ native villages until many weeks later we came into the country of the
+ Wakamba.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIX. THE TANA RIVER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Our first sight of the Tana River was from the top of a bluff. It flowed
+ below us a hundred feet, bending at a sharp elbow against the cliff on
+ which we stood. Out of the jungle it crept sluggishly and into the jungle
+ it crept again, brown, slow, viscid, suggestive of the fevers and the
+ lurking beasts by which, indeed, it was haunted. From our elevation we
+ could follow its course by the jungle that grew along its banks. At first
+ this was intermittent, leaving thin or even open spaces at intervals, but
+ lower down it extended away unbroken and very tall. The trees were many of
+ them beginning to come into flower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Either side of the jungle were rolling hills. Those to the left made up to
+ the tremendous slopes of Kenia. Those to the right ended finally in a low
+ broken range many miles away called the Ithanga Hills. The country gave
+ one the impression of being clothed with small trees; although here and
+ there this growth gave space to wide grassy plains. Later we discovered
+ that the forest was more apparent than real. The small trees, even where
+ continuous, were sparse enough to permit free walking in all directions,
+ and open enough to allow clear sight for a hundred yards or so.
+ Furthermore, the shallow wide valleys between the hills were almost
+ invariably treeless and grown to very high thick grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the course of the Tana possessed advantages to such as we. By
+ following in general the course of the stream we were always certain of
+ wood and water. The river itself was full of fish-not to speak of hundreds
+ of crocodiles and hippopotamuses. The thick river jungle gave cover to
+ such animals as the bushbuck, leopard, the beautiful colobus, some of the
+ tiny antelope, waterbuck, buffalo and rhinoceros. Among the thorn and
+ acacia trees of the hillsides one was certain of impalla, eland,
+ diks-diks, and giraffes. In the grass bottoms were lions, rhinoceroses, a
+ half dozen varieties of buck, and thousands and thousands of game birds
+ such as guinea fowl and grouse. On the plains fed zebra, hartebeeste,
+ wart-hog, ostriches, and several species of the smaller antelope. As a
+ sportsman's paradise this region would be hard to beat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were now afoot. The dreaded tsetse fly abounded here, and we had sent
+ our horses in via Fort Hall. F. had accompanied them, and hoped to rejoin
+ us in a few days or weeks with tougher and less valuable mules. Pending
+ his return we moved on leisurely, camping long at one spot, marching short
+ days, searching the country far and near for the special trophies of which
+ we stood in need.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was great fun. Generally we hunted each in his own direction and
+ according to his own ideas. The jungle along the river, while not the most
+ prolific in trophies, was by all odds the most interesting. It was very
+ dense, very hot, and very shady. Often a thorn thicket would fling itself
+ from the hills right across to the water's edge, absolutely and hopelessly
+ impenetrable save by way of the rhinoceros tracks. Along these then we
+ would slip, bent double, very quietly and gingerly, keeping a sharp
+ lookout for the rightful owners of the trail. Again we would wander among
+ lofty trees through the tops of which the sun flickered on festooned
+ serpent-like vines. Every once in a while we managed a glimpse of the
+ sullen oily river through the dense leaf screen on its banks. The water
+ looked thick as syrup, of a deadly menacing green. Sometimes we saw a
+ loathsome crocodile lying with his nose just out of water, or heard the
+ snorting blow of a hippopotamus coming up for air. Then the thicket forced
+ us inland again. We stepped very slowly, very alertly, our ears cocked for
+ the faintest sound, our eyes roving. Generally, of course, the creatures
+ of the jungle saw us first. We became aware of them by a crash or a
+ rustling or a scamper. Then we stood stock listening with all our ears for
+ some sound distinguishing to the species. Thus I came to recognize the
+ queer barking note of the bushbuck, for example, and to realize how
+ profane and vulgar that and the beautiful creature, the impalla, can be
+ when he forgets himself. As for the rhinoceros, he does not care how much
+ noise he makes, nor how badly he scares you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Personally, I liked very well to circle out in the more open country until
+ about three o'clock, then to enter the river jungle and work my way slowly
+ back toward camp. At that time of day the shadows were lengthening, the
+ birds and animals were beginning to stir about. In the cooling nether
+ world of shadow we slipped silently from thicket to thicket, from tree to
+ tree; and the jungle people fled from us, or withdrew, or gazed curiously,
+ or cursed us as their dispositions varied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While thus returning one evening I saw my first colobus. He was swinging
+ rapidly from one tree to another, his long black and white fur shining
+ against the sun. I wanted him very much, and promptly let drive at him
+ with the 405 Winchester. I always carried this heavier weapon in the dense
+ jungle. Of course I missed him, but the roar of the shot so surprised him
+ that he came to a stand. Memba Sasa passed me the Springfield, and I
+ managed to get him in the head. At the shot another flashed into view,
+ high up in the top of a tree. Again I aimed and fired. The beast let go
+ and fell like a plummet. &ldquo;Good shot,&rdquo; said I to myself. Fifty feet down
+ the colobus seized a limb and went skipping away through the branches as
+ lively as ever. In a moment he stopped to look back, and by good luck I landed
+ him through the body. When we retrieved him we found that the first shot
+ had not hit him at all!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the time I thought he must have been frightened into falling; but many
+ subsequent experiences showed me that this sheer let-go-all-holds drop is
+ characteristic of the colobus and his mode of progression. He rarely, as
+ far as my observation goes, leaps out and across as do the ordinary
+ monkeys, but prefers to progress by a series of slanting ascents followed
+ by breath-taking straight drops to lower levels. When closely pressed from
+ beneath, he will go as high as he can, and will then conceal himself in
+ the thick leaves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ B. and I procured our desired number of colobus by taking advantage of
+ this habit-as soon as we had learned it. Shooting the beasts with our
+ rifles we soon found to be not only very difficult, but also destructive
+ of the skins. On the other hand, a man could not, save by sheer good
+ fortune, rely on stalking near enough to use a shotgun. Therefore we
+ evolved a method productive of the maximum noise, row, barked shins, thorn
+ wounds, tumbles, bruises-and colobus! It was very simple. We took about
+ twenty boys into the jungle with us, and as soon as we caught sight of a
+ colobus we chased him madly. That was all there was to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet this method, simple apparently to the point of imbecility, had
+ considerable logic back of it after all; for after a time somebody managed
+ to get underneath that colobus when he was at the top of a tree. Then the
+ beast would hide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Consider then a tumbling riotous mob careering through the jungle as fast
+ as the jungle would let it, slipping, stumbling, falling flat, getting
+ tangled hopelessly, disentangling with profane remarks, falling behind and
+ catching up again, everybody yelling and shrieking. Ahead of us we caught
+ glimpses of the sleek bounding black and white creature, running up the
+ long slanting limbs, and dropping like a plummet into the lower branches
+ of the next tree. We white men never could keep up with the best of our
+ men at this sort of work, although in the open country I could hold them
+ well enough. We could see them dashing through the thick cover at a great
+ rate of speed far ahead of us. After an interval came a great shout in
+ chorus. By this we knew that the quarry had been definitely brought to a
+ stand. Arriving at the spot we craned our heads backward, and proceeded to
+ get a crick in the neck trying to make out invisible colobus in the very
+ tops of the trees above us. For gaudily marked beasts the colobus were
+ extraordinarily difficult to see. This was in no sense owing to any
+ far-fetched application of protective colouration; but to the remarkable
+ skill the animals possessed in concealing themselves behind apparently the
+ scantiest and most inadequate cover. Fortunately for us our boys' ability
+ to see them was equally remarkable. Indeed, the most difficult part of
+ their task was to point the game out to us. We squinted, and changed
+ position, and tried hard to follow directions eagerly proffered by a dozen
+ of the men. Finally one of us would, by the aid of six power-glasses, make
+ out, or guess at a small tuft of white or black hair showing beyond the
+ concealment of a bunch of leaves. We would unlimber the shotgun and send a
+ charge of BB into that bunch. Then down would plump the game, to the huge
+ and vociferous delight of all the boys. Or, as occasionally happened, the
+ shot was followed merely by a shower of leaves and a chorus of
+ expostulations indicating that we had mistaken the place, and had fired
+ into empty air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this manner we gathered the twelve we required between us. At noon we
+ sat under the bank, with the tangled roots of trees above us, and the
+ smooth oily river slipping by. You may be sure we always selected a spot
+ protected by very shoal water, for the crocodiles were numerous. I always
+ shot these loathsome creatures whenever I got a chance, whenever the sound
+ of a shot would not alarm more valuable game. Generally they were to be
+ seen in midstream, just the tip of their snouts above water, and
+ extraordinarily like anything but crocodiles. Often it took several close
+ scrutinies through the glass to determine the brutes. This required rather
+ nice shooting. More rarely we managed to see them on the banks, or only
+ half submerged. In this position, too, they were all but undistinguishable
+ as living creatures. I think this is perhaps because of their complete
+ immobility. The creatures of the woods, standing quite still, are
+ difficult enough to see; but I have a notion that the eye, unknown to
+ itself, catches the sum total of little flexings of the muscles, movements
+ of the skin, winkings, even the play of wind and light in the hair of the
+ coat, all of which, while impossible of analysis, together relieve the
+ appearance of dead inertia. The vitality of a creature like the crocodile,
+ however, seems to have withdrawn into the inner recesses of its being. It
+ lies like a log of wood, and for a log of wood it is mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless the crocodile has stored in it somewhere a fearful vitality.
+ The swiftness of its movements when seizing prey is most astonishing; a
+ swirl of water, the sweep of a powerful tail, and the unfortunate victim
+ has disappeared. For this reason it is especially dangerous to approach
+ the actual edge of any of the great rivers, unless the water is so shallow
+ that the crocodile could not possibly approach under cover, as is its
+ cheerful habit. We had considerable difficulty in impressing this
+ elementary truth on our hill-bred totos until one day, hearing wild
+ shrieks from the direction of the river, I rushed down to find the lot
+ huddled together in the very middle of a sand spit that-reached well out
+ into the stream. Inquiry developed that while paddling in the shallows
+ they had been surprised by the sudden appearance of an ugly snout and well
+ drenched by the sweep of an eager tail. The stroke fortunately missed. We
+ stilled the tumult, sat down quietly to wait, and at the end of ten
+ minutes had the satisfaction of abating that croc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Generally we killed the brutes where we found them and allowed them to
+ drift away with the current. Occasionally however we wanted a piece of
+ hide, and then tried to retrieve them. One such occasion showed very
+ vividly the tenacity of life and the primitive nervous systems of these
+ great saurians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I discovered the beast, head out of water, in a reasonable sized pool
+ below which were shallow rapids. My Springfield bullet hit him fair,
+ whereupon he stood square on his head and waved his tail in the air,
+ rolled over three or four times, thrashed the water, and disappeared.
+ After waiting a while we moved on downstream. Returning four hours later I
+ sneaked up quietly. There the crocodile lay sunning himself on the sand
+ bank. I supposed he must be dead; but when I accidentally broke a twig, he
+ immediately commenced to slide off into the water. Thereupon I stopped him
+ with a bullet in the spine. The first shot had smashed a hole in his head,
+ just behind the eye, about the size of an ordinary coffee cup. In spite of
+ this wound, which would have been instantly fatal to any warm-blooded
+ animal, the creature was so little affected that it actually reacted to a
+ slight noise made at some distance from where it lay. Of course the wound
+ would probably have been fatal in the long run.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The best spot to shoot at, indeed, is not the head but the spine
+ immediately back of the head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These brutes are exceedingly powerful. They are capable of taking down
+ horses and cattle, with no particular effort. This I know from my own
+ observation. Mr. Fleischman, however, was privileged to see the wonderful
+ sight of the capture and destruction of a full-grown rhinoceros by a
+ crocodile. The photographs he took of this most extraordinary affair leave
+ no room for doubt. Crossing a stream was always a matter of concern to us.
+ The boys beat the surface of the water vigorously with their safari
+ sticks. On occasion we have even let loose a few heavy bullets to stir up
+ the pool before venturing in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A steep climb through thorn and brush would always extricate us from the
+ river jungle when we became tired of it. Then we found ourselves in a
+ continuous but scattered growth of small trees. Between the trunks of
+ these we could see for a hundred yards or so before their numbers closed
+ in the view. Here was the favourite haunt of numerous beautiful impalla.
+ We caught glimpses of them, flashing through the trees; or occasionally
+ standing, gazing in our direction, their slender necks stretched high,
+ their ears pointed for us. These curious ones were generally the does. The
+ bucks were either more cautious or less inquisitive. A herd or so of eland
+ also liked this covered country; and there were always a few waterbuck and
+ rhinoceroses about. Often too we here encountered stragglers from the open
+ plains-zebra or hartebeeste, very alert and suspicious in unaccustomed
+ surroundings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great deal of the plains country had been burned over; and a
+ considerable area was still afire. The low bright flames licked their way
+ slowly through the grass in a narrow irregular band extending sometimes
+ for miles. Behind it was blackened soil, and above it rolled dense clouds
+ of smoke. Always accompanied it thousands of birds wheeling and dashing
+ frantically in and out of the murk, often fairly at the flames themselves.
+ The published writings of a certain worthy and sentimental person waste
+ much sympathy over these poor birds dashing frenziedly about above their
+ destroyed nests. As a matter of fact they are taking greedy advantage of a
+ most excellent opportunity to get insects cheap. Thousands of the common
+ red-billed European storks patrolled the grass just in front of the
+ advancing flames, or wheeled barely above the fire. Grasshoppers were
+ their main object, although apparently they never objected to any small
+ mammals or reptiles that came their way. Far overhead wheeled a few
+ thousand more assorted soarers who either had no appetite or had satisfied
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The utter indifference of the animals to the advance of a big
+ conflagration always impressed me. One naturally pictures the beasts as
+ fleeing wildly, nostrils distended, before the devouring element. On the
+ contrary I have seen kongoni grazing quite peacefully with flames on three
+ sides of them. The fire seems to travel rather slowly in the tough grass;
+ although at times and for a short distance it will leap to a wild and
+ roaring life. Beasts will then lope rapidly away to right or left, but
+ without excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On these open plains we were more or less pestered with ticks of various
+ sizes. These clung to the grass blades; but with no invincible preference
+ for that habitat; trousers did them just as well. Then they ascended
+ looking for openings. They ranged in size from little red ones as small as
+ the period of a printed page to big patterned fellows the size of a pea.
+ The little ones were much the most abundant. At times I have had the front
+ of my breeches so covered with them that their numbers actually imparted a
+ reddish tinge to the surface of the cloth. This sounds like exaggeration,
+ but it is a measured statement. The process of de-ticking (new and
+ valuable word) can then be done only by scraping with the back of a
+ hunting knife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some people, of tender skin, are driven nearly frantic by these pests.
+ Others, of whom I am thankful to say I am one, get off comparatively easy.
+ In a particularly bad tick country, one generally appoints one of the
+ youngsters as &ldquo;tick toto.&rdquo; It is then his job in life to de-tick any
+ person or domestic animal requiring his services. His is a busy existence.
+ But though at first the nuisance is excessive, one becomes accustomed to
+ it in a remarkably short space of time. The adaptability of the human
+ being is nowhere better exemplified. After a time one gets so that at
+ night he can remove a marauding tick and cast it forth into the darkness
+ without even waking up. Fortunately ticks are local in distribution. Often
+ one may travel weeks or months without this infliction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was always interested and impressed to observe how indifferent the wild
+ animals seem to be to these insects. Zebra, rhinoceros and giraffe seem to
+ be especially good hosts. The loathsome creatures fasten themselves in
+ clusters wherever they can grip their fangs. Thus in a tick country a
+ zebra's ears, the lids and corners of his eyes, his nostrils and lips, the
+ soft skin between his legs and body, and between his hind legs, and under
+ his tail are always crusted with ticks as thick as they can cling. One
+ would think the drain on vitality would be enormous, but the animals are
+ always plump and in condition. The same state of affairs obtains with the
+ other two beasts named. The hartebeeste also carries ticks but not nearly
+ in the same abundance; while such creatures as the waterbuck, impalla,
+ gazelles and the smaller bucks seem either to be absolutely free from the
+ pests, or to have a very few. Whether this is because such animals take
+ the trouble to rid themselves, or because they are more immune from attack
+ it would be difficult to say. I have found ticks clinging to the hair of
+ lions, but never fastened to the flesh. It is probable that they had been
+ brushed off from the grass in passing. Perhaps ticks do not like lions,
+ waterbuck, Tommies, et al., or perhaps only big coarse-grained common
+ brutes like zebra and rhinos will stand them at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XX. DIVERS ADVENTURES ALONG THE TANA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Late one afternoon I shot a wart-hog in the tall grass. The beast was an
+ unusually fine specimen, so I instructed Fundi and the porters to take the
+ head, and myself started for camp with Memba Sasa. I had gone not over a
+ hundred yards when I was recalled by wild and agonized appeals of &ldquo;Bwana!
+ bwana!&rdquo; The long-legged Fundi was repeatedly leaping straight up in the
+ air to an astonishing height above the long grass, curling his legs up
+ under him at each jump, and yelling like a steam-engine. Returning
+ promptly, I found that the wart-hog had come to life at the first prick of
+ the knife. He was engaged in charging back and forth in an earnest effort
+ to tusk Fundi, and the latter was jumping high in an equally earnest
+ effort to keep out of the way. Fortunately he proved agile enough to do so
+ until I planted another bullet in the aggressor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These wart-hogs are most comical brutes from whatever angle one views
+ them. They have a patriarchal, self-satisfied, suburban manner of complete
+ importance. The old gentleman bosses his harem outrageously, and each and
+ every member of the tribe walks about with short steps and a stuffy
+ parvenu small-town self-sufficiency. One is quite certain that it is only
+ by accident that they have long tusks and live in Africa, instead of
+ rubber-plants and self-made business and a pug-dog within commuters'
+ distance of New York. But at the slightest alarm this swollen and puffy
+ importance breaks down completely. Away they scurry, their tails held
+ stiffly and straightly perpendicular, their short legs scrabbling the
+ small stones in a frantic effort to go faster than nature had intended
+ them to go. Nor do they cease their flight at a reasonable distance, but
+ keep on going over hill and dale, until they fairly vanish in the blue. I
+ used to like starting them off this way, just for the sake of contrast,
+ and also for the sake of the delicious but impossible vision of seeing
+ their human prototypes do likewise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a wart-hog is at home, he lives down a hole. Of course it has to be a
+ particularly large hole. He turns around and backs down it. No more
+ peculiar sight can be imagined than the sardonically toothsome countenance
+ of a wart-hog fading slowly in the dimness of a deep burrow, a good deal
+ like Alice's Cheshire Cat. Firing a revolver, preferably with smoky black
+ powder, just in front of the hole annoys the wart-hog exceedingly. Out he
+ comes full tilt, bent on damaging some one, and it takes quick shooting to
+ prevent his doing so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once, many hundreds of miles south of the Tana, and many months later, we
+ were riding quite peaceably through the country, when we were startled by
+ the sound of a deep and continuous roaring in a small brush patch to our
+ left. We advanced cautiously to a prospective lion, only to discover that
+ the roaring proceeded from the depths of a wart-hog burrow. The
+ reverberation of our footsteps on the hollow ground had alarmed him. He
+ was a very nervous wart-hog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On another occasion, when returning to camp from a solitary walk, I saw
+ two wart-hogs before they saw me. I made no attempt to conceal myself, but
+ stood absolutely motionless. They fed slowly nearer and nearer until at
+ last they were not over twenty yards away. When finally they made me out,
+ their indignation and amazement and utter incredulity were very funny. In
+ fact, they did not believe in me at all for some few snorty moments.
+ Finally they departed, their absurd tails stiff upright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One afternoon F. and I, hunting along one of the wide grass bottom lands,
+ caught sight of a herd of an especially fine impalla. The animals were
+ feeding about fifty yards the other side of a small solitary bush, and the
+ bush grew on the sloping bank of the slight depression that represented
+ the dry stream bottom. We could duck down into the depression, sneak along
+ it, come up back of the little bush, and shoot from very close range.
+ Leaving the gunbearers, we proceeded to do this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So quietly did we move that when we rose up back of the little bush a
+ lioness lying under it with her cub was as surprised as we were!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, I do not think she knew what we were, for instead of attacking,
+ she leaped out the other side the bush, uttering a startled snarl. At once
+ she whirled to come at us, but the brief respite had allowed us to recover
+ our own scattered wits. As she turned I caught her broadside through the
+ heart. Although this shot knocked her down, F. immediately followed it
+ with another for safety's sake. We found that actually we had just missed
+ stepping on her tail!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cub we caught a glimpse of. He was about the size of a setter dog. We
+ tried hard to find him, but failed. The lioness was an unusually large
+ one, probably about as big as the female ever grows, measuring nine feet
+ six inches in length, and three feet eight inches tail at the shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Billy had her funny times housekeeping. The kitchen department never quite
+ ceased marvelling at her. Whenever she went to the cook-camp to deliver
+ her orders she was surrounded by an attentive and respectful audience. One
+ day, after holding forth for some time in Swahili, she found that she had
+ been standing hobnailed on one of the boy's feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Mahomet!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;That must hurt you! Why didn't you tell me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Memsahib,&rdquo; he smiled politely, &ldquo;I think perhaps you move some time!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On another occasion she was trying to tell the cook, through Mahomet as
+ interpreter, that she wanted a tough old buffalo steak pounded,
+ boarding-house style. This evidently puzzled all hands. They turned to in
+ an earnest discussion of what it was all about, anyway. Billy understood
+ Swahili well enough at that time to gather that they could not understand
+ the Memsahib's wanting the meat &ldquo;kibokoed&rdquo;&mdash;FLOGGED. Was it a religious
+ rite, or a piece of revenge? They gave it up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said Mahomet patiently at last. &ldquo;He say he do it. WHICH ONE
+ IS IT?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Part of our supplies comprised tins of dehydrated fruit. One evening Billy
+ decided to have a grand celebration, so she passed out a tin marked
+ &ldquo;rhubarb&rdquo; and some cornstarch, together with suitable instructions for a
+ fruit pudding. In a little while the cook returned.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Nataka m'tund-I want fruit,&rdquo; said he.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Billy pointed out, severely, that he already had fruit. He went away
+ shaking his head. Evening and the pudding came. It looked good, and we
+ congratulated Billy on her culinary enterprise. Being hungry, we took big
+ mouthfuls. There followed splutterings and investigations. The rhubarb can
+ proved to be an old one containing heavy gun grease!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When finally we parted with our faithful cook we bought him a really
+ wonderful many bladed knife as a present. On seeing it he slumped to the
+ ground-six feet of lofty dignity-and began to weep violently, rocking back
+ and forth in an excess of grief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, what is it?&rdquo; we inquired, alarmed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Memsahib!&rdquo; he wailed, the tears coursing down his cheeks, &ldquo;I wanted a
+ watch!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning about nine o'clock we were riding along at the edge of a
+ grass-grown savannah, with a low hill to our right and another about four
+ hundred yards ahead. Suddenly two rhinoceroses came to their feet some
+ fifty yards to our left out in the high grass, and stood looking
+ uncertainly in our direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look out! Rhinos!&rdquo; I warned instantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why-why!&rdquo; gasped Billy in an astonished tone of voice, &ldquo;they have manes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some concern for her sanity I glanced in her direction. She was
+ staring, not to her left, but straight ahead. I followed the direction of
+ her gaze, to see three lions moving across the face of the hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instantly we dropped off our horses. We wanted a shot at those lions very
+ much indeed, but were hampered in our efforts by the two rhinoceroses, now
+ stamping, snorting, and moving slowly in our direction. The language we
+ muttered was racy, but we dropped to a kneeling position and opened fire
+ on the disappearing lions. It was most distinctly a case of divided
+ attention, one eye on those menacing rhinos, and one trying to attend to
+ the always delicate operation of aligning sights and signalling from a
+ rather distracted brain just when to pull the trigger. Our faithful
+ gunbearers crouched by us, the heavy guns ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One rhino seemed either peaceable or stupid. He showed no inclination
+ either to attack or to depart, but was willing to back whatever play his
+ friend might decide on. The friend charged toward us until we began to
+ think he meant battle, stopped, thought a moment, and then, followed by
+ his companion, trotted slowly across our bows about eighty yards away,
+ while we continued our long range practice at the lions over their backs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this we were not winning many cigars. F. had a 280-calibre rifle
+ shooting the Ross cartridge through the much advertised grooveless oval
+ bore. It was little accurate beyond a hundred yards. Memba Sasa had thrust
+ the 405 into my hand, knowing it for the &ldquo;lion gun,&rdquo; and kept just out of
+ reach with the long-range Springfield. I had no time to argue the matter
+ with him. The 405 has a trajectory like a rainbow at that distance, and I
+ was guessing at it, and not making very good guesses either. B. had his
+ Springfield and made closer practice, finally hitting a leg of one of the
+ beasts. We saw him lift his paw and shake it, but he did not move lamely
+ afterward, so the damage was probably confined to a simple scrape. It was
+ a good shot anyway. Then they disappeared over the top of the hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We walked forward, regretting rhinos. Thirty yards ahead of me came a
+ thunderous and roaring growl, and a magnificent old lion reared his head
+ from a low bush. He evidently intended mischief, for I could see his tail
+ switching. However, B. had killed only one lion and I wanted very much to
+ give him the shot. Therefore, I held the front sight on the middle of his
+ chest, and uttered a fervent wish to myself that B. would hurry up. In
+ about ten seconds the muzzle of his rifle poked over my shoulder, so I
+ resigned the job.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At B.'s shot the lion fell over, but was immediately up and trying to get
+ at us. Then we saw that his hind quarters were paralyzed. He was a most
+ magnificent sight as he reared his fine old head, roaring at us full
+ mouthed so that the very air trembled. Billy had a good look at a lion in
+ action. B. took up a commanding position on an ant hill to one side with
+ his rifle levelled. F. and I advanced slowly side by side. At twelve feet
+ from the wounded beast stopped, F. unlimbered the kodak, while I held the
+ bead of the 405 between the lion's eyes, ready to press trigger at the
+ first forward movement, however slight. Thus we took several exposures in
+ the two cameras. Unfortunately one of the cameras fell in the river the
+ next day. The other contained but one exposure. While not so spectacular
+ as some of those spoiled, it shows very well the erect mane, the wicked
+ narrowing of the eyes, the flattening of the ears of an angry lion. You
+ must imagine, furthermore, the deep rumbling diapason of his growling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We backed away, and B. put in the finishing shot. The first bullet, we
+ then found, had penetrated the kidneys, thus inflicting a temporary
+ paralysis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we came to skin him we found an old-fashioned lead bullet between the
+ bones of his right forepaw. The entrance wound had so entirely healed over
+ that hardly the trace of a scar remained. From what I know of the
+ character of these beasts, I have no doubt that this ancient injury
+ furnished the reason for his staying to attack us instead of departing
+ with the other three lions over the hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Following the course of the river, we one afternoon came around a bend on
+ a huge herd of mixed game that had been down to water. The river, a quite
+ impassable barrier lay to our right, and an equally impassable precipitous
+ ravine barred their flight ahead. They were forced to cross our front,
+ quite close, within the hundred yards. We stopped to watch them go, a
+ seemingly endless file of them, some very much frightened, bounding
+ spasmodically as though stung; others more philosophical, loping easily
+ and unconcernedly; still others to a few-even stopping for a moment to get
+ a good view of us. The very young creatures, as always, bounced along
+ absolutely stiff-legged, exactly like wooden animals suspended by an
+ elastic, touching the ground and rebounding high, without a bend of the
+ knee nor an apparent effort of the muscles. Young animals seem to have to
+ learn how to bend their legs for the most efficient travel. The same is
+ true of human babies as well. In this herd were, we estimated, some four
+ or five hundred beasts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While hunting near the foothills I came across the body of a large eagle
+ suspended by one leg from the crotch of a limb. The bird's talon had
+ missed its grip, probably on alighting, the tarsus had slipped through the
+ crotch beyond the joint, the eagle had fallen forward, and had never been
+ able to flop itself back to an upright position!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXI. THE RHINOCEROS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The rhinoceros is, with the giraffe, the hippopotamus, the gerenuk, and
+ the camel, one of Africa's unbelievable animals. Nobody has bettered
+ Kipling's description of him in the Just-so Stories: &ldquo;A horn on his nose,
+ piggy eyes, and few manners.&rdquo; He lives a self-centred life, wrapped up in
+ the porcine contentment that broods within nor looks abroad over the land.
+ When anything external to himself and his food and drink penetrates to his
+ intelligence he makes a flurried fool of himself, rushing madly and
+ frantically here and there in a hysterical effort either to destroy or get
+ away from the cause of disturbance. He is the incarnation of a living and
+ perpetual Grouch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Generally he lives by himself, sometimes with his spouse, more rarely
+ still with a third that is probably a grown-up son or daughter. I
+ personally have never seen more than three in company. Some observers have
+ reported larger bands, or rather collections, but, lacking other evidence,
+ I should be inclined to suspect that some circumstances of food or water
+ rather than a sense of gregariousness had attracted a number of
+ individuals to one locality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rhinoceros has three objects in life: to fill his stomach with food
+ and water, to stand absolutely motionless under a bush, and to imitate ant
+ hills when he lies down in the tall grass. When disturbed at any of these
+ occupations he snorts. The snort sounds exactly as though the safety valve
+ of a locomotive had suddenly opened and as suddenly shut again after two
+ seconds of escaping steam. Then he puts his head down and rushes madly in
+ some direction, generally upwind. As he weighs about two tons, and can, in
+ spite of his appearance, get over the ground nearly as fast as an ordinary
+ horse, he is a truly imposing sight, especially since the innocent
+ bystander generally happens to be upwind, and hence in the general path of
+ progress. This is because the rhino's scent is his keenest sense, and
+ through it he becomes aware, in the majority of times, of man's presence.
+ His sight is very poor indeed; he cannot see clearly even a moving object
+ much beyond fifty yards. He can, however, hear pretty well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The novice, then, is subjected to what he calls a &ldquo;vicious charge&rdquo; on the
+ part of the rhinoceros, merely because his scent was borne to the beast
+ from upwind, and the rhino naturally runs away upwind. He opens fire, and
+ has another thrilling adventure to relate. As a matter of fact, if he had
+ approached from the other side, and then aroused the animal with a clod of
+ earth, the beast would probably have &ldquo;charged&rdquo; away in identically the
+ same direction. I am convinced from a fairly varied experience that this
+ is the basis for most of the thrilling experiences with rhinoceroses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But whatever the beast's first mental attitude, the danger is quite real.
+ In the beginning he rushes, upwind in instinctive reaction against the
+ strange scent. If he catches sight of the man at all, it must be after he
+ has approached to pretty close range, for only at close range are the
+ rhino's eyes effective. Then he is quite likely to finish what was at
+ first a blind dash by a genuine charge. Whether this is from malice or
+ from the panicky feeling that he is now too close to attempt to get away,
+ I never was able determine. It is probably in the majority of cases the
+ latter. This seems indicated by the fact that the rhino, if avoided in his
+ first rush, will generally charge right through and keep on going.
+ Occasionally, however, he will whirl and come back to the attack. There
+ can then be no doubt that he actually intends mischief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor must it be forgotten that with these animals, AS WITH ALL OTHERS, not
+ enough account is taken of individual variation. They, as well as man, and
+ as well as other animals, have their cowards, their fighters, their
+ slothful and their enterprising. And, too, there seem to be truculent and
+ peaceful districts. North of Mt. Kenia, between that peak and the Northern
+ Guaso Nyero River, we saw many rhinos, none of which showed the slightest
+ disposition to turn ugly. In fact, they were so peaceful that they
+ scrabbled off as fast as they could go every time they either scented,
+ heard, or SAW us; and in their flight they held their noses up, not down.
+ In the wide angle between the Tana and Thika rivers, and comprising the
+ Yatta Plains, and in the thickets of the Tsavo, the rhinoceroses generally
+ ran nose down in a position of attack and were much inclined to let their
+ angry passions master them at the sight of man. Thus we never had our
+ safari scattered by rhinoceroses in the former district, while in the
+ latter the boys were up trees six times in the course of one morning! Carl
+ Akeley, with a moving picture machine, could not tease a charge out of a
+ rhino in a dozen tries, while Dugmore, in a different part of the country,
+ was so chivied about that he finally left the district to avoid killing
+ any more of the brutes in self-defence!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact of the matter is that the rhinoceros is neither animated by the
+ implacable man-destroying passion ascribed to him by the amateur hunter,
+ nor is he so purposeless and haphazard in his rushes as some would have us
+ believe. On being disturbed his instinct is to get away. He generally
+ tries to get away in the direction of the disturbance, or upwind, as the
+ case may be. If he catches sight of the cause of disturbance he is apt to
+ try to trample and gore it, whatever it is. As his sight is short, he will
+ sometimes so inflict punishment on unoffending bushes. In doing this he is
+ probably not animated by a consuming destructive blind rage, but by a
+ naturally pugnacious desire to eliminate sources of annoyance. Missing a
+ definite object, he thunders right through and disappears without trying
+ again to discover what has aroused him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This first rush is not a charge in the sense that it is an attack on a
+ definite object. It may not, and probably will not, amount to a charge at
+ all, for the beast will blunder through without ever defining more clearly
+ the object of his blind dash. That dash is likely, however, at any moment,
+ to turn into a definite charge should the rhinoceros happen to catch sight
+ of his disturber. Whether the impelling motive would then be a mistaken
+ notion that on the part of the beast he was so close he had to fight, or
+ just plain malice, would not matter. At such times the intended victim is
+ not interested in the rhino's mental processes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owing to his size, his powerful armament, and his incredible quickness the
+ rhinoceros is a dangerous animal at all times, to be treated with respect
+ and due caution. This is proved by the number of white men, out of a
+ sparse population, that are annually tossed and killed by the brutes, and
+ by the promptness with which the natives take to trees-thorn trees at
+ that!-when the cry of faru! is raised. As he comes rushing in your
+ direction, head down and long weapon pointed, tail rigidly erect, ears up,
+ the earth trembling with his tread and the air with his snorts, you
+ suddenly feel very small and ineffective.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you keep cool, however, it is probable that the encounter will result
+ only in a lot of mental perturbation for the rhino and a bit of excitement
+ for yourself. If there is any cover you should duck down behind it and
+ move rapidly but quietly to one side or another of the line of advance. If
+ there is no cover, you should crouch low and hold still. The chances are
+ he will pass to one side or the other of you, and go snorting away into
+ the distance. Keep your eye on him very closely. If he swerves definitely
+ in your direction, AND DROPS HIS HEAD A LITTLE LOWER, it would be just as
+ well to open fire. Provided the beast was still far enough away to give me
+ &ldquo;sea-room,&rdquo; I used to put a small bullet in the flesh of the outer part of
+ the shoulder. The wound thus inflicted was not at all serious, but the
+ shock of the bullet usually turned the beast. This was generally in the
+ direction of the wounded shoulder, which would indicate that the brute
+ turned toward the apparent source of the attack, probably for the purpose
+ of getting even. At any rate, the shot turned the rush to one side, and
+ the rhinoceros, as usual, went right on through. If, however, he seemed to
+ mean business, or was too close for comfort, the point to aim for was the
+ neck just above the lowered horn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In my own experience I came to establish a &ldquo;dead line&rdquo; about twenty yards
+ from myself. That seemed to be as near as I cared to let the brutes come.
+ Up to that point I let them alone on the chance that they might swerve or
+ change their minds, as they often did. But inside of twenty yards, whether
+ the rhinoceros meant to charge me, or was merely running blindly by, did
+ not particularly matter. Even in the latter case he might happen to catch
+ sight of me and change his mind. Thus, looking over my notebook records, I
+ find that I was &ldquo;charged&rdquo; forty odd times-that is to say, the rhinoceros
+ rushed in my general direction. Of this lot I can be sure of but three,
+ and possibly four, that certainly meant mischief. Six more came so
+ directly at us, and continued so to come, that in spite of ourselves we
+ were compelled to kill them. The rest were successfully dodged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I have heard old hunters of many times my experience, affirm that only
+ in a few instances have they themselves been charged indubitably and with
+ malice aforethought, it might be well to detail my reasons for believing
+ myself definitely and not blindly attacked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first instance was that when B. killed his second trophy rhinoceros.
+ The beast's companion refused to leave the dead body for a long time, but
+ finally withdrew. On our approaching, however, and after we had been some
+ moments occupied with the trophy, it returned and charged viciously. It
+ was finally killed at fifteen yards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second instance was of a rhinoceros that got up from the grass sixty
+ yards away, and came headlong in my direction. At the moment I was
+ standing on the edge of a narrow eroded ravine, ten feet deep, with
+ perpendicular sides. The rhinoceros came on bravely to the edge of this
+ ravine-and stopped. Then he gave an exhibition of unmitigated bad temper
+ most amusing to contemplate-from my safe position. He snorted, and
+ stamped, and pawed the earth, and tramped up and down at a great rate. I
+ sat on the opposite bank and laughed at him. This did not please him a
+ bit, but after many short rushes to the edge of the ravine, he gave it up
+ and departed slowly, his tail very erect and rigid. From the persistency
+ with which he tried to get at me, I cannot but think he intended something
+ of the sort from the first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The third instance was much more aggravating. In company with Memba Sasa
+ and Fundi I left camp early one morning to get a waterbuck. Four or five
+ hundred yards out, however, we came on fresh buffalo signs, not an hour
+ old. To one who knew anything of buffaloes' habits this seemed like an
+ excellent chance, for at this time of the morning they should be feeding
+ not far away preparatory to seeking cover for the day. Therefore we
+ immediately took up the trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It led us over hills, through valleys, high grass, burned country, brush,
+ thin scrub, and small woodland alternately. Unfortunately we had happened
+ on these buffalo just as they were about changing district, and they were
+ therefore travelling steadily. At times the trail was easy to follow and
+ at other times we had to cast about very diligently to find traces of the
+ direction even such huge animals had taken. It was interesting work,
+ however, and we drew on steadily, keeping a sharp lookout ahead in case
+ the buffalo had come to a halt in some shady thicket out of the sun. As
+ the latter ascended the heavens and the scorching heat increased, our
+ confidence in nearing our quarry ascended likewise, for we knew that
+ buffaloes do not like great heat. Nevertheless this band continued
+ straight on its way. I think now they must have got scent of our camp, and
+ had therefore decided to move to one of the alternate and widely separated
+ feeding grounds every herd keeps in its habitat. Only at noon, and after
+ six hours of steady trailing, covering perhaps a dozen miles, did we catch
+ them up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the start we had been bothered with rhinoceroses. Five times did we
+ encounter them, standing almost squarely on the line of the spoor we were
+ following. Then we had to make a wide quiet circle to leeward in order to
+ avoid disturbing them, and were forced to a very minute search in order to
+ pick up the buffalo tracks again on the other side. This was at once an
+ anxiety and a delay, and we did not love those rhino.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, at the very edge of the Yatta Plains we overtook the herd,
+ resting for noon in a scattered thicket. Leaving Fundi, I, with Memba
+ Sasa, stalked down to them. We crawled and crept by inches flat to the
+ ground, which was so hot that it fairly burned the hand. The sun beat down
+ on us fiercely, and the air was close and heavy even among the scanty
+ grass tufts in which we were trying to get cover. It was very hard work
+ indeed, but after a half hour of it we gained a thin bush not over thirty
+ yards from a half dozen dark and indeterminate bodies dozing in the very
+ centre of a brush patch. Cautiously I wiped the sweat from my eyes and
+ raised my glasses. It was slow work and patient work, picking out and
+ examining each individual beast from the mass. Finally the job was done. I
+ let fall my glasses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Monumookee y'otey-all cows,&rdquo; I whispered to Memba Sasa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We backed out of there inch by inch, with intention of circling a short
+ distance to the leeward, and then trying the herd again lower down. But
+ some awkward slight movement, probably on my part, caught the eye of one
+ of those blessed cows. She threw up her head; instantly the whole thicket
+ seemed alive with beasts. We could hear them crashing and stamping,
+ breaking the brush, rushing headlong and stopping again; we could even
+ catch momentary glimpses of dark bodies. After a few minutes we saw the
+ mass of the herd emerge from the thicket five hundred yards away and flow
+ up over the hill. There were probably a hundred and fifty of them, and,
+ looking through my glasses, I saw among them two fine old bulls. They were
+ of course not much alarmed, as only the one cow knew what it was all about
+ anyway, and I suspected they would stop at the next thicket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had only one small canteen of water with us, but we divided that. It
+ probably did us good, but the quantity was not sufficient to touch our
+ thirst. For the remainder of the day we suffered rather severely, as the
+ sun was fierce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a short interval we followed on after the buffaloes. Within a half
+ mile beyond the crest of the hill over which they had disappeared was
+ another thicket. At the very edge of the thicket, asleep under an outlying
+ bush, stood one of the big bulls!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luck seemed with us at last. The wind was right, and between us and the
+ bull lay only four hundred yards of knee-high grass. All we had to do was
+ to get down on our hands and knees, and, without further precautions,
+ crawl up within range and pot him. That meant only a bit of hard, hot
+ work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we were about halfway a rhinoceros suddenly arose from the grass
+ between us and the buffalo, and about one hundred yards away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What had aroused him, at that distance and upwind, I do not know. It
+ hardly seemed possible that he could have heard us, for we were moving
+ very quietly, and, as I say, we were downwind. However, there he was on
+ his feet, sniffing now this way, now that, in search for what had alarmed
+ him. We sank out of sight and lay low, fully expecting that the brute
+ would make off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For just twenty-five minutes by the watch that rhinoceros looked and
+ looked deliberately in all directions while we lay hidden waiting for him
+ to get over it. Sometimes he would start off quite confidently for fifty
+ or sixty yards, so that we thought at last we were rid of him, but always
+ he returned to the exact spot where we had first seen him, there to stamp,
+ and blow. The buffalo paid no attention to these manifestations. I suppose
+ everybody in jungleland is accustomed to rhinoceros bad temper over
+ nothing. Twice he came in our direction, but both times gave it up after
+ advancing twenty-five yards or so. We lay flat on our faces, the vertical
+ sun slowly roasting us, and cursed that rhino.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the significance of this incident is twofold: first, the fact that,
+ instead of rushing off at the first intimation of our presence, as would
+ the average rhino, he went methodically to work to find us; second, that
+ he displayed such remarkable perseverance as to keep at it nearly a half
+ hour. This was a spirit quite at variance with that finding its expression
+ in the blind rush or in the sudden passionate attack. From that point of
+ view it seems to me that the interest and significance of the incident can
+ hardly be overstated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four or five times we thought ourselves freed of the nuisance, but always,
+ just as we were about to move on, back he came, as eager as ever to nose
+ us out. Finally he gave it up, and, at a slow trot, started to go away
+ from there. And out of the three hundred and sixty degrees of the circle
+ where he might have gone he selected just our direction. Note that this
+ was downwind for him, and that rhinoceroses usually escape upwind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We laid very low, hoping that, as before, he would change his mind as to
+ direction. But now he was no longer looking, but travelling. Nearer and
+ nearer he came. We could see plainly his little eyes, and hear the regular
+ swish, swish, swish of his thick legs brushing through the grass. The
+ regularity of his trot never varied, but to me lying there directly in his
+ path, he seemed to be coming on altogether too fast for comfort. From our
+ low level he looked as big as a barn. Memba Sasa touched me lightly on the
+ leg. I hated to shoot, but finally when he loomed fairly over us I saw it
+ must be now or never. If I allowed him to come closer, he must indubitably
+ catch the first movement of my gun and so charge right on us before I
+ would have time to deliver even an ineffective shot. Therefore, most
+ reluctantly, I placed the ivory bead of the great Holland gun just to the
+ point of his shoulder and pulled the trigger. So close was he that as he
+ toppled forward I instinctively, though unnecessarily of course, shrank
+ back as though he might fall on me. Fortunately I had picked my spot
+ properly, and no second shot was necessary. He fell just twenty-seven
+ feet-nine yards&mdash;from where we lay!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The buffalo vanished into the blue. We were left with a dead rhino, which
+ we did not want, twelve miles from camp, and no water. It was a hard hike
+ back, but we made it finally, though nearly perished from thirst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This beast, be it noted, did not charge us at all, but I consider him as
+ one of the three undoubtedly animated by hostile intentions. Of the others
+ I can, at this moment, remember five that might or might not have been
+ actually and maliciously charging when they were killed or dodged. I am no
+ mind reader for rhinoceros. Also I am willing to believe in their entirely
+ altruistic intentions. Only, if they want to get the practical results of
+ their said altruistic intentions they must really refrain from coming
+ straight at me nearer than twenty yards. It has been stated that if one
+ stands perfectly still until the rhinoceros is just six feet away, and
+ then jumps sideways, the beast will pass him. I never happened to meet
+ anybody who had acted on this theory. I suppose that such exist: though I
+ doubt if any persistent exponent of the art is likely to exist long.
+ Personally I like my own method, and stoutly maintain that within twenty
+ yards it is up to the rhinoceros to begin to do the dodging.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXII. THE RHINOCEROS-(continued)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At first the traveller is pleased and curious over rhinoceros. After he
+ has seen and encountered eight or ten, he begins to look upon them as an
+ unmitigated nuisance. By the time he has done a week in thick
+ rhino-infested scrub he gets fairly to hating them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are bad enough in the open plains, where they can be seen and
+ avoided, but in the tall grass or the scrub they are a continuous anxiety.
+ No cover seems small enough to reveal them. Often they will stand or lie
+ absolutely immobile until you are within a very short distance, and then
+ will outrageously break out. They are, in spite of their clumsy build, as
+ quick and active as polo ponies, and are the only beasts I know of capable
+ of leaping into full speed ahead from a recumbent position. In thorn scrub
+ they are the worst, for there, no matter how alert the traveller may hold
+ himself, he is likely to come around a bush smack on one. And a dozen
+ times a day the throat-stopping, abrupt crash and smash to right or left
+ brings him up all standing, his heart racing, the blood pounding through
+ his veins. It is jumpy work, and is very hard on the temper. In the
+ natural reaction from being startled into fits one snaps back to
+ profanity. The cumulative effects of the epithets hurled after a departing
+ and inconsiderately hasty rhinoceros may have done something toward
+ ruining the temper of the species. It does not matter whether or not the
+ individual beast proves dangerous; he is inevitably most startling. I have
+ come in at night with my eyes fairly aching from spying for rhinos during
+ a day's journey through high grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, as a friend remarked, rhinos are such a mussy death. One poor chap,
+ killed while we were away on our first trip, could not be moved from the
+ spot where he had been trampled. A few shovelfuls of earth over the
+ remains was all the rhinoceros had left possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately, in the thick stuff especially, it is often possible to avoid
+ the chance rhinoceros through the warning given by the rhinoceros birds.
+ These are birds about the size of a robin that accompany the beast
+ everywhere. They sit in a row along his back occupying themselves with
+ ticks and a good place to roost. Always they are peaceful and quiet until
+ a human being approaches. Then they flutter a few feet into the air
+ uttering a peculiar rapid chattering. Writers with more sentiment than
+ sense of proportion assure us that this warns the rhinoceros of
+ approaching danger! On the contrary, I always looked at it the other way.
+ The rhinoceros birds thereby warned ME of danger, and I was duly thankful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The safari boys stand quite justly in a holy awe of the rhino. The safari
+ is strung out over a mile or two of country, as a usual thing, and a
+ downwind rhino is sure to pierce some part of the line in his rush. Then
+ down go the loads with a smash, and up the nearest trees swarm the boys.
+ Usually their refuges are thorn trees, armed, even on the main trunk, with
+ long sharp spikes. There is no difficulty in going up, but the gingerly
+ coming down, after all the excitement has died, is a matter of
+ deliberation and of voices uplifted in woe. Cuninghame tells of an
+ inadequate slender and springy, but solitary, sapling into which swarmed
+ half his safari on the advent of a rambunctious rhino. The tree swayed and
+ bent and cracked alarmingly, threatening to dump the whole lot on the
+ ground. At each crack the boys yelled. This attracted the rhinoceros,
+ which immediately charged the tree full tilt. He hit square, the tree
+ shivered and creaked, the boys wound their arms and legs around the
+ slender support and howled frantically. Again and again rhinoceros drew
+ back to repeat his butting of that tree. By the time Cuninghame reached
+ the spot, the tree, with its despairing burden of black birds, was
+ clinging to the soil by its last remaining roots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Nairobi Club I met a gentleman with one arm gone at the shoulder.
+ He told his story in a slightly bored and drawling voice, picking his
+ words very carefully, and evidently most occupied with neither
+ understating nor overstating the case. It seems he had been out, and had
+ killed some sort of a buck. While his men were occupied with this, he
+ strolled on alone to see what he could find. He found a rhinoceros, that
+ charged viciously, and into which he emptied his gun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I came to,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it was just coming on dusk, and the lions were
+ beginning to grunt. My arm was completely crushed, and I was badly bruised
+ and knocked about. As near as I could remember I was fully ten miles from
+ camp. A circle of carrion birds stood all about me not more than ten feet
+ away, and a great many others were flapping over me and fighting in the
+ air. These last were so close that I could feel the wind from their wings.
+ It was rawther gruesome.&rdquo; He paused and thought a a moment, as though
+ weighing his words. &ldquo;In fact,&rdquo; he added with an air of final conviction,
+ &ldquo;it was QUITE gruesome!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most calm and imperturbable rhinoceros I ever saw was one that made us
+ a call on the Thika River. It was just noon, and our boys were making camp
+ after a morning's march. The usual racket was on, and the usual varied
+ movement of rather confused industry. Suddenly silence fell. We came out
+ of the tent to see the safari gazing spellbound in one direction. There
+ was a rhinoceros wandering peaceably over the little knoll back of camp,
+ and headed exactly in our direction. While we watched, he strolled through
+ the edge of camp, descended the steep bank to the river's edge, drank,
+ climbed the bank, strolled through camp again and departed over the hill.
+ To us he paid not the slightest attention. It seems impossible to believe
+ that he neither scented nor saw any evidences of human life in all that
+ populated flat, especially when one considers how often these beasts will
+ SEEM to become aware of man's presence by telepathy.* Perhaps he was the
+ one exception to the whole race, and was a good-natured rhino.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Opposing theories are those of &ldquo;instinct,&rdquo; and of slight
+ causes, such a grasshoppers leaping before the hunter's
+ feet, not noticed by the man approaching.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The babies are astonishing and amusing creatures, with blunt noses on
+ which the horns are just beginning to form, and with even fewer manners
+ than their parents. The mere fact of an 800-pound baby does not cease to
+ be curious. They are truculent little creatures, and sometimes rather hard
+ to avoid when they get on the warpath. Generally, as far as my observation
+ goes, the mother gives birth to but one at a time. There may be occasional
+ twin births, but I happen never to have met so interesting a family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rhinoceroses are still very numerous-too numerous. I have seen as many as
+ fourteen in two hours, and probably could have found as many more if I had
+ been searching for them. There is no doubt, however, that this species
+ must be the first to disappear of the larger African animals. His great
+ size combined with his 'orrid 'abits mark him for early destruction. No
+ such dangerous lunatic can be allowed at large in a settled country, nor
+ in a country where men are travelling constantly. The species will
+ probably be preserved in appropriate restricted areas. It would be a great
+ pity to have so perfect an example of the Prehistoric Pinhead wiped out
+ completely. Elsewhere he will diminish, and finally disappear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For one thing, and for one thing only, is the traveller indebted to the
+ rhinoceros. The beast is lazy, large, and has an excellent eye for easy
+ ways through. For this reason, as regards the question of good roads, he
+ combines the excellent qualities of Public Sentiment, the Steam Roller,
+ and the Expert Engineer. Through thorn thickets impenetrable to anything
+ less armoured than a Dreadnaught like himself he clears excellent paths.
+ Down and out of eroded ravines with perpendicular sides he makes excellent
+ wide trails, tramped hard, on easy grades, often with zigzags to ease the
+ slant. In some of the high country where the torrential rains wash
+ hundreds of such gullies across the line of march it is hardly an
+ exaggeration to say that travel would be practically impossible without
+ the rhino trails wherewith to cross. Sometimes the perpendicular banks
+ will extend for miles without offering any natural break down to the
+ stream-bed. Since this is so I respectfully submit to Government the
+ following proposal:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (a) That a limited number of these beasts shall be licensed as Trail
+ Rhinos; and that all the rest shall be killed from the settled and
+ regularly travelled districts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (b) That these Trail Rhinos shall be suitably hobbled by short steel
+ chains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (c) That each Trail Rhino shall carry painted conspicuously on his side
+ his serial number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (d) That as a further precaution for public safety each Trail Rhino shall
+ carry firmly attached to his tail a suitable red warning flag. Thus the
+ well-known habit of the rhinoceros of elevating his tail rigidly when
+ about to charge, or when in the act of charging, will fly the flag as a
+ warning to travellers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (e) That an official shall be appointed to be known as the Inspector of
+ Rhinos whose duty it shall be to examine the hobbles, numbers and flags of
+ all Trail Rhinos, and to keep the same in due working order and repair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And I do submit to all and sundry that the above resolutions have as much
+ sense to them as have most of the petitions submitted to Government by
+ settlers in a new country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIII. THE HIPPO POOL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ For a number of days we camped in a grove just above a dense jungle and
+ not fifty paces from the bank of a deep and wide river. We could at
+ various points push through light low undergrowth, or stoop beneath clear
+ limbs, or emerge on tiny open banks and promontories to look out over the
+ width of the stream. The river here was some three or four hundred feet
+ wide. It cascaded down through various large boulders and sluiceways to
+ fall bubbling and boiling into deep water; it then flowed still and
+ sluggish for nearly a half mile and finally divided into channels around a
+ number of wooded islands of different sizes. In the long still stretch
+ dwelt about sixty hippopotamuses of all sizes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During our stay these hippos led a life of alarmed and angry care. When we
+ first arrived they were distributed picturesquely on banks or sandbars, or
+ were lying in midstream. At once they disappeared under water. By the end
+ of four or five minutes they began to come to the surface. Each beast took
+ one disgusted look, snorted, and sank again. So hasty was his action that
+ he did not even take time to get a full breath; consequently up he had to
+ come in not more than two minutes, this time. The third submersion lasted
+ less than a minute; and at the end of half hour of yelling we had the
+ hippos alternating between the bottom of the river and the surface of the
+ water about as fast as they could make a round trip, blowing like
+ porpoises. It was a comical sight. And as some of the boys were always out
+ watching the show, those hippos had no respite during the daylight hours.
+ From a short distance inland the explosive blowing as they came to the
+ surface sounded like the irregular exhaust of a steam-engine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We camped at this spot four days; and never, in that length of time,
+ during the daytime, did those hippopotamuses take any recreation and rest.
+ To be sure after a little they calmed down sufficiently to remain on the
+ surface for a half minute or so, instead of gasping a mouthful of air and
+ plunging below at once; but below was where they considered they belonged
+ most of the time. We got to recognize certain individuals. They would
+ stare at us fixedly for a while; and then would glump down out of sight
+ like submarines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I saw them thus floating with only the very top of the head and snout
+ out of water, I for the first time appreciated why the Greeks had named
+ them hippopotamuses-the river horses. With the heavy jowl hidden; and the
+ prominent nostrils, the long reverse-curved nose, the wide eyes, and the
+ little pointed ears alone visible, they resembled more than a little that
+ sort of conventionalized and noble charger seen on the frieze of the
+ Parthenon, or in the prancy paintings of the Renaissance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were hippopotamuses of all sizes and of all colours. The little
+ ones, not bigger than a grand piano, were of flesh pink. Those half-grown
+ were mottled with pink and black in blotches. The adults were almost
+ invariably all dark, though a few of them retained still a small pink spot
+ or so-a sort of persistence in mature years of the eternal boy-, I
+ suppose. All were very sleek and shiny with the wet; and they had a
+ fashion of suddenly and violently wiggling one or the other or both of
+ their little ears in ridiculous contrast to the fixed stare of their bung
+ eyes. Generally they had nothing to say as to the situation, though
+ occasionally some exasperated old codger would utter a grumbling bellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ground vegetation for a good quarter mile from the river bank was
+ entirely destroyed, and the earth beaten and packed hard by these animals.
+ Landing trails had been made leading out from the water by easy and
+ regular grades. These trails were about two feet wide and worn a foot or
+ so deep. They differed from the rhino trails, from which they could be
+ easily distinguished, in that they showed distinctly two parallel tracks
+ separated from each other by a slight ridge. In other words, the hippo
+ waddles. These trails we found as far as four and five miles inland. They
+ were used, of course, only at night; and led invariably to lush and heavy
+ feed. While we were encamped there, the country on our side the river was
+ not used by our particular herd of hippos. One night, however, we were
+ awakened by a tremendous rending crash of breaking bushes, followed by an
+ instant's silence and then the outbreak of a babel of voices. Then we
+ heard a prolonged sw-i-sh-sh-sh, exactly like the launching of a big boat.
+ A hippo had blundered out the wrong side the river, and fairly into our
+ camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In rivers such as the Tana these great beasts are most extraordinarily
+ abundant. Directly in front of our camp, for example, were three separate
+ herds which contained respectively about sixty, forty, and twenty-five
+ head. Within two miles below camp were three other big pools each with its
+ population; while a walk of a mile above showed about as many more. This
+ sort of thing obtained for practically the whole length of the
+ river-hundreds of miles. Furthermore, every little tributary stream, no
+ matter how small, provided it can muster a pool or so deep enough to
+ submerge so large an animal, has its faithful band. I have known of a
+ hippo quite happily occupying a ditch pool ten feet wide and fifteen feet
+ long. There was literally not room enough for the beast to turn around; he
+ had to go in at one end and out at the other! Each lake, too, is alive
+ with them; and both lakes and rivers are many.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nobody disturbs hippos, save for trophies and an occasional supply of meat
+ for the men or of cooking fat for the kitchen. Therefore they wax fat and
+ sassy, and will long continue to flourish in the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It takes time to kill a hippo, provided one is wanted. The mark is small,
+ and generally it is impossible to tell whether or not the bullet has
+ reached the brain. Harmed or whole the beast sinks anyway. Some hours
+ later the distention of the stomach will float the body. Therefore the
+ only decent way to do is to take the shot, and then wait a half day to see
+ whether or not you have missed. There are always plenty of volunteers in
+ camp to watch the pool, for the boys are extravagantly fond of hippo meat.
+ Then it is necessary to manoeuvre a rope on the carcass, often a matter of
+ great difficulty, for the other hippos bellow and snort and try to live up
+ to the circus posters of the Blood-sweating Behemoth of Holy Writ, and the
+ crocodiles like dark meat very much. Usually one offers especial reward to
+ volunteers, and shoots into the water to frighten the beasts. The
+ volunteer dashes rapidly across the shallows, makes a swift plunge, and
+ clambers out on the floating body as onto a raft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he makes fast the rope, and everybody tails on and tows the whole
+ outfit ashore. On one occasion the volunteer produced a fish line and
+ actually caught a small fish from the floating carcass! This sounds like a
+ good one; but I saw it with my own two eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at the hippo pool camp that we first became acquainted with Funny
+ Face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Funny Face was the smallest, furriest little monkey you ever saw. I never
+ cared for monkeys before; but this one was altogether engaging. He had
+ thick soft fur almost like that on a Persian cat, and a tiny human black
+ face, and hands that emerged from a ruff; and he was about as big as
+ old-fashioned dolls used to be before they began to try to imitate real
+ babies with them. That is to say, he was that big when we said farewell to
+ him. When we first knew him, had he stood in a half pint measure he could
+ just have seen over the rim. We caught him in a little thorn ravine all by
+ himself, a fact that perhaps indicates that his mother had been killed, or
+ perhaps that he, like a good little Funny Face, was merely staying where
+ he was told while she was away. At any rate he fought savagely, according
+ to his small powers. We took him ignominiously by the scruff of the neck,
+ haled him to camp, and dumped him down on Billy. Billy constructed him a
+ beautiful belt by sacrificing part of a kodak strap (mine), and tied him
+ to a chop box filled with dry grass. Thenceforth this became Funny Face's
+ castle, at home and on the march.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within a few hours his confidence in life was restored. He accepted small
+ articles of food from our hands, eyeing us intently, retired and examined
+ them. As they all proved desirable, he rapidly came to the conclusion that
+ these new large strange monkeys, while not so beautiful and agile as his
+ own people, were nevertheless a good sort after all. Therefore he took us
+ into his confidence. By next day he was quite tame, would submit to being
+ picked up without struggling, and had ceased trying to take an end off our
+ various fingers. In fact when the finger was presented, he would seize it
+ in both small black hands; convey it to his mouth; give it several mild
+ and gentle love-chews; and then, clasping it with all four hands, would
+ draw himself up like a little athlete and seat himself upright on the
+ outspread palm. Thence he would survey the world, wrinkling up his tiny
+ brow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This chastened and scholarly attitude of mind lasted for four or five
+ days. Then Funny Face concluded that he understood all about it, had
+ settled satisfactorily to himself all the problems of the world and his
+ relations to it, and had arrived at a good working basis for life.
+ Therefore these questions ceased to occupy him. He dismissed them from his
+ mind completely, and gave himself over to light-hearted frivolity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His disposition was flighty but full of elusive charm. You deprecated his
+ lack of serious purpose in life, disapproved heartily of his
+ irresponsibility, but you fell to his engaging qualities. He was a typical
+ example of the lovable good-for-naught. Nothing retained his attention for
+ two consecutive minutes. If he seized a nut and started for his chop box
+ with it, the chances were he would drop it and forget all about it in the
+ interest excited by a crawling ant or the colour of a flower. His elfish
+ face was always alight with the play of emotions and of flashing changing
+ interests. He was greatly given to starting off on very important errands,
+ which he forgot before he arrived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this he contrasted strangely with his friend Darwin. Darwin was another
+ monkey of the same species, caught about a week later. Darwin's face was
+ sober and pondering, and his methods direct and effective. No side
+ excursions into the brilliant though evanescent fields of fancy diverted
+ him from his ends. These were, generally, to get the most and best food
+ and the warmest corner for sleep. When he had acquired a nut, a kernel of
+ corn, or a piece of fruit, he sat him down and examined it thoroughly and
+ conscientiously and then, conscientiously and thoroughly, he devoured it.
+ No extraneous interest could distract his attention; not for a moment.
+ That he had sounded the seriousness of life is proved by the fact that he
+ had observed and understood the flighty character of Funny Face. When
+ Funny Face acquired a titbit, Darwin took up a hump-backed position near
+ at hand, his bright little eyes fixed on his friend's activities. Funny
+ Face would nibble relishingly at his prune for a moment or so; then an
+ altogether astonishing butterfly would flitter by just overhead. Funny
+ Face, lost in ecstasy would gaze skyward after the departing marvel. This
+ was Darwin's opportunity. In two hops he was at Funny Face's side. With
+ great deliberation, but most businesslike directness, Darwin disengaged
+ Funny Face's unresisting fingers from the prune, seized it, and retired.
+ Funny Face never knew it; his soul was far away after the blazoned wonder,
+ and when it returned, it was not to prunes at all. They were forgotten,
+ and his wandering eye focussed back to a bright button in the grass. Thus
+ by strict attention to business did Darwin prosper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darwin's attitude was always serious, and his expression grave. When he
+ condescended to romp with Funny Face one could see that it was not for the
+ mere joy of sport, but for the purposes of relaxation. If offered a gift
+ he always examined it seriously before finally accepting it, turning it
+ over and over in his hands, and considering it with wrinkled brow. If you
+ offered anything to Funny Face, no matter what, he dashed up, seized it on
+ the fly, departed at speed uttering grateful low chatterings; probably
+ dropped and forgot it in the excitement of something new before he had
+ even looked to see what it was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These people,&rdquo; said Darwin to himself, &ldquo;on the whole, and as an average,
+ seem to give me appropriate and pleasing gifts. To be sure, it is always
+ well to see that they don't try to bunco me with olive stones or such
+ worthless trash, but still I believe they are worth cultivating and
+ standing in with.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It strikes me,&rdquo; observed Funny Face to himself, &ldquo;that my adorable
+ Memsahib and my beloved bwana have been very kind to me to-day, though I
+ don't remember precisely how. But I certainly do love them!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We cut good sized holes on each of the four sides of their chop box to
+ afford them ventilation on the march. The box was always carried on one of
+ the safari boy's heads: and Funny Face and Darwin gazed forth with great
+ interest. It was very amusing to see the big negro striding jauntily along
+ under his light burden; the large brown winking eyes glued to two of the
+ apertures. When we arrived in camp and threw the box cover open, they
+ hopped forth, shook themselves, examined their immediate surroundings and
+ proceeded to take a little exercise. When anything alarmed them, such as
+ the shadow of a passing hawk, they skittered madly up the nearest thing in
+ sight-tent pole, tree, or human form&mdash; and scolded indignantly or
+ chittered in a low tone according to the degree of their terror. When
+ Funny Face was very young, indeed, the grass near camp caught fire. After
+ the excitement was over we found him completely buried in the straw of his
+ box, crouched, and whimpering like a child. As he could hardly, at his
+ tender age, have had any previous experience with fire, this instinctive
+ fear was to me very interesting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monkeys had only one genuine enemy. That was an innocent plush lion
+ named Little Simba. It had been given us in joke before we left
+ California, we had tucked it into an odd corner of our trunk, had
+ discovered it there, carried it on safari out of sheer idleness, and lo!
+ it had become an important member of the expedition. Every morning Mahomet
+ or Yusuf packed it-or rather him-carefully away in the tin box. Promptly
+ at the end of the day's march Little Simba was haled forth and set in a
+ place of honour in the centre of the table, and reigned there-or sometimes
+ in a little grass jungle constructed by his faithful servitors-until the
+ march was again resumed. His job in life was to look after our hunting
+ luck. When he failed to get us what we wanted, he was punished; when he
+ procured us what we desired he was rewarded by having his tail sewed on
+ afresh, or by being presented with new black thread whiskers, or even a
+ tiny blanket of Mericani against the cold. This last was an especial
+ favour for finally getting us the greater kudu. Naturally as we did all
+ this in the spirit of an idle joke our rewards and punishments were rather
+ desultory. To our surprise, however, we soon found that our boys took
+ Little Simba quite seriously. He was a fetish, a little god, a power of
+ good or bad luck. We did not appreciate this point until one evening,
+ after a rather disappointing day, Mahomet came to us bearing Little Simba
+ in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bwana,&rdquo; said he respectfully, &ldquo;is it enough that I shut Simba in the tin
+ box, or do you wish to flog him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On one very disgraceful occasion, when everything went wrong, we plucked
+ Little Simba from his high throne and with him made a beautiful drop-kick
+ out into the tall grass. There, in a loud tone of voice, we sternly bade
+ him lie until the morrow. The camp was bung-eyed. It is not given to every
+ people to treat its gods in such fashion: indeed, in very deed, great is
+ the white man! To be fair, having published Little Simba's disgrace, we
+ should publish also Little Simba's triumph: to tell how, at the end of a
+ certain very lucky three months' safari he was perched atop a pole and
+ carried into town triumphantly at the head of a howling, singing
+ procession of a hundred men. He returned to America, and now, having
+ retired from active professional life, is leading an honoured old age
+ among the trophies he helped to procure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Funny Face first met Little Simba when on an early investigating tour.
+ With considerable difficulty he had shinnied up the table leg, and had
+ hoisted himself over the awkwardly projecting table edge. When almost
+ within reach of the fascinating affairs displayed atop, he looked straight
+ up into the face of Little Simba! Funny Face shrieked aloud, let go all
+ holds and fell off flat on his back. Recovering immediately, he climbed
+ just as high as he could, and proceeded, during the next hour, to relieve
+ his feelings by the most insulting chatterings and grimaces. He never
+ recovered from this initial experience. All that was necessary to evoke
+ all sorts of monkey talk was to produce Little Simba. Against his benign
+ plush front then broke a storm of remonstrance. He became the object of
+ slow advances and sudden scurrying, shrieking retreats, that lasted just
+ as long as he stayed there, and never got any farther than a certain quite
+ conservative point. Little Simba did not mind. He was too busy being a
+ god.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIV. BUFFALO
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Cape Buffalo is one of the four dangerous kinds of African big game;
+ of which the other three are the lion, the rhinoceros, and the elephant.
+ These latter are familiar to us in zoological gardens, although the
+ African and larger form of the rhinoceros and elephant are seldom or never
+ seen in captivity. But buffaloes are as yet unrepresented in our living
+ collections. They are huge beasts, tremendous from any point of view,
+ whether considered in height, in mass, or in power. At the shoulder they
+ stand from just under five feet to just under six feet in height; they are
+ short legged, heavy bodied bull necked, thick in every dimension. In
+ colour they are black as to hair, and slate gray as to skin; so that the
+ individual impression depends on the thickness of the coat. They wear
+ their horns parted in the middle, sweeping smoothly away in the curves of
+ two great bosses either side the head. A good trophy will measure in
+ spread from forty inches to four feet. Four men will be required to carry
+ in the head alone. As buffaloes when disturbed or suspicious have a habit
+ of thrusting their noses up and forward, that position will cling to one's
+ memory as the most typical of the species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great many hunters rank the buffalo first among the dangerous beasts.
+ This is not my own opinion, but he is certainly dangerous enough. He
+ possesses the size, power, and truculence of the rhinoceros, together with
+ all that animal's keenness of scent and hearing but with a sharpness of
+ vision the rhinoceros has not. While not as clever as either the lion or
+ the elephant, he is tricky enough when angered to circle back for the
+ purpose of attacking his pursuers in the rear or flank, and to arrange
+ rather ingenious ambushes for the same purpose. He is rather more
+ tenacious of life than the rhinoceros, and will carry away an
+ extraordinary quantity of big bullets. Add to these considerations the
+ facts that buffaloes go in herds; and that, barring luck, chances are
+ about even they will have to be followed into the thickest cover, it can
+ readily be seen that their pursuit is exciting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The problem would be simplified were one able or willing to slip into the
+ thicket or up to the grazing herd and kill the nearest beast that offers.
+ As a matter of fact an ordinary herd will contain only two or three bulls
+ worth shooting; and it is the hunter's delicate task to glide and crawl
+ here and there, with due regard for sight, scent and sound, until he has
+ picked one of these from the scores of undesirables. Many times will he
+ worm his way by inches toward the great black bodies half defined in the
+ screen of thick undergrowth only to find that he has stalked cows or small
+ bulls. Then inch by inch he must back out again, unable to see twenty
+ yards to either side, guiding himself by the probabilities of the faint
+ chance breezes in the thicket. To right and left he hears the quiet
+ continued crop, crop, crop, sound of animals grazing. The sweat runs down
+ his face in streams, and blinds his eyes, but only occasionally and with
+ the utmost caution can he raise his hand-or, better, lower his head-to
+ clear his vision. When at last he has withdrawn from the danger zone, he
+ wipes his face, takes a drink from the canteen, and tries again. Sooner or
+ later his presence comes to the notice of some old cow. Behind the leafy
+ screen where unsuspected she has been standing comes the most unexpected
+ and heart-jumping crash! Instantly the jungle all about roars into life.
+ The great bodies of the alarmed beasts hurl themselves through the
+ thicket, smash! bang! crash! smash! as though a tornado were uprooting the
+ forest. Then abruptly a complete silence! This lasts but ten seconds or
+ so; then off rushes the wild stampede in another direction; only again to
+ come to a listening halt of breathless stillness. So the hunter, unable to
+ see anything, and feeling very small, huddles with his gunbearers in a
+ compact group, listening to the wild surging short rushes, now this way,
+ now that, hoping that the stampede may not run over him. If by chance it
+ does, he has his two shots and the possibility of hugging a tree while the
+ rush divides around him. The latter is the most likely; a single buffalo
+ is hard enough to stop with two shots, let alone a herd. And yet,
+ sometimes, the mere flash and noise will suffice to turn them, provided
+ they are not actually trying to attack, but only rushing indefinitely
+ about. Probably a man can experience few more thrilling moments than he
+ will enjoy standing in one of the small leafy rooms of an African jungle
+ while several hundred tons of buffalo crash back and forth all around him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the best of circumstances it is only rarely that having identified his
+ big bull, the hunter can deliver a knockdown blow. The beast is
+ extraordinarily vital, and in addition it is exceedingly difficult to get
+ a fair, open shot. Then from the danger of being trampled down by the
+ blind and senseless stampede of the herd he passes to the more defined
+ peril from an angered and cunning single animal. The majority of
+ fatalities in hunting buffaloes happen while following wounded beasts. A
+ flank charge at close range may catch the most experienced man; and even
+ when clearly seen, it is difficult to stop. The buffalo's wide bosses are
+ a helmet to his brain, and the body shot is always chancy. The beast
+ tosses his victim, or tramples him, or pushes him against a tree to crush
+ him like a fly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He who would get his trophy, however, is not always-perhaps is not
+ generally-forced into the thicket to get it. When not much disturbed,
+ buffaloes are in the habit of grazing out into the open just before dark;
+ and of returning to their thicket cover only well after sunrise. If the
+ hunter can arrange to meet his herd at such a time, he stands a very good
+ chance of getting a clear shot. The job then requires merely ordinary
+ caution and manoeuvring; and the only danger, outside the ever-present one
+ from the wounded beast, is that the herd may charge over him deliberately.
+ Therefore it is well to keep out of sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The difficulty generally is to locate your beasts. They wander all night,
+ and must be blundered upon in the early morning before they have drifted
+ back into the thickets. Sometimes, by sending skilled trackers in several
+ directions, they can be traced to where they have entered cover. A
+ messenger then brings the white man to the place, and every one tries to
+ guess at what spot the buffaloes are likely to emerge for their evening
+ stroll. It is remarkably easy to make a wrong guess, and the remaining
+ daylight is rarely sufficient to repair a mistake. And also, in the case
+ of a herd ranging a wide country with much tall grass and several drinking
+ holes, it is rather difficult, without very good luck, to locate them on
+ any given night or morning. A few herds, a very few, may have fixed
+ habits, and so prove easy hunting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These difficulties, while in no way formidable, are real enough in their
+ small way; but they are immensely increased when the herds have been often
+ disturbed. Disturbance need not necessarily mean shooting. In countries
+ unvisited by white men often the pastoral natives will so annoy the
+ buffalo by shoutings and other means, whenever they appear near the tame
+ cattle, that the huge beasts will come practically nocturnal. In that case
+ only the rankest luck will avail to get a man a chance in the open. The
+ herds cling to cover until after sundown and just at dusk; and they return
+ again very soon after the first streaks of dawn. If the hunter just
+ happens to be at the exact spot, he may get a twilight shot when the
+ glimmering ivory of his front sight is barely visible. Otherwise he must
+ go into the thicket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As an illustration of the first condition might be instanced an afternoon
+ on the Tana. The weather was very hot. We had sent three lots of men out
+ in different directions, each under the leadership of one of the
+ gunbearers, to scout, while we took it easy in the shade of our banda, or
+ grass shelter, on the bank of the river. About one o'clock a messenger
+ came into camp reporting that the men under Mavrouki had traced a herd to
+ its lying-down place. We took our heavy guns and started.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The way led through thin scrub up the long slope of a hill that broke on
+ the other side into undulating grass ridges that ended in a range of
+ hills. These were about four or five miles distant, and thinly wooded on
+ sides and lower slopes with what resembled a small live-oak growth. Among
+ these trees, our guide told us, the buffalo had first been sighted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun was very hot, and all the animals were still. We saw impalla in
+ the scrub, and many giraffes and bucks on the plains. After an hour and a
+ half's walk we entered the parklike groves at the foot of the hills, and
+ our guide began to proceed more cautiously. He moved forward a few feet,
+ peered about, retraced his steps. Suddenly his face broke into a broad
+ grin. Following his indication we looked up, and there in a tree almost
+ above us roosted one of our boys sound asleep! We whistled at him.
+ Thereupon he awoke, tried to look very alert, and pointed in the direction
+ we should go. After an interval we picked up another sentinel, and
+ another, and another until, passed on thus from one to the next, we traced
+ the movements of the herd. Finally we came upon Mavrouki and Simba under a
+ bush. From them, in whispers, we learned that the buffalo were karibu
+ sana-very near; that they had fed this far, and were now lying in the long
+ grass just ahead. Leaving the men, we now continued our forward movement
+ on hands and knees, in single file. It was very hot work, for the sun beat
+ square down on us, and the tall grass kept off every breath of air. Every
+ few moments we rested, lying on our faces. Occasionally, when the grass
+ shortened, or the slant of ground tended to expose us, we lay quite flat
+ and hitched forward an inch at a time by the strength of our toes. This
+ was very severe work indeed, and we were drenched in perspiration. In
+ fact, as I had been feeling quite ill all day, it became rather doubtful
+ whether I could stand the pace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However after a while we managed to drop down into an eroded deep little
+ ravine. Here the air was like that of a furnace, but at least we could
+ walk upright for a few rods. This we did, with the most extraordinary
+ precautions against even the breaking of a twig or the rolling of a
+ pebble. Then we clambered to the top of the bank, wormed our way forward
+ another fifty feet to the shelter of a tiny bush, and stretched out to
+ recuperate. We lay there some time, sheltered from the sun. Then ahead of
+ us suddenly rumbled a deep bellow. We were fairly upon the herd!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cautiously F., who was nearest the centre of the bush, raised himself
+ alongside the stem to look. He could see where the beasts were lying, not
+ fifty yards away, but he could make out nothing but the fact of great
+ black bodies taking their ease in the grass under the shade of trees. So
+ much he reported to us; then rose again to keep watch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus we waited the rest of the afternoon. The sun dipped at last toward
+ the west, a faint irregular breeze wandered down from the hills, certain
+ birds awoke and uttered their clear calls, an unsuspected kongoni stepped
+ from the shade of a tree over the way and began to crop the grass, the
+ shadows were lengthening through the trees. Then ahead of us an uneasiness
+ ran through the herd. We in the grass could hear the mutterings and
+ grumblings of many great animals. Suddenly F. snapped his fingers, stooped
+ low and darted forward. We scrambled to our feet and followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Across a short open space we ran, bent double to the shelter of a big ant
+ hill. Peering over the top of this we found ourselves within sixty yards
+ of a long compact column of the great black beasts, moving forward orderly
+ to the left, the points of the cow's horns, curved up and in, tossing
+ slowly as the animals walked. On the flank of the herd was a big gray
+ bull.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been agreed that B. was to have the shot. Therefore he opened fire
+ with his 405 Winchester, a weapon altogether too light for this sort of
+ work. At the shot the herd dashed forward to an open grass meadow a few
+ rods away, wheeled and faced back in a compact mass, their noses thrust up
+ and out in their typical fashion, trying with all their senses to locate
+ the cause of the disturbance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taking advantage both of the scattered cover, and the half light of the
+ shadows we slipped forward as rapidly and as unobtrusively as we could to
+ the edge of the grass meadow. Here we came to a stand eighty yards from
+ the buffaloes. They stood compactly like a herd of cattle, staring,
+ tossing their heads, moving slightly, their wild eyes searching for us. I
+ saw several good bulls, but always they moved where it was impossible to
+ shoot without danger of getting the wrong beast. Finally my chance came; I
+ planted a pair of Holland bullets in the shoulder of one of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The herd broke away to the right, sweeping past us at close range. My bull
+ ran thirty yards with them, then went down stone dead. When we examined
+ him we found the hole made by B.'s Winchester bullet; so that quite
+ unintentionally and by accident I had fired at the same beast. This was
+ lucky. The trophy, by hunter's law, of course, belonged to B.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore F. and I alone followed on after the herd. It was now coming on
+ dusk. Within a hundred yards we began to see scattered beasts. The
+ formation of the herd had broken. Some had gone on in flight, while others
+ in small scattered groups would stop to stare back, and would then move
+ slowly on for a few paces before stopping again. Among these I made out a
+ bull facing us about a hundred and twenty-five yards away, and managed to
+ stagger him, but could not bring him down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now occurred an incident which I should hesitate to relate were it not
+ that both F. and myself saw it. We have since talked it over, compared our
+ recollections, and found them to coincide in every particular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we moved cautiously in pursuit of the slowly retreating herd three cows
+ broke back and came running down past us. We ducked aside and hid, of
+ course, but noticed that of the three two were very young, while one was
+ so old that she had become fairly emaciated, a very unusual thing with
+ buffaloes. We then followed the herd for twenty minutes, or until
+ twilight, when we turned back. About halfway down the slope we again met
+ the three cows, returning. They passed us within twenty yards, but paid us
+ no attention whatever. The old cow was coming along very reluctantly,
+ hanging back at every step, and every once in a while swinging her head
+ viciously at one or the other of her two companions. These escorted her on
+ either side, and a little to the rear. They were plainly urging her
+ forward, and did not hesitate to dig her in the ribs with their horns
+ whenever she turned especially obstinate. In fact they acted exactly like
+ a pair of cowboys HERDING a recalcitrant animal back to its band and I
+ have no doubt at all that when they first by us the old lady was making a
+ break for liberty in the wrong direction, AND THAT THE TWO YOUNGER COWS
+ WERE TRYING TO ROUND HER BACK! Whether they were her daughters or not is
+ problematical; but it certainly seemed that they were taking care of her
+ and trying to prevent her running back where it was dangerous to go. I
+ never heard of a similar case, though Herbert Ward* mentions, without
+ particulars that elephants AND BUFFALOES will assist each other WHEN
+ WOUNDED.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * A Voice from the Congo.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After passing these we returned to where B. and the men, who had now come
+ up, had prepared the dead bull for transportation. We started at once,
+ travelling by the stars, shouting and singing to discourage the lions, but
+ did not reach camp until well into the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXV. THE BUFFALO-continued
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Some months later, and many hundreds of miles farther south, Billy and I
+ found ourselves alone with twenty men, and two weeks to pass until C.-our
+ companion at the time-should return from a long journey out with a wounded
+ man. By slow stages, and relaying back and forth, we landed in a valley so
+ beautiful in every way that we resolved to stay as long as possible. This
+ could be but five days at most. At the end of that time we must start for
+ our prearranged rendezvous with C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The valley was in the shape of an ellipse, the sides of which were formed
+ by great clifflike mountains, and the other two by hills lower, but still
+ of considerable boldness and size. The longest radius was perhaps six or
+ eight miles, and the shortest three or four. At one end a canyon dropped
+ away to a lower level, and at the other a pass in the hills gave over to
+ the country of the Narassara River. The name of the valley was Lengeetoto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the great mountains flowed many brooks of clear sparkling water, that
+ ran beneath the most beautiful of open jungles, to unite finally in one
+ main stream that disappeared down the canyon. Between these brooks were
+ low broad rolling hills, sometimes grass covered, sometimes grown thinly
+ with bushes. Where they headed in the mountains, long stringers of forest
+ trees ran up to blocklike groves, apparently pasted like wafers against
+ the base of the cliffs, but in reality occupying spacious slopes below
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We decided to camp at the foot of a long grass slant within a hundred
+ yards of the trees along one of the small streams. Before us we had the
+ sweep of brown grass rising to a clear cut skyline; and all about us the
+ distant great hills behind which the day dawned and fell. One afternoon a
+ herd of giraffes stood silhouetted on this skyline quite a half hour
+ gazing curiously down on our camp. Hartebeeste and zebra swarmed in the
+ grassy openings; and impalla in the brush. We saw sing-sing and steinbuck,
+ and other animals, and heard lions nearly every night. But principally we
+ elected to stay because a herd of buffaloes ranged the foothills and dwelt
+ in the groves of forest trees under the cliffs. We wanted a buffalo; and
+ as Lengeetoto is practically unknown to white men, we thought this a good
+ chance to get one. In that I reckoned without the fact that at certain
+ seasons the Masai bring their cattle in, and at such times annoy the
+ buffalo all they can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We started out well enough. I sent Memba Sasa with two men to locate the
+ herd. About three o'clock a messenger came to camp after me. We plunged
+ through our own jungle, crossed a low swell, traversed another jungle, and
+ got in touch with the other two men. They reported the buffalo had entered
+ the thicket a few hundred yards below us. Cautiously reconnoitering the
+ ground it soon became evident that we would be forced more definitely to
+ locate the herd. To be sure, they had entered the stream jungle at a known
+ point, but there could be no telling how far they might continue in the
+ thicket, nor on what side of it they would emerge at sundown. Therefore we
+ commenced cautiously and slowly follow the trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The going was very thick, naturally, and we could not see very far ahead.
+ Our object was not now to try for a bull, but merely to find where the
+ herd was feeding, in order that we might wait for it to come out. However,
+ we were brought to a stand, in the middle of a jungle of green leaves, by
+ the cropping sound of a beast grazing just the other side of a bush. We
+ could not see it, and we stood stock still in the hope of escaping
+ discovery ourselves. But an instant later a sudden crash of wood told us
+ we had been seen. It was near work. The gunbearers crouched close to me. I
+ held the heavy double gun ready. If the beast had elected to charge I
+ would have had less than ten yards within which to stop it. Fortunately it
+ did not do so. But instantly the herd was afoot and off at full speed. A
+ locomotive amuck in a kindling pile could have made no more appalling a
+ succession of rending crashes than did those heavy animals rushing here
+ and there through the thick woody growth. We could see nothing. Twice the
+ rush started in our direction, but stopped as suddenly as it had begun, to
+ be succeeded by absolute stillness when everything, ourselves included,
+ held its breath to listen. Finally, the first panic over, the herd started
+ definitely away downstream. We ran as fast as we could out of the jungle
+ to a commanding position on the hill. Thence we could determine the course
+ of the herd. It continued on downstream as far as we could follow the
+ sounds in the convolutions of the hills. Realizing that it would
+ improbably recover enough from its alarmed condition to resume its regular
+ habits that day, we returned to camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning Memba Sasa and I were afield before daylight. We took no
+ other men. In hunting I am a strong disbeliever in the common habit of
+ trailing along a small army. It is simple enough, in case the kill is
+ made, to send back for help. No matter how skilful your men are at
+ stalking, the chances of alarming the game are greatly increased by
+ numbers; while the possibilities of misunderstanding the plan of campaign,
+ and so getting into the wrong place at the wrong time, are infinite.
+ Alone, or with one gunbearer, a man can slip in and out a herd of
+ formidable animals with the least chances of danger. Merely going out
+ after camp meat is of course a different matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We did not follow in the direction taken by the herd the night before, but
+ struck off toward the opposite side of the valley. For two hours we
+ searched the wooded country at the base of the cliff mountains, working
+ slowly around the circle, examining every inlet, ravine and gully. Plenty
+ of other sorts of game we saw, including elephant tracks not a half hour
+ old; but no buffalo. About eight o'clock, however, while looking through
+ my glasses, I caught sight of some tiny chunky black dots crawling along
+ below the mountains diagonally across the valley, and somewhat over three
+ miles away. We started in that direction as fast as we could walk. At the
+ end of an hour we surmounted the last swell, and stood at the edge of a
+ steep drop. Immediately below us flowed a good-sized stream through a high
+ jungle over the tops of which we looked to a triangular gentle slope
+ overgrown with scattered bushes and high grass. Beyond this again ran
+ another jungle, angling up hill from the first, to end in a forest of
+ trees about thirty or forty acres in extent. This jungle and these trees
+ were backed up against the slope of the mountain. The buffaloes we had
+ first seen above the grove: they must now have sought cover among either
+ the trees or the lower jungle, and it seemed reasonable that the beasts
+ would emerge on the grass and bush area late in the afternoon. Therefore
+ Memba Sasa and I selected good comfortable sheltered spots, leaned our
+ backs against rocks, and resigned ourselves to long patience. It was now
+ about nine o'clock in the morning, and we could not expect our game to
+ come out before half past three at earliest. We could not, however, go
+ away to come back later because of the chance that the buffaloes might
+ take it into their heads to go travelling. I had been fooled that way
+ before. For this reason, also, it was necessary, every five minutes or so,
+ to examine carefully all our boundaries; lest the beasts might be slipping
+ away through the cover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hours passed very slowly. We made lunch last as long as possible. I
+ had in my pocket a small edition of Hawthorne's &ldquo;The House of the Seven
+ Gables,&rdquo; which I read, pausing every few minutes to raise my glasses for
+ the periodical examination of the country. The mental focussing back from
+ the pale gray half light of Hawthorne's New England to the actuality of
+ wild Africa was a most extraordinary experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through the heat of the day the world lay absolutely silent. At about
+ half-past three, however, we heard rumblings and low bellows from the
+ trees a half mile away. I repocketed Hawthorne, and aroused myself to
+ continuous alertness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ensuing two hours passed more slowly than all the rest of the day, for
+ we were constantly on the lookout. The buffaloes delayed most singularly,
+ seemingly reluctant to leave their deep cover. The sun dropped behind the
+ mountains, and their shadow commenced to climb the opposite range. I
+ glanced at my watch. We had not more than a half hour of daylight left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fifteen minutes of this passed. It began to look as though our long and
+ monotonous wait had been quite in vain; when, right below us, and perhaps
+ five hundred yards away, four great black bodies fed leisurely from the
+ bushes. Three of them we could see plainly. Two were bulls of fair size.
+ The fourth, half concealed in the brush, was by far the biggest of the
+ lot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to reach them we would have to slip down the face of the hill on
+ which we sat, cross the stream jungle at the bottom, climb out the other
+ side, and make our stalk to within range. With a half hour more of
+ daylight this would have been comparatively easy, but in such
+ circumstances it is difficult to move at the same time rapidly and unseen.
+ However, we decided to make the attempt. To that end we disencumbered
+ ourselves of all our extras-lunch box, book, kodak, glasses, etc.-and
+ wormed our way as rapidly as possible toward the bottom of the hill. We
+ utilized the cover as much as we were able, but nevertheless breathed a
+ sigh of relief when we had dropped below the line of the jungle. We wasted
+ very little time crossing the latter, save for precautions against noise.
+ Even in my haste, however, I had opportunity to notice its high and
+ austere character, with the arching overhead vines, and the clear freedom
+ from undergrowth in its heart. Across this cleared space we ran at full
+ speed, crouching below the grasp of the vines, splashed across the brook
+ and dashed up the other bank. Only a faint glimmer of light lingered in
+ the jungle. At the upper edge we paused, collected ourselves, and pushed
+ cautiously through the thick border-screen of bush.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The twilight was just fading into dusk. Of course we had taken our
+ bearings from the other hill; so now, after reassuring ourselves of them,
+ we began to wriggle our way at a great pace through the high grass. Our
+ calculations were quite accurate. We stalked successfully, and at last,
+ drenched in sweat, found ourselves lying flat within ten yards of a small
+ bush behind which we could make out dimly the black mass of the largest
+ beast we had seen from across the way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although it was now practically dark, we had the game in our own hands.
+ From our low position the animal, once it fed forward from behind the
+ single small bush, would be plainly outlined against the sky, and at ten
+ yards I should be able to place my heavy bullets properly, even in the
+ dark. Therefore, quite easy in our minds, we lay flat and rested. At the
+ end of twenty seconds the animal began to step forward. I levelled my
+ double gun, ready to press trigger the moment the shoulder appeared in the
+ clear. Then against the saffron sky emerged the ugly outline and two
+ upstanding horns of a rhinoceros!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faru!&rdquo; I whispered disgustedly to Memba Sasa. With infinite pains we
+ backed out, then retreated to a safe distance. It was of course now too
+ late to hunt up the three genuine buffaloes of this ill-assorted group.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact our main necessity was to get through the river jungle before the
+ afterglow had faded from the sky, leaving us in pitch darkness. I sent
+ Memba Sasa across to pick up the effects we had left on the opposite
+ ridge, while I myself struck directly across the flat toward camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had plunged ahead thus, for two or three hundred yards, when I was
+ brought up short by the violent snort of a rhinoceros just off the
+ starboard bow. He was very close, but I was unable to locate him in the
+ dusk. A cautious retreat and change of course cleared me from him, and I
+ was about to start on again full speed when once more I was halted by
+ another rhinoceros, this time dead ahead. Attempting to back away from
+ him, I aroused another in my rear; and as though this were not enough a
+ fourth opened up to the left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was absolutely impossible to see anything ten yards away unless it
+ happened to be silhouetted against the sky. I backed cautiously toward a
+ little bush, with a vague idea of having something to dodge around. As the
+ old hunter said when, unarmed, he met the bear, &ldquo;Anything, even a
+ newspaper, would have come handy.&rdquo; To my great joy I backed against a
+ conical ant hill four or five feet high. This I ascended and began
+ anti-rhino demonstrations. I had no time to fool with rhinos, anyway. I
+ wanted to get through that jungle before the leopards left their family
+ circles. I hurled clods of earth and opprobrious shouts and epithets in
+ the four directions of my four obstreperous friends, and I thought I
+ counted four reluctant departures. Then, with considerable doubt, I
+ descended from my ant hill and hurried down the slope, stumbling over
+ grass hummocks, colliding with bushes, tangling with vines, but
+ progressing in a gratifyingly rhinoless condition. Five minutes cautious
+ but rapid feeling my way brought me through the jungle. Shortly after I
+ raised the campfires; and so got home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next two days were repetitions, with slight variation, of this
+ experience, minus the rhinos! Starting from camp before daylight we were
+ only in time to see the herd-always aggravatingly on the other side of the
+ cover, no matter which side we selected for our approach, slowly grazing
+ into the dense jungle. And always they emerged so late and so far away
+ that our very best efforts failed to get us near them before dark. The
+ margin always so narrow, however, that our hopes were alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the fourth day, which must be our last in Longeetoto, we found that the
+ herd had shifted to fresh cover three miles along the base of the
+ mountains. We had no faith in those buffaloes, but about half-past three
+ we sallied forth dutifully and took position on a hill overlooking the new
+ hiding place. This consisted of a wide grove of forest trees varied by
+ occasional open glades and many dense thickets. So eager were we to win
+ what had by now developed into a contest that I refused to shoot a lioness
+ with a three-quarters-grown cub that appeared within easy shot from some
+ reeds below us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time passed as usual until nearly sunset. Then through an opening into one
+ of the small glades we caught sight of the herd travelling slowly but
+ steadily from right to left. The glimpse was only momentary, but it was
+ sufficient to indicate the direction from which we might expect them to
+ emerge. Therefore we ran at top speed down from our own hill, tore through
+ the jungle at its foot, and hastily, but with more caution, mounted the
+ opposite slope through the scattered groves and high grass. We could hear
+ occasionally indications of the buffaloes' slow advance, and we wanted to
+ gain a good ambuscade above them before they emerged. We found it in the
+ shape of a small conical hillock perched on the side hill itself, and
+ covered with long grass. It commanded open vistas through the scattered
+ trees in all directions. And the thicket itself ended not fifty yards
+ away. No buffalo could possibly come out without our seeing him; and we
+ had a good half hour of clear daylight before us. It really seemed that
+ luck had changed at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We settled ourselves, unlimbered for action, and got our breath. The
+ buffaloes came nearer and nearer. At length, through a tiny opening a
+ hundred yards away, we could catch momentary glimpses of their great black
+ bodies. I thrust forward the safety catch and waited. Finally a half dozen
+ of the huge beasts were feeding not six feet inside the circle of brush,
+ and only thirty-odd yards from where we lay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And they came no farther! I never passed a more heart-breaking half hour
+ of suspense than that in which little by little the daylight and our hopes
+ faded, while those confounded buffaloes moved slowly out to the very edge
+ of the thicket, turned, and moved as slowly back again. At times they came
+ actually into view. We could see their sleek black bodies rolling lazily
+ into sight and back again, like seals on the surface of water, but never
+ could we make out more than that. I could have had a dozen good shots, but
+ I could not even guess what I would be shooting at. And the daylight
+ drained away and the minutes ticked by!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, as I could see no end to this performance save that to which we
+ had been so sickeningly accustomed in the last four days, I motioned to
+ Memba Sasa, and together we glided like shadows into the thicket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There it was already dusk. We sneaked breathlessly through the small
+ openings, desperately in a hurry, almost painfully on the alert. In the
+ dark shadow sixty yards ahead stood a half dozen monstrous bodies all
+ facing our way. They suspected the presence of something unusual, but in
+ the darkness and the stillness they could neither identify it nor locate
+ it exactly. I dropped on one knee and snatched my prism glasses to my
+ eyes. The magnification enabled me to see partially into the shadows.
+ Every one of the group carried the sharply inturned points to the horns:
+ they were all cows!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An instant after I had made out this fact, they stampeded across our face.
+ The whole band thundered and crashed away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Desperately we sprang after them, our guns atrail, our bodies stooped low
+ to keep down in the shadow of the earth. And suddenly, without the
+ slightest warning we plumped around a bush square on top of the entire
+ herd. It had stopped and was staring back in our direction. I could see
+ nothing but the wild toss of a hundred pair of horns silhouetted against
+ such of the irregular saffron afterglow as had not been blocked off by the
+ twigs and branches of the thicket. All below was indistinguishable
+ blackness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They stood in a long compact semicircular line thirty yards away, quite
+ still, evidently staring intently into the dusk to find out what had
+ alarmed them. At any moment they were likely to make another rush; and if
+ they did so in the direction they were facing, they would most certainly
+ run over us and trample us down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Remembering the dusk I thought it likely that the unexpected vivid flash
+ of the gun might turn them off before they got started. Therefore I raised
+ the big double Holland, aimed below the line of heads, and was just about
+ to pull trigger when my eye caught the silhouette of a pair of horns whose
+ tips spread out instead of turning in. This was a bull, and I immediately
+ shifted the gun in his direction. At the heavy double report, the herd
+ broke wildly to right and left and thundered away. I confess I was quite
+ relieved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A low moaning bellow told us that our bull was down. The last few days'
+ experience at being out late had taught us wisdom so Memba Sasa had
+ brought a lantern. By the light of this, we discovered our bull down, and
+ all but dead. To make sure, I put a Winchester bullet into his backbone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We felt ourselves legitimately open to congratulations, for we had killed
+ this bull from a practically nocturnal herd, in the face of considerable
+ danger and more than considerable difficulty. Therefore we shook hands and
+ made appropriate remarks to each other, lacking anybody to make them for
+ us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By now it was pitch dark in the thicket, and just about so outside. We had
+ to do a little planning. I took the Holland gun, gave Memba Sasa the
+ Winchester, and started him for camp after help. As he carried off the
+ lantern, it was now up to me to make a fire and to make it quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the past hour a fine drizzle had been falling; and the whole country
+ was wet from previous rains. I hastily dragged in all the dead wood I
+ could find near, collected what ought to be good kindling, and started in
+ to light a fire. Now, although I am no Boy Scout, I have lit several fires
+ in my time. But never when I was at the same time in such a desperate need
+ and hurry; and in possession of such poor materials. The harder I worked,
+ the worse things sputtered and smouldered. Probably the relief from the
+ long tension of the buffalo hunt had something to do with my general
+ piffling inefficiency. If I had taken time to do a proper job once instead
+ of a halfway job a dozen times, as I should have done and usually would
+ have done, I would have had a fire in no time. I imagine I was somewhat
+ scared. The lioness and her hulking cub had smelled the buffalo and were
+ prowling around. I could hear them purring and uttering their hollow
+ grunts. However, at last the flame held. I fed it sparingly, lit a pipe,
+ placed the Holland gun next my hand, and resigned myself to waiting. For
+ two hours this was not so bad. I smoked, and rested up, and dried out
+ before my little fire. Then my fuel began to run low. I arose and tore
+ down all the remaining dead limbs within the circle of my firelight. These
+ were not many, so I stepped out into the darkness for more. Immediately I
+ was warned back by a deep growl!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next hour was not one of such solid comfort. I began to get
+ parsimonious about my supply of firewood, trying to use it in such a
+ manner as to keep up an adequate blaze, and at the same time to make it
+ last until Memba Sasa should return with the men. I did it, though I got
+ down to charred ends before I was through. The old lioness hung around
+ within a hundred yards or so below, and the buffalo herd, returning, filed
+ by above, pausing to stamp and snort at the fire. Finally, about nine
+ o'clock, I made out two lanterns bobbing up to me through the trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last incident to be selected from many experiences with buffaloes took
+ place in quite an unvisited district over the mountains from the Loieta
+ Plains. For nearly two months we had ranged far in this lovely upland
+ country of groves and valleys and wide grass bottoms between hills,
+ hunting for greater kudu. One day we all set out from camp to sweep the
+ base of a range of low mountains in search of a good specimen of Newman's
+ hartebeeste, or anything else especially desirable that might happen
+ along. The gentle slope from the mountains was of grass cut by numerous
+ small ravines grown with low brush. This brush was so scanty as to afford
+ but indifferent cover for anything larger than one of the small grass
+ antelopes. All the ravines led down a mile or so to a deeper main
+ watercourse paralleling the mountains. Some water stood in the pools here;
+ and the cover was a little more dense, but consisted at best of but a
+ &ldquo;stringer&rdquo; no wider than a city street. Flanking the stringer were
+ scattered high bushes for a few yards; and then the open country.
+ Altogether as unlikely a place for the shade-loving buffalo as could be
+ imagined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We collected our Newmanii after rather a long hunt; and just at noon, when
+ the heat of the day began to come on, we wandered down to the water for
+ lunch. Here we found a good clear pool and drank. The boys began to make
+ themselves comfortable by the water's edge; C. went to superintend the
+ disposal of Billy's mule. Billy had sat down beneath the shade of the most
+ hospitable of the bushes a hundred feet or so away, and was taking off her
+ veil and gloves. I was carrying to her the lunch box. When I was about
+ halfway from where the boys were drinking at the stream's edge to where
+ she sat, a buffalo bull thrust his head from the bushes just the other
+ side of her. His head was thrust up and forward, as he reached after some
+ of the higher tender leaves on the bushes. So close was he that I could
+ see plainly the drops glistening on his moist black nose. As for Billy,
+ peacefully unwinding her long veil, she seemed fairly under the beast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had no weapon, and any moment might bring some word or some noise that
+ would catch the animal's attention. Fortunately, for the moment, every
+ one, relaxed in the first reaction after the long morning, was keeping
+ silence. If the buffalo should look down, he could not fail to see Billy;
+ and if he saw her, he would indubitably kill her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As has been explained, snapping the fingers does not seem to reach the
+ attention of wild animals. Therefore I snapped mine as vigorously as I
+ knew how. Billy heard, looked toward me, turned in the direction of my
+ gaze, and slowly sank prone against the ground. Some of the boys heard me
+ also, and I could see the heads of all of them popping up in interest from
+ the banks of the stream. My cautious but very frantic signals to lie low
+ were understood: the heads dropped back. Mavrouki, a rifle in each hand,
+ came worming his way toward me through the grass with incredible quickness
+ and agility. A moment later he thrust the 405 Winchester into my hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This weapon, powerful and accurate as it is, the best of the lot for
+ lions, was altogether too small for the tremendous brute before me.
+ However, the Holland was in camp; and I was very glad in the circumstances
+ to get this. The buffalo had browsed slowly forward into the clear, and
+ was now taking the top off a small bush, and facing half away from us. It
+ seemed to me quite the largest buffalo I had ever seen, though I should
+ have been willing to have acknowledged at that moment that the
+ circumstances had something to do with the estimate. However, later we
+ found that the impression was correct. He was verily a giant of his kind.
+ His height at the shoulder was five feet ten inches; and his build was
+ even chunkier than the usual solid robust pattern of buffaloes. For
+ example, his neck, just back of the horns, was two feet eight inches
+ thick! He weighed not far from three thousand pounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once the rifle was in my hands I lost the feeling of utter helplessness,
+ and began to plan the best way out of the situation. As yet the beast was
+ totally unconscious of our presence; but that could not continue long.
+ There were too many men about. A chance current of air from any one of a
+ half dozen directions could not fail to give him the scent. Then there
+ would be lively doings. It was exceedingly desirable to deliver the first
+ careful blow of the engagement while he was unaware. On the other hand,
+ his present attitude-half away from me-was not favourable; nor, in my
+ exposed position dared I move to a better place. There seemed nothing
+ better than to wait; so wait we did. Mavrouki crouched close at my elbow,
+ showing not the faintest indication of a desire to be anywhere but there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The buffalo browsed for a minute or so; then swung slowly broadside on. So
+ massive and low were the bosses of his horns that the brain shot was
+ impossible. Therefore I aimed low in the shoulder. The shock of the bullet
+ actually knocked that great beast off his feet! My respect for the hitting
+ power of the 405 went up several notches. The only trouble was that he
+ rebounded like a rubber ball. Without an instant's hesitation I gave him
+ another in the same place. This brought him to his knees for an instant;
+ but he was immediately afoot again. Billy had, with great good sense and
+ courage, continued to lie absolutely flat within a few yards of the beast,
+ Mavrouki and I had kept low, and C. and the men were out of sight. The
+ buffalo therefore had seen none of his antagonists. He charged at a guess,
+ and guessed wrong. As he went by I fired at his head, and, as we found out
+ afterward, broke his jaw. A moment later C.'s great elephant gun roared
+ from somewhere behind me as he fired by a glimpse through the brush at the
+ charging animal. It was an excellent snapshot, and landed back of the
+ ribs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the buffalo broke through the screen of brush I dashed after him, for
+ I thought our only chance of avoiding danger lay in keeping close track of
+ where that buffalo went. On the other side the bushes I found a little
+ grassy opening, and then a small but dense thicket into which the animal
+ had plunged. To my left, C. was running up, followed closely by Billy,
+ who, with her usual good sense, had figured out the safest place to be
+ immediately back of the guns. We came together at the thicket's edge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The animal's movements could be plainly followed by the sound of his
+ crashing. We heard him dash away some distance, pause, circle a bit to the
+ right, and then come rushing back in our direction. Stooping low we peered
+ into the darkness of the thicket. Suddenly we saw him, not a dozen yards
+ away. He was still afoot, but very slow. I dropped the magazine of five
+ shots into him as fast as I could work the lever. We later found all the
+ bullet-holes in a spot as big as the palm of your hand. These successive
+ heavy blows delivered all in the same place were too much for even his
+ tremendous vitality; and slowly he sank on his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVI. JUJA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Most people have heard of Juja, the modern dwelling in the heart of an
+ African wilderness, belonging to our own countryman, Mr. W. N. McMillan.
+ If most people are as I was before I saw the place, they have considerable
+ curiosity and no knowledge of what it is and how it looks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We came to Juja at the end of a wide circle that had lasted three months,
+ and was now bringing us back again toward our starting point. For five
+ days we had been camped on top a high bluff at the junction of two rivers.
+ When we moved we dropped down the bluff, crossed one river, and, after
+ some searching, found our way up the other bluff. There we were on a vast
+ plain bounded by mountains thirty miles away. A large white and unexpected
+ sign told us we were on Juja Farm, and warned us that we should be careful
+ of our fires in the long grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For an hour we plodded slowly along. Herds of zebra and hartebeeste drew
+ aside before us, dark heavy wildebeeste-the gnu-stood in groups at a safe
+ distance their heads low, looking exactly like our vanished bison;
+ ghostlike bands of Thompson's gazelles glided away with their smooth
+ regular motion. On the vast and treeless plains single small objects
+ standing above the general uniformity took an exaggerated value; so that,
+ before it emerged from the swirling heat mirage, a solitary tree might
+ easily be mistaken for a group of buildings or a grove. Finally, however,
+ we raised above the horizon a dark straight clump of trees. It danced in
+ the mirage, and blurred and changed form, but it persisted. A strange
+ patch of white kept appearing and disappearing again. This resolved itself
+ into the side of a building. A spider-legged water tower appeared above
+ the trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gradually we drew up on these. A bit later we swung to the right around a
+ close wire fence ten feet high, passed through a gate, and rode down a
+ long slanting avenue of young trees. Between the trees were century plants
+ and flowers, and a clipped border ran before them. The avenue ended before
+ a low white bungalow, with shady verandas all about it, and vines. A
+ formal flower garden lay immediately about it, and a very tall flag pole
+ had been planted in front. A hundred feet away the garden dropped off
+ steep to one of the deep river canyons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two white-robed Somalis appeared on the veranda to inform us that McMillan
+ was off on safari. Our own boys approaching at this moment, we thereupon
+ led them past the house, down another long avenue of trees and flowers,
+ out into an open space with many buildings at its edges, past extensive
+ stables, and through another gate to the open plains once more. Here we
+ made camp. After lunch we went back to explore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Juja is situated on the top of a high bluff overlooking a river. In all
+ directions are tremendous grass plains. Donya Sabuk-the Mountain of
+ Buffaloes-is the only landmark nearer than the dim mountains beyond the
+ edge of the world, and that is a day's journey away. A rectangle of
+ possibly forty acres has been enclosed on three sides by animal-proof wire
+ fence. The fourth side is the edge of the bluff. Within this enclosure
+ have been planted many trees, now of good size; a pretty garden with
+ abundance of flowers, ornamental shrubs, a sundial, and lawns. In the
+ river bottom land below the bluff is a very extensive vegetable and fruit
+ garden, with cornfields, and experimental plantings of rubber, and the
+ like. For the use of the people of Juja here are raised a great variety
+ and abundance of vegetables, fruits, and grains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Juja House, as has been said, stands back a hundred feet from a bend in
+ the bluffs that permits a view straight up the river valley. It is
+ surrounded by gardens and trees, and occupies all one end of the enclosed
+ rectangle. Farther down and perched on the edge of a bluff, are several
+ pretty little bungalows for the accommodation of the superintendent and
+ his family, for the bachelors' mess, for the farm offices and dispensary,
+ and for the dairy room, the ice-plant and the post-office and telegraph
+ station. Back of and inland from this row on the edge of the cliff, and
+ scattered widely in open space, are a large store stocked with everything
+ on earth, the Somali quarters of low whitewashed buildings, the cattle
+ corrals, the stables, wild animal cages, granaries, blacksmith and
+ carpenter shops, wagon sheds and the like. Outside the enclosure, and a
+ half mile away, are the conical grass huts that make up the native
+ village. Below the cliff is a concrete dam, an electric light plant, a
+ pumping plant and a few details of the sort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such is a relief map of Juja proper. Four miles away, and on another
+ river, is Long Juja, a strictly utilitarian affair where grow ostriches,
+ cattle, sheep, and various irrigated things in the bottom land. All the
+ rest of the farm, or estate, or whatever one would call it, is open plain,
+ with here and there a river bottom, or a trifle of brush cover. But never
+ enough to constitute more than an isolated and lonesome patch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before leaving London we had received from McMillan earnest assurances
+ that he kept open house, and that we must take advantage of his
+ hospitality should we happen his way. Therefore when one of his
+ white-robed Somalis approached us to inquire respectfully as to what we
+ wanted for dinner, we yielded weakly to the temptation and told him. Then
+ we marched us boldly to the house and took possession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All around the house ran a veranda, shaded bamboo curtains and vines,
+ furnished with the luxurious teakwood chairs of the tropics of which you
+ can so extend the arms as to form two comfortable and elevated rests for
+ your feet. Horns of various animals ornamented the walls. A megaphone and
+ a huge terrestrial telescope on a tripod stood in one corner. Through the
+ latter one could examine at favourable times the herds of game on the
+ plains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And inside-mind you, we were fresh from three months in the wilderness-we
+ found rugs, pictures, wall paper, a pianola, many books, baths, beautiful
+ white bedrooms with snowy mosquito curtains, electric lights, running
+ water, and above all an atmosphere of homelike comfort. We fell into easy
+ chairs, and seized books and magazines. The Somalis brought us trays with
+ iced and fizzy drinks in thin glasses. When the time came we crossed the
+ veranda in the rear to enter a spacious separate dining-room. The table
+ was white with napery, glittering with silver and glass, bright with
+ flowers. We ate leisurely of a well-served course dinner, ending with
+ black coffee, shelled nuts, and candied fruit. Replete and satisfied we
+ strolled back across the veranda to the main house. F. raised his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hark!&rdquo; he admonished us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We held still. From the velvet darkness came the hurried petulant barking
+ of zebra; three hyenas howled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVII. A VISIT AT JUJA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Next day we left all this; and continued our march. About a month later,
+ however, we encountered McMillan himself in Nairobi. I was just out from a
+ very hard trip to the coast-Billy not with me-and wanted nothing so much
+ as a few days' rest. McMillan's cordiality was not to be denied, however,
+ so the very next day found us tucking ourselves into a buckboard behind
+ four white Abyssinian mules. McMillan, some Somalis and Captain Duirs came
+ along in another similar rig. Our driver was a Hottentot half-caste from
+ South Africa. He had a flat face, a yellow skin, a quiet manner, and a
+ competent hand. His name was Michael. At his feet crouched a small Kikuyu
+ savage, in blanket ear ornaments and all the fixings, armed with a long
+ lashed whip and raucous voice. At any given moment he was likely to hop
+ out over the moving wheel, run forward, bat the off leading mule, and hop
+ back again, all with the most extraordinary agility. He likewise hurled
+ what sounded like very opprobrious epithets at such natives as did not get
+ out the way quickly enough to suit him. The expression of his face, which
+ was that of a person steeped in woe, never changed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We rattled out of Nairobi at a great pace, and swung into the Fort Hall
+ Road. This famous thoroughfare, one of the three or four made roads in all
+ East Africa, is about sixty miles long. It is a strategic necessity but is
+ used by thousands of natives on their way to see the sights of the great
+ metropolis. As during the season there is no water for much of the
+ distance, a great many pay for their curiosity with their lives. The road
+ skirts the base of the hills, winding in and out of shallow canyons and
+ about the edges of rounded hills. To the right one can see far out across
+ the Athi Plains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We met an almost unbroken succession of people. There were long pack
+ trains of women, quite cheerful, bent over under the weight of firewood or
+ vegetables, many with babies tucked away in the folds of their garments;
+ mincing dandified warriors with poodle-dog hair, skewers in their ears,
+ their jewelery brought to a high polish a fatuous expression of
+ self-satisfaction on their faces, carrying each a section of sugarcane
+ which they now used as a staff but would later devour for lunch; bearers,
+ under convoy of straight soldierly red-sashed Sudanese, transporting
+ Government goods; wild-eyed staring shenzis from the forest, with matted
+ hair and goatskin garments, looking ready to bolt aside at the slightest
+ alarm; coveys of marvellous and giggling damsels, their fine-grained skin
+ anointed and shining with red oil, strung with beads and shells, very
+ coquettish and sure of their feminine charm; naked small boys marching
+ solemnly like their elders; camel trains from far-off Abyssinia or
+ Somaliland under convoy of white-clad turbaned grave men of beautiful
+ features; donkey safaris in charge of dirty degenerate looking East
+ Indians carrying trade goods to some distant post-all these and many more,
+ going one way or the other, drew one side, at the sight of our white
+ faces, to let us pass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About two o'clock we suddenly turned off from the road, apparently quite
+ at random, down the long grassy interminable incline that dipped slowly
+ down and slowly up again over great distance to form the Athi Plains.
+ Along the road, with its endless swarm of humanity, we had seen no game,
+ but after a half mile it began to appear. We encountered herds of zebra,
+ kongoni, wildebeeste, and &ldquo;Tommies&rdquo; standing about or grazing, sometimes
+ almost within range from the moving buckboard. After a time we made out
+ the trees and water tower of Juja ahead; and by four o'clock had turned
+ into the avenue of trees. Our approach had been seen. Tea was ready, and a
+ great and hospitable table of bottles, ice, and siphons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning we inspected the stables, built of stone in a hollow
+ square, like a fort, with box stalls opening directly into the courtyard
+ and screened carefully against the deadly flies. The horses, beautiful
+ creatures, were led forth each by his proud and anxious syce. We tried
+ them all, and selected our mounts for the time of our stay. The syces were
+ small black men, lean and well formed, accustomed to running afoot
+ wherever their charges went, at walk, lope or gallop. Thus in a day they
+ covered incredible distances over all sorts of country; but were always at
+ hand to seize the bridle reins when the master wished to dismount. Like
+ the rickshaw runners in Nairobi, they wore their hair clipped close around
+ their bullet heads and seemed to have developed into a small compact hard
+ type of their own. They ate and slept with their horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just outside the courtyard of the stables a little barred window had been
+ cut through. Near this were congregated a number of Kikuyu savages wrapped
+ in their blankets, receiving each in turn a portion of cracked corn from a
+ dusty white man behind the bars. They were a solemn, unsmiling, strange
+ type of savage, and they performed all the manual work within the
+ enclosure, squatting on their heels and pulling methodically but slowly at
+ the weeds, digging with their pangas, carrying loads: to and fro, or
+ solemnly pushing a lawn mower, blankets wrapped shamelessly about their
+ necks. They were harried about by a red-faced beefy English gardener with
+ a marvellous vocabulary of several native languages and a short hippo-hide
+ whip. He talked himself absolutely purple in the face without, as far as
+ my observation went, penetrating an inch below the surface. The Kikuyus
+ went right on doing what they were already doing in exactly the same
+ manner. Probably the purple Englishman was satisfied with that, but I am
+ sure apoplexy of either the heat or thundering variety has him by now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the store building squatted another group of savages. Perhaps in
+ time one of the lot expected to buy something; or possibly they just sat.
+ Nobody but a storekeeper would ever have time to find out. Such is the
+ native way. The storekeeper in this case was named John. Besides being
+ storekeeper, he had charge of the issuing of all the house supplies, and
+ those for the white men's mess; he must do all the worrying about the
+ upper class natives; he must occasionally kill a buck for the meat supply;
+ and he must be prepared to take out any stray tenderfeet that happen along
+ during McMillan's absence, and persuade them that they are mighty hunters.
+ His domain was a fascinating place, for it contained everything from
+ pianola parts to patent washstands. The next best equipped place of the
+ kind I know of is the property room of a moving picture company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We went to mail a letter, and found the postmaster to be a gentle-voiced,
+ polite little Hindu, who greeted us smilingly, and attempted to conceal a
+ work of art. We insisted; whereupon he deprecatingly drew forth a copy of
+ a newspaper cartoon having to do with Colonel Roosevelt's visit. It was
+ copied with mathematical exactness, and highly coloured in a manner to
+ throw into profound melancholy the chauffeur of a coloured supplement
+ press. We admired and praised; whereupon, still shyly, he produced more,
+ and yet again more copies of the same cartoon. When we left, he was
+ reseating himself to the painstaking valueless labour with which he filled
+ his days. Three times a week such mail as Juja gets comes in via native
+ runner. We saw the latter, a splendid figure, almost naked, loping easily,
+ his little bundle held before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Down past the office and dispensary we strolled, by the comfortable, airy,
+ white man's clubhouse. The headman of the native population passed us with
+ a dignified salute; a fine upstanding deep-chested man, with a lofty air
+ of fierce pride. He and his handful of soldiers alone of the natives,
+ except the Somalis and syces, dwelt within the compound in a group of huts
+ near the gate. There when off duty they might be seen polishing their
+ arms, or chatting with their women. The latter were ladies of leisure,
+ with wonderful chignons, much jewelery, and patterned Mericani wrapped
+ gracefully about their pretty figures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time we had seen all these things it was noon. We ate lunch. The
+ various members of the party decided to do various things. I elected to go
+ out with McMillan while he killed a wildebeeste, and I am very glad I did.
+ It was a most astonishing performance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You must imagine us driving out the gate in a buckboard behind four small
+ but lively white Abyssinian mules. In the front seat were Michael, the
+ Hottentot driver, and McMillan's Somali gunbearer. In the rear seat were
+ McMillan and myself, while a small black syce perched precariously behind.
+ Our rifles rested in a sling before us. So we jogged out on the road to
+ Long Juju, examining with a critical eye the herds of game to right and
+ left of us. The latter examined us, apparently, with an eye as critical.
+ Finally, in a herd of zebra, we espied a lone wildebeeste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wildebeeste is the Jekyll and Hyde of the animal kingdom. His usual
+ and familiar habit is that of a heavy, sluggish animal, like our vanished
+ bison. He stands solid and inert, his head down; he plods slowly forward
+ in single file, his horns swinging, each foot planted deliberately. In
+ short, he is the personification of dignity, solid respectability, gravity
+ of demeanour. But then all of a sudden, at any small interruption, he
+ becomes the giddiest of created beings. Up goes his head and tail, he buck
+ jumps, cavorts, gambols, kicks up his heels, bounds stiff-legged, and
+ generally performs like an irresponsible infant. To see a whole herd at
+ once of these grave and reverend seigneurs suddenly blow up into such
+ light-headed capers goes far to destroy one's faith in the stability of
+ institutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Also the wildebeeste is not misnamed. He is a conservative, and he sees no
+ particular reason for allowing his curiosity to interfere with his
+ preconceived beliefs. The latter are distrustful. Therefore he and his
+ females and his young-I should say small-depart when one is yet far away.
+ I say small, because I do not believe that any wildebeeste is ever young.
+ They do not resemble calves, but are exact replicas of the big ones, just
+ as Niobe's daughters are in nothing childlike, but merely smaller women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we caught sight of this lone wildebeeste among the zebra, I naturally
+ expected that we would pull up the buckboard, descend, and approach to
+ within some sort of long range. Then we would open fire. Barring luck, the
+ wildebeeste would thereupon depart &ldquo;wilder and beestier than ever,&rdquo; as
+ John McCutcheon has it. Not at all! Michael, the Hottentot, turned the
+ buckboard off the road, headed toward the distant quarry, and charged at
+ full speed! Over stones we went that sent us feet into the air, down and
+ out of shallow gullies that seemed as though they would jerk the pole from
+ the vehicle with a grand rattlety-bang, every one hanging on for his life.
+ I was entirely occupied with the state of my spinal column and the
+ retention of my teeth, but McMillan must have been keeping his eye on the
+ game. One peculiarity of the wildebeeste is that he cannot see behind him,
+ and another is that he is curious. It would not require a very large bump
+ of curiosity, however, to cause any animal to wonder what all the row was
+ about. There could be no doubt that this animal would sooner or later stop
+ for an instant to look for the purpose of seeing what was up in
+ jungleland; and just before doing so he would, for a few steps, slow down
+ from a gallop to a trot. McMillan was watching for this symptom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now!&rdquo; he yelled, when he saw it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instantly Michael threw his weight into the right rein and against the
+ brake. We swerved so violently to the right and stopped so suddenly that I
+ nearly landed on the broad prairies. The manoeuvre fetched us up
+ broadside. The small black syce-and heaven knows how HE had managed to
+ hang on-darted to the heads of the leading mules. At the same moment the
+ wildebeeste turned, and stopped; but even before he had swung his head,
+ McMillan had fired. It was extraordinarily good, quick work, the way he
+ picked up the long range from the spurts of dust where the bullets hit. At
+ the third or fourth shots he landed one. Immediately the beast was off
+ again at a tearing run pursued by a rapid fusillade from the remaining
+ shots. Then with a violent jerk and a wild yell we were off again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This time, since the animal was wounded, he made for rougher country. And
+ everywhere that wildebeeste went we too were sure to go. We hit or shaved
+ boulders that ought to have smashed a wheel, we tore through thick brush
+ regardless. Twice we charged unhesitatingly over apparent precipices. I do
+ not know the name of the manufacturer of the buckboard. If I did, I should
+ certainly recommend it here. Twice more we swerved to our broadside and
+ cut loose the port batteries. Once more McMillan hit. Then, on the fourth
+ &ldquo;run,&rdquo; we gained perceptibly. The beast was weakening. When he came to a
+ stumbling halt we were not over a hundred yards from him, and McMillan
+ easily brought him down. We had chased him four or five miles, and
+ McMillan had fired nineteen shots, of which two had hit. The rifle
+ practice throughout had been remarkably good, and a treat to watch.
+ Personally, besides the fun of attending the show, I got a mighty good
+ afternoon's exercise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We loaded the game aboard and jogged slowly back to the house, for the
+ mules were pretty tired. We found a neighbour, Mr. Heatley of Kamiti Ranch
+ who had &ldquo;dropped down&rdquo; twelve miles to see us. On account of a theft
+ McMillan now had all the Somalis assembled for interrogation on the side
+ verandas. The interrogation did not amount to much, but while it was going
+ on the Sudanese headman and his askaris were quietly searching the boys'
+ quarters. After a time they appeared. The suspected men had concealed
+ nothing, but the searchers brought with them three of McMillan's shirts
+ which they had found among the effects of another, and entirely
+ unsuspected, boy named Abadie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How is this, Abadie?&rdquo; demanded McMillan sternly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abadie hesitated. Then he evidently reflected that there is slight use in
+ having a deity unless one makes use of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bwana,&rdquo; said he with an engaging air of belief and candour, &ldquo;God must
+ have put them there!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening we planned a &ldquo;general day&rdquo; for the morrow. We took boys and
+ buckboards and saddle-horses, beaters, shotguns, rifles, and revolvers,
+ and we sallied forth for a grand and joyous time. The day from a sporting
+ standpoint was entirely successful, the bag consisting of two waterbuck, a
+ zebra, a big wart-hog, six hares, and six grouse. Personally I was a
+ little hazy and uncertain. By evening the fever had me, and though I
+ stayed at Juja for six days longer, it was as a patient to McMillan's
+ unfailing kindness rather than as a participant in the life of the farm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVIII. A RESIDENCE AT JUJA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A short time later, at about middle of the rainy season, McMillan left for
+ a little fishing off Catalina Island. The latter is some fourteen thousand
+ miles of travel from Juja. Before leaving on this flying trip, McMillan
+ made us a gorgeous offer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you want to go it alone, you can go out and use Juja as
+ long as you please.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This offer, or, rather, a portion of it, you may be sure, we accepted
+ promptly. McMillan wanted in addition to leave us his servants; but to
+ this we would not agree. Memba Sasa and Mahomet were, of course, members
+ of our permanent staff. In addition to them we picked up another house
+ boy, named Leyeye. He was a Masai. These proud and aristocratic savages
+ rarely condescend to take service of any sort except as herders; but when
+ they do they prove to be unusually efficient and intelligent. We had also
+ a Somali cook, and six ordinary bearers to do general labour. This small
+ safari we started off afoot for Juja. The whole lot cost us about what we
+ would pay one Chinaman on the Pacific Coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day we ourselves drove out in the mule buckboard. The rains were on,
+ and the road was very muddy. After the vital tropical fashion the grass
+ was springing tall in the natural meadows and on the plains and the
+ brief-lived white lilies and an abundance of ground flowers washed the
+ slopes with colour. Beneath the grass covering, the entire surface of the
+ ground was an inch or so deep in water. This was always most surprising,
+ for, apparently, the whole country should have been high and dry.
+ Certainly its level was that of a plateau rather than a bottom land; so
+ that one seemed always to be travelling at an elevation. Nevertheless
+ walking or riding we were continually splashing, and the only dry going
+ outside the occasional rare &ldquo;islands&rdquo; of the slight undulations we found
+ near the very edge of the bluffs above the rivers. There the drainage
+ seemed sufficient to carry off the excess. Elsewhere the hardpan or
+ bedrock must have been exceptionally level and near the top of the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing nor nobody seemed to mind this much. The game splashed around
+ merrily, cropping at the tall grass; the natives slopped indifferently,
+ and we ourselves soon became so accustomed to two or three inches of water
+ and wet feet that after the first two days we never gave those phenomena a
+ thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The world above at this season of the year was magnificent. The African
+ heavens are always widely spacious, but now they seemed to have blown even
+ vaster than usual. In the sweep of the vision four or five heavy black
+ rainstorms would be trailing their skirts across an infinitely remote
+ prospect; between them white piled scud clouds and cumuli sailed like
+ ships; and from them reflected so brilliant a sunlight and behind all
+ showed so dazzling a blue sky that the general impression was of a fine
+ day. The rainstorms' gray veils slanted; tremendous patches of shadow lay
+ becalmed on the plains; bright sunshine poured abundantly its warmth and
+ yellow light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So brilliant with both direct and reflected light and the values of
+ contrast were the heavens, that when one happened to stand within one of
+ the great shadows it became extraordinarily difficult to make out game on
+ the plains. The pupils contracted to the brilliancy overhead. Often too,
+ near sunset, the atmosphere would become suffused with a lurid saffron
+ light that made everything unreal and ghastly. At such times the game
+ seemed puzzled by the unusual aspect of things. The zebra especially would
+ bark and stamp and stand their ground, and even come nearer out of sheer
+ curiosity. I have thus been within fifty yards of them, right out in the
+ open. At such times it was as though the sky, instead of rounding over in
+ the usual shape, had been thrust up at the western horizon to the same
+ incredible height as the zenith. In the space thus created were piled
+ great clouds through which slanted broad bands of yellow light on a
+ diminished world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It rained with great suddenness on our devoted heads, and with a curious
+ effect of metamorphoslng the entire universe. One moment all was clear and
+ smiling, with the trifling exception of distant rain squalls that amounted
+ to nothing in the general scheme. Then the horizon turned black, and with
+ incredible swiftness the dark clouds materialized out of nothing, rolled
+ high to the zenith like a wave, blotted out every last vestige of
+ brightness. A heavy oppressive still darkness breathed over the earth.
+ Then through the silence came a faraway soft drumming sound, barely to be
+ heard. As we bent our ears to catch this it grew louder and louder,
+ approaching at breakneck speed like a troop of horses. It became a roar
+ fairly terrifying in its mercilessly continued crescendo. At last the
+ deluge of rain burst actually as a relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what a deluge! Facing it we found difficulty in breathing. In six
+ seconds every stitch we wore was soaked through, and only the notebook,
+ tobacco, and matches bestowed craftily in the crown of the cork helmet
+ escaped. The visible world was dark and contracted. It seemed that nothing
+ but rain could anywhere exist; as though this storm must fill all space to
+ the horizon and beyond. Then it swept on and we found ourselves steaming
+ in bright sunlight. The dry flat prairie (if this was the first shower for
+ some time) had suddenly become a lake from the surface of which projected
+ bushes and clumps of grass. Every game trail had become the water course
+ of a swiftly running brook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But most pleasant were the evenings at Juja, when, safe indoors, we sat
+ and listened to the charge of the storm's wild horsemen, and the thunder
+ of its drumming on the tin roof. The onslaughts were as fierce and abrupt
+ as those of Cossacks, and swept by as suddenly. The roar died away in the
+ distance, and we could then hear the steady musical dripping of waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pleasant it was also to walk out from Juja in almost any direction. The
+ compound, and the buildings and trees within it, soon dwindled in the
+ distances of the great flat plain. Herds of game were always in sight,
+ grazing, lying down, staring in our direction. The animals were incredibly
+ numerous. Some days they were fairly tame, and others exceedingly wild,
+ without any rhyme or reason. This shyness or the reverse seemed not to be
+ individual to one herd; but to be practically universal. On a &ldquo;wild day&rdquo;
+ everything was wild from the Lone Tree to Long Juju. It would be
+ manifestly absurd to guess at the reason. Possibly the cause might be
+ atmospheric or electrical; possibly days of nervousness might follow
+ nights of unusual activity by the lions; one could invent a dozen
+ possibilities. Perhaps the kongonis decided it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Juja we got to know the kongonis even better than we had before. They
+ are comical, quizzical beasts, with long-nosed humorous faces, a
+ singularly awkward construction, a shambling gait; but with altruistic
+ dispositions and an ability to get over the ground at an extraordinary
+ speed. Every move is a joke; their expression is always one of grieved but
+ humorous astonishment. They quirk their heads sidewise or down and stare
+ at an intruder with the most comical air of skeptical wonder. &ldquo;Well, look
+ who's here!&rdquo; says the expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh!&rdquo; says the kongoni himself, after a good look, &ldquo;pooh! pooh!&rdquo; with
+ the most insulting inflection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is very numerous and very alert. One or more of a grazing herd are
+ always perched as sentinels atop ant hills or similar small elevations. On
+ the slightest intimation of danger they give the alarm, whereupon the herd
+ makes off at once, gathering in all other miscellaneous game that may be
+ in the vicinity. They will go out of their way to do this, as every
+ African hunter knows. It immensely complicates matters; for the sportsman
+ must not only stalk his quarry, but he must stalk each and every kongoni
+ as well. Once, in another part of the country, C. and I saw a kongoni
+ leave a band of its own species far down to our right, gallop toward us
+ and across our front, pick up a herd of zebra we were trying to approach
+ and make off with them to safety. We cursed that kongoni, but we admired
+ him, for he deliberately ran out of safety into danger for the purpose of
+ warning those zebra. So seriously do they take their job as policemen of
+ the plains that it is very common for a lazy single animal of another
+ species to graze in a herd of kongonis simply for the sake of protection.
+ Wildebeeste are much given to this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The kongoni progresses by a series of long high bounds. While in midair he
+ half tucks up his feet, which gives him the appearance of an automatic
+ toy. This gait looks deliberate, but is really quite fast, as the mounted
+ sportsman discovers when he enters upon a vain pursuit. If the horse is an
+ especially good one, so that the kongoni feels himself a trifle closely
+ pressed, the latter stops bouncing and runs. Then he simply fades away
+ into the distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These beasts are also given to chasing each other all over the landscape.
+ When a gentleman kongoni conceives a dislike for another gentleman
+ kongoni, he makes no concealment of his emotions, but marches up and prods
+ him in the ribs. The ensuing battle is usually fought out very stubbornly
+ with much feinting, parrying, clashing of the lyre-shaped horns; and a
+ good deal of crafty circling for a favourable opening. As far as I was
+ ever able to see not much real damage is inflicted; though I could well
+ imagine that only skilful fence prevented unpleasant punctures in soft
+ spots. After a time one or the other feels himself weakening. He dashes
+ strongly in, wheels while his antagonist is braced, and makes off. The
+ enemy pursues. Then, apparently, the chase is on for the rest of the day.
+ The victor is not content merely to drive his rival out of the country; he
+ wants to catch him. On that object he is very intent; about as intent as
+ the other fellow is of getting away. I have seen two such beasts almost
+ run over a dozen men who were making no effort to keep out of sight. Long
+ after honour is satisfied, indeed, as it seems to me, long after the
+ dictates of common decency would call a halt that persistent and
+ single-minded pursuer bounds solemnly and conscientiously along in the
+ wake of his disgusted rival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These and the zebra and wildebeeste were at Juja the most conspicuous game
+ animals. If they could not for the moment be seen from the veranda of the
+ house itself, a short walk to the gate was sufficient to reveal many
+ hundreds. Among them fed herds of the smaller Thompson's gazelle, or
+ &ldquo;Tommies.&rdquo; So small were they that only their heads could be seen above
+ the tall grass as they ran.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To me there was never-ending fascination in walking out over those sloppy
+ plains in search of adventure, and in the pleasure of watching the beasts.
+ Scarcely less fascination haunted a stroll down the river canyons or along
+ the tops of the bluffs above them. Here the country was broken into rocky
+ escarpments in which were caves; was clothed with low and scattered brush;
+ or was wooded in the bottom lands. Naturally an entirely different set of
+ animals dwelt here; and in addition one was often treated to the romance
+ of surprise. Herds of impalla haunted these edges; graceful creatures,
+ trim and pretty with wide horns and beautiful glowing red coats. Sometimes
+ they would venture out on the open plains, in a very compact band, ready
+ to break back for cover at the slightest alarm; but generally fed inside
+ the fringe of bushes. Once from the bluff above I saw a beautiful herd of
+ over a hundred pacing decorously along the river bottom below me, single
+ file, the oldest buck at the head, and the miscellaneous small buck
+ bringing up the rear after the does. I shouted at them. Immediately the
+ solemn procession broke. They began to leap, springing straight up into
+ the air as though from a released spring, or diving forward and upward in
+ long graceful bounds like dolphins at sea. These leaps were incredible.
+ Several even jumped quite over the backs of others; and all without a
+ semblance of effort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Along the fringe of the river, too, dwelt the lordly waterbuck,
+ magnificent and proud as the stags of Landseer; and the tiny steinbuck and
+ duiker, no bigger than jack-rabbits, but perfect little deer for all that.
+ The incredibly plebeian wart-hog rooted about; and down in the bottom
+ lands were leopards. I knocked one off a rock one day. In the river itself
+ dwelt hippopotamuses and crocodiles. One of the latter dragged under a
+ yearling calf just below the house itself, and while we were there.
+ Besides these were of course such affairs as hyenas and jackals, and great
+ numbers of small game: hares, ducks, three kinds of grouse, guinea fowl,
+ pigeons, quail, and jack snipe, not to speak of a variety of plover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the drier extents of dry grass atop the bluffs the dance birds were
+ especially numerous; each with his dance ring nicely trodden out, each
+ leaping and falling rhythmically for hours at a time. Toward sunset great
+ flights of sand grouse swarmed across the yellowing sky from some distant
+ feeding ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Near Juja I had one of the three experiences that especially impressed on
+ my mind the abundance of African big game. I had stalked and wounded a
+ wildebeeste across the N'derogo River, and had followed him a mile or so
+ afoot, hoping to be able to put in a finishing shot. As sometimes happens
+ the animal rather gained strength as time went on; so I signalled for my
+ horse, mounted, and started out to run him down. After a quarter mile we
+ began to pick up the game herds. Those directly in our course ran straight
+ away; other herds on either side, seeing them running, came across in a
+ slant to join them. Inside of a half mile I was driving before me
+ literally thousands of head of game of several varieties. The dust rose in
+ a choking cloud that fairly obscured the landscape, and the drumming of
+ the hooves was like the stampeding of cattle. It was a wonderful sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the plains of Juja, also, I had my one real African Adventure, when, as
+ in the Sunday Supplements, I Stared Death in the Face-also everlasting
+ disgrace and much derision. We were just returning to the farm after an
+ afternoon's walk, and as we approached I began to look around for much
+ needed meat. A herd of zebra stood in sight; so leaving Memba Sasa I began
+ to stalk them. My usual weapon for this sort of thing was the Springfield,
+ for which I carried extra cartridges in my belt. On this occasion,
+ however, I traded with Memba Sasa for the 405, simply for the purpose of
+ trying it out. At a few paces over three hundred yards I landed on the
+ zebra, but did not knock him down. Then I set out to follow. It was a long
+ job and took me far, for again and again he joined other zebra, when, of
+ course, I could not tell one from t'other. My only expedient was to
+ frighten the lot. There upon the uninjured ones would distance the one
+ that was hurt. The latter kept his eye on me. Whenever I managed to get
+ within reasonable distance, I put up the rear sight of the 405, and let
+ drive. I heard every shot hit, and after each hit was more than a little
+ astonished to see the zebra still on his feet, and still able to wobble
+ on.* The fifth shot emptied the rifle. As I had no more cartridges for
+ this arm, I approached to within sixty yards, and stopped to wait either
+ for him to fall, or for a very distant Memba Sasa to come up with more
+ cartridges. Then the zebra waked up. He put his ears back and came
+ straight in my direction. This rush I took for a blind death flurry, and
+ so dodged off to one side, thinking that he would of course go by me. Not
+ at all! He swung around on the circle too, and made after me. I could see
+ that his ears were back, eyes blazing, and his teeth snapping with rage.
+ It was a malicious charge, and, as such, with due deliberation, I offer it
+ to sportsman's annals. As I had no more cartridges I ran away as fast as I
+ could go. Although I made rather better time than ever I had attained to
+ before, it was evident that the zebra would catch me; and as the brute
+ could paw, bite, and kick, I did not much care for the situation. Just as
+ he had nearly reached me, and as I was trying to figure on what kind of a
+ fight I could put up with a clubbed rifle barrel, he fell dead. To be
+ killed by a lion is at least a dignified death; but to be mauled by a
+ zebra!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am sorry I did not try out this heavy-calibred rifle oftener at long
+ range. It was a marvellously effective weapon at close quarters; but I
+ have an idea-but only a tentative idea-that above three hundred yards its
+ velocity is so reduced by air resistance against the big blunt bullet as
+ greatly to impair its hitting powers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We generally got back from our walks or rides just before dark to find the
+ house gleaming with lights, a hot bath ready, and a tray of good wet
+ drinks next the easy chairs. There, after changing our clothes, we sipped
+ and read the papers-two months off the press, but fresh arrived for all
+ that-until a white-robed, dignified figure appeared in the doorway to
+ inform us that dinner was ready. Our ways were civilized and soft, then,
+ until the morrow when once again, perhaps, we went forth into the African
+ wilderness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Juja is a place of startling contrasts-of naked savages clipping formal
+ hedges, of windows opening from a perfectly appointed brilliantly lighted
+ dining-room to a night whence float the lost wails of hyenas or the deep
+ grumbling of lions, of cushioned luxurious chairs in reach of many books,
+ but looking out on hills where the game herds feed, of comfortable beds
+ with fine linen and soft blankets where one lies listening to the voices
+ of an African night, or the weirder minor house noises whose origin and
+ nature no man could guess, of tennis courts and summer houses, of lawns
+ and hammocks, of sundials and clipped hedges separated only by a few
+ strands of woven wire from fields identical with those in which roamed the
+ cave men of the Pleistocene. But to Billy was reserved the most ridiculous
+ contrast of all. Her bedroom opened to a veranda a few feet above a formal
+ garden. This was a very formal garden, with a sundial, gravelled walks,
+ bordered flower beds, and clipped border hedges. One night she heard a
+ noise outside. Slipping on a warm wrap and seizing her trusty revolver she
+ stole out on the veranda to investigate. She looked over the veranda rail.
+ There just below her, trampling the flower beds, tracking the gravel
+ walks, endangering the sundial, stood a hippopotamus!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had neighbours six or seven miles away. At times they came down to
+ spend the night and luxuriate in the comforts of civilization. They were a
+ Lady A., and her nephew, and a young Scotch acquaintance the nephew had
+ taken into partnership. They had built themselves circular houses of
+ papyrus reeds with conical thatched roofs and earth floors, had purchased
+ ox teams and gathered a dozen or so Kikuyus, and were engaged in breaking
+ a farm in the wilderness. The life was rough and hard, and Lady A. and her
+ nephew gently bred, but they seemed to be having quite cheerfully the time
+ of their lives. The game furnished them meat, as it did all of us, and
+ they hoped in time that their labours would make the land valuable and
+ productive. Fascinating as was the life, it was also one of many
+ deprivations. At Juja were a number of old copies of Life, the pretty
+ girls in which so fascinated the young men that we broke the laws of
+ propriety by presenting them, though they did not belong to us. C., the
+ nephew, was of the finest type of young Englishman, clean cut,
+ enthusiastic, good looking, with an air of engaging vitality and optimism.
+ His partner, of his own age, was an insufferable youth. Brought up in some
+ small Scottish valley, his outlook had never widened. Because he wanted to
+ buy four oxen at a cheaper price, he tried desperately to abrogate
+ quarantine regulations. If he had succeeded, he would have made a few
+ rupees, but would have introduced disease in his neighbours' herds. This
+ consideration did not affect him. He was much given to sneering at what he
+ could not understand; and therefore, a great deal met with his
+ disapproval. His reading had evidently brought him down only to about the
+ middle sixties; and affairs at that date were to him still burning
+ questions. Thus he would declaim vehemently over the Alabama claims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I blush with shame,&rdquo; he would cry, &ldquo;when I think of England's attitude in
+ that matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We pointed out that the dispute had been amicably settled by the best
+ minds of the time, had passed between the covers of history, and had given
+ way in immediate importance to several later topics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This vacillating policy,&rdquo; he swept on, &ldquo;annoys me. For my part, I should
+ like to see so firm a stand taken on all questions that in any part of the
+ world, whenever a man, and wherever a man, said 'I am an Englishman?
+ everybody else would draw back!'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was an incredible person. However, I was glad to see him; he and a few
+ others of his kind have consoled me for a number of Americans I have met
+ abroad. Lady A., with the tolerant philosophy of her class, seemed merely
+ amused. I have often since wondered how this ill-assorted partnership
+ turned out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two other neighbours of ours dropped in once or twice-twenty-six miles on
+ bicycles, on which they could ride only a portion of the distance. They
+ had some sort of a ranch up in the Ithanga Hills; and were two of the
+ nicest fellows one would want to meet, brimful of energy, game for
+ anything, and had so good a time always that the grumpiest fever could not
+ prevent every one else having a good time too. Once they rode on their
+ bicycles forty miles to Nairobi, danced half the night at a Government
+ House ball, rode back in the early morning, and did an afternoon's
+ plowing! They explained this feat by pointing out most convincingly that
+ the ground was just right for plowing, but they did not want to miss the
+ ball!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Occasionally a trim and dapper police official would drift in on horseback
+ looking for native criminals; and once a safari came by. Twelve miles away
+ was the famous Kamiti Farm of Heatly, where Roosevelt killed his buffalo;
+ and once or twice Heatly himself, a fine chap, came to see us. Also just
+ before I left with Duirs for a lion hunt on Kapiti, Lady Girouard, wife of
+ the Governor, and her nephew and niece rode out for a hunt. In the African
+ fashion, all these people brought their own personal servants. It makes
+ entertaining easy. Nobody knows where all these boys sleep; but they
+ manage to tuck away somewhere, and always show up after a mysterious
+ system of their own whenever there is anything to be done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We stayed at Juja a little over three weeks. Then most reluctantly said
+ farewell and returned to Nairobi in preparation for a long trip to the
+ south.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIX. CHAPTER THE LAST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ With our return from Juja to Nairobi for a breathing space, this volume
+ comes to a logical conclusion. In it I have tried to give a fairly
+ comprehensive impression-it could hardly be a picture of so large a
+ subject-of a portion of East Equatorial Africa, its animals, and its
+ people. Those who are sufficiently interested will have an opportunity in
+ a succeeding volume of wandering with us even farther afield. The low
+ jungly coast region; the fierce desert of the Serengetti; the swift sullen
+ rhinoceros-haunted stretches of the Tsavo; Nairobi, the strangest mixture
+ of the twentieth centuries A.D. and B.C.; Mombasa with its wild, barbaric
+ passionate ebb and flow of life, of colour, of throbbing sound, the great
+ lions of the Kapiti Plains, the Thirst of the Loieta, the Masai spearmen,
+ the long chase for the greater kudu; the wonderful, high unknown country
+ beyond the Narossara and other affairs will there be detailed. If the
+ reader of this volume happens to want more, there he will find it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_APPE" id="link2H_APPE">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ APPENDIX I
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Most people are very much interested in how hot it gets in such tropics as
+ we traversed. Unfortunately it is very difficult to tell them. Temperature
+ tables have very little to do with the matter, for humidity varies
+ greatly. On the Serengetti at lower reaches of the Guaso Nyero I have seen
+ it above 110 degrees. It was hot, to be sure, but not exhaustingly so. On
+ the other hand, at 90 or 95 degrees the low coast belt I have had the
+ sweat run from me literally in streams; so that a muddy spot formed
+ wherever I stood still. In the highlands, moreover, the nights were often
+ extremely cold. I have recorded night temperatures as low as 40 at 7000
+ feet of elevation; and noon temperatures as low 65.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of more importance than the actual or sensible temperature of the air is
+ the power of the sun's rays. At all times of year this is practically
+ constant; for the orb merely swings a few degrees north and south of the
+ equator, and the extreme difference in time between its risings or
+ settings is not more than twenty minutes. This power is also practically
+ constant whatever the temperature of the air and is dangerous even on a
+ cloudy day, when the heat waves are effectually screened off, but when the
+ actinic rays are as active as ever. For this reason the protection of
+ helmet and spine pad should never be omitted, no matter what the condition
+ of the weather, between nine o'clock and four. A very brief exposure is
+ likely to prove fatal. It should be added that some people stand these
+ actinic rays better than others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such being the case, mere temperature tables could have little interest to
+ the general reader. I append a few statistics, selected from many, and
+ illustrative of the different conditions.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Locality. Elevation 6am noon 8pm Apparent conditions
+ Coast &mdash;- 80 90 76 Very hot and sticky
+ Isiola River 2900 65 94 84 Hot but not exhausting
+ Tans River 3350 68 98 79 Hot but not exhausting
+ Near Meru 5450 62 80 70 Very pleasant
+ Serengetti Plains 2200 78 106 86 Hot and humid
+ Narossara River 5450 54 89 69 Very pleasant
+ Narossara Mts. 7400 42 80 50 Chilly
+ Narossara Mts. 6450 40 62 52 Cold
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_APPE2" id="link2H_APPE2">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ APPENDIX II
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ GAME ANIMALS COLLECTED
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Lion Bush pig Grant's gazelle
+ Serval cat Baboon Thompson's gazelle
+ Cheetah Colobus Gerenuk gazelle
+ Black-backed jackal Hippopotamus Coke's hartebeests
+ Silver jackal Rhinoceros Jackson's hartebeests
+ Striped hyena Crocodile Neuman's hartebeests
+ Spotted hyena Python Chandler's reedbuck
+ Fennec fox Ward's zebra Bohur reedbuck
+ Honey badger Grevy's zebra Beisa ox
+ Aardewolf Notata gazelle Fringe-eared oryx
+ Wart-hog Roberts' gazelle Duiker
+ Waterbuck Klipspringer Harvey's duiker
+ Sing-sing Dik-dik Greater kudu
+ Oribi (3 varieties) Wildebeeste Lesser kudu
+ Eland Roosevelt's wildebeests Sable antelope
+ Roan antelope Buffalo
+ Bushbuck Topi
+
+ Total, fifty-four kinds
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ GAME BIRDS COLLECTED
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Marabout Gadwall Lesser bustard
+ Egret European stork Guinea fowl
+ Glossy ibis Quail Giant guinea fowl
+ Egyptian goose Sand grouse Green pigeon
+ White goose Francolin Blue pigeon
+ English snipe Spur fowl Dove (2 species)
+ Mallard duck Greater bustard
+
+ Total, twenty-two kinds
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_APPE3" id="link2H_APPE3">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ APPENDIX III
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ For the benefit of the sportsman and gun crank who want plain facts and no
+ flapdoodle, the following statistics are offered. To the lay reader this
+ inclusion will be incomprehensible; but I know my gun crank as I am one
+ myself!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Army Springfield, model 1903 to take the 1906 cartridge, shooting the
+ Spitzer sharp point bullet. Stocked to suit me by Ludwig Wundhammer, and
+ fitted with Sheard gold bead front sight and Lyman aperture receiver
+ sight. With this I did most my shooting, as the trajectory was remarkably
+ good, and the killing power remarkable. Tried out both the old-fashioned
+ soft point bullets and the sharp Spitzer bullets, but find the latter far
+ the more effective. In fact the paralyzing shock given by the Spitzer is
+ almost beyond belief. African animals are notably tenacious of life; but
+ the Springfield dropped nearly half the animals dead with one shot; a most
+ unusual record, as every sportsman will recognize. The bullets seemed on
+ impact always to flatten slightly at the base, the point remaining
+ intact-to spin widely on the axis, and to plunge off at an angle. This
+ action of course depended on the high velocity. The requisite velocity,
+ however seemed to keep up within all shooting ranges. A kongoni I killed
+ at 638 paces (measured), and another at 566 paces both exhibited this
+ action of the bullet. I mention these ranges because I have seen the
+ statement in print that the remaining velocity beyond 350 yards would not
+ be sufficient in this arm to prevent the bullet passing through cleanly. I
+ should also hasten to add that I do not habitually shoot at game at the
+ above ranges; but did so in these two instances for the precise purpose of
+ testing the arm. Metal fouling did not bother me at all, though I had been
+ led to expect trouble from it. The weapon was always cleaned with water so
+ boiling hot that the heat of the barrel dried it. When occasionally flakes
+ of metal fouling became visible a Marble brush always sufficed to remove
+ enough of it. It was my habit to smear the bullets with mobilubricant
+ before placing them in the magazine. This was not as much of a nuisance as
+ it sounds. A small tin box about the size of a pill box lasted me the
+ whole trip; and only once did I completely empty the magazine at one time.
+ On my return I tested the rifle very thoroughly for accuracy. In spite of
+ careful cleaning the barrel was in several places slightly corroded. For
+ this the climate was responsible. The few small pittings, however, did not
+ seem in any way to have affected the accuracy, as the rifle shot the
+ following groups: 3-1/2 inches at 200 yards; 7-1/4 inches at 300 yards;
+ and 11-1/2 inches at 500 yards.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It shot one five-shot 1-2/3 inch group at 200 yds., and
+ several others at all distances less than the figures given,
+ but I am convinced these must have been largely accidental.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ These groups were not made from a machine rest, however; as none was
+ available. The complete record with this arm for my whole stay in Africa
+ was 307 hits out of 395 cartridges fired, representing 185 head of game
+ killed. Most of this shooting was for meat and represented also all sorts
+ of &ldquo;varmints&rdquo; as well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 405 Winchester. This weapon was sighted like the Springfield, and was
+ constantly in the field as my second gun. For lions it could not be
+ beaten; as it was very accurate, delivered a hard blow, and held five
+ cartridges. Beyond 125 to 150 yards one had to begin to guess at distance,
+ so for ordinary shooting I preferred the Springfield. In thick brush
+ country, however, where one was likely to come suddenly on rhinoceroes,
+ but where one wanted to be ready always for desirable smaller game, the
+ Winchester was just the thing. It was short, handy, and reliable. One
+ experience with a zebra 300-350 yards has made me question whether at long
+ (hunting) ranges the remaining velocity of the big blunt nosed bullet is
+ not seriously reduced; but as to that I have not enough data for a final
+ conclusion. I have no doubt, however, that at such ranges, and beyond, the
+ little Springfield has more shocking power. Of course at closer ranges the
+ Winchester is by far the more powerful. I killed one rhinoceros with the
+ 405, one buffalo and one hippo; but should consider it too light for an
+ emergency gun against the larger dangerous animals, such as buffalo and
+ rhinoceros. If one has time for extreme accuracy, and can pick the shot,
+ it is plenty big; but I refer now to close quarters in a hurry. I had no
+ trouble whatever with the mechanism of this arm; nor have I ever had
+ trouble with any of the lever actions, although I have used them for many
+ years. As regards speed of fire the controversy between the lever and bolt
+ action advocates seems to me foolish in the extreme. Either action can be
+ fired faster than it should be fired in the presence of game. It is my
+ belief that any man, no matter how practised or how cool, can stampede
+ himself beyond his best accuracy by pumping out his shots too rapidly.
+ This is especially true in the face of charging dangerous game. So firmly
+ do I believe this that I generally take the rifle from my shoulder between
+ each shot. Even aimed rapid fire is of no great value as compared with
+ better aimed slower fire. The first bullet delivers to an animal's nervous
+ system about all the shock it can absorb. If the beast is not thereby
+ knocked down and held down, subsequent shots can accomplish that desirable
+ result only by reaching a vital spot or by tearing tissue. As an example
+ of this I might instance a waterbuck into which I saw my companion empty
+ five heavy 465 and double 500 bullets from cordite rifles before it fell!
+ Thus if the game gets to its feet after the first shock, it is true that
+ the hunter will often empty into it six or seven more bullets without
+ apparent result, unless he aims carefully for a centrally vital point. It
+ follows that therefore a second shot aimed with enough care to land it in
+ that point is worth a lot more than a half dozen delivered in three or
+ four seconds with only the accuracy necessary to group decently at very
+ short range, even if all of them hit the beast. I am perfectly aware that
+ this view will probably be disputed; but it is the result of considerable
+ experience, close observation and real interest in the game. The whole
+ record of the Winchester was 56 hits out of 70 cartridges fired;
+ representing 27 head of game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 465 Holland &amp; Holland double cordite rifle. This beautiful weapon,
+ built and balanced like a fine hammerless shotgun, was fitted with open
+ sights. It was of course essentially a close range emergency gun, but was
+ capable of accurate work at a distance. I killed one buffalo dead with it,
+ across a wide canyon, with the 300-yard leaf up on the back sight. Its
+ game list however was limited to rhinoceroses, hippopotamuses, buffaloes
+ and crocodiles. The recoil in spite of its weight of twelve and one half
+ pounds, was tremendous; but unnoticeable when I was shooting at any of
+ these brutes. Its total record was 31 cartridges fired with 29 hits
+ representing 13 head of game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conditions militating against marksmanship are often severe. Hard work
+ in the tropics is not the most steadying regime in the world, and outside
+ a man's nerves, he is often bothered by queer lights, and the effects of
+ the mirage that swirls from the sun-heated plain. The ranges, too, are
+ rather long. I took the trouble to pace out about every kill, and find
+ that antelope in the plains averaged 245 yards; with a maximum of 638
+ yards, while antelope in covered country averaged 148 yards, with a
+ maximum of 311.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_APPE4" id="link2H_APPE4">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ APPENDIX IV. THE AMERICAN IN AFRICA
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ IN WHICH HE APPEARS AS DIFFERENT FROM THE ENGLISHMAN
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It is always interesting to play the other fellow's game his way, and
+ then, in light of experience, to see wherein our way and his way modify
+ each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The above proposition here refers to camping. We do considerable of it in
+ our country, especially in our North and West. After we have been at it
+ for some time, we evolve a method of our own. The basis of that method is
+ to do without; to GO LIGHT. At first even the best of us will carry too
+ much plunder, but ten years of philosophy and rainstorms, trails and
+ trials, will bring us to an irreducible minimum. A party of three will get
+ along with two pack horses, say; or, on a harder trip, each will carry the
+ necessities on his own back. To take just as little as is consistent with
+ comfort is to play the game skilfully. Any article must pay in use for its
+ transportation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this ideal deeply ingrained by the test of experience, the American
+ camper is appalled by the caravan his British cousins consider necessary
+ for a trip into the African back country. His said cousin has, perhaps,
+ very kindly offered to have his outfit ready for him when he arrives. He
+ does arrive to find from one hundred to one hundred and fifty men gathered
+ as his personal attendants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Great Scot!&rdquo; he cries, &ldquo;I want to go camping; I don't want to invade
+ anybody's territory. Why the army?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He discovers that these are porters, to carry his effects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What effects?&rdquo; he demands, bewildered. As far as he knows, he has two
+ guns, some ammunition, and a black tin box, bought in London, and
+ half-filled with extra clothes, a few medicines, a thermometer, and some
+ little personal knick-knacks. He has been wondering what else he is going
+ to put in to keep things from rattling about. Of course he expected
+ besides these to take along a little plain grub, and some blankets, and a
+ frying pan and kettle or so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English friend has known several Americans, so he explains patiently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know this seems foolish to you,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;but you must remember you
+ are under the equator and you must do things differently here. As long as
+ you keep fit you are safe; but if you get run down a bit you'll go. You've
+ got to do yourself well, down here, rather better than you have to in any
+ other climate. You need all the comfort you can get; and you want to save
+ yourself all you can.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This has a reasonable sound and the American does not yet know the game.
+ Recovering from his first shock, he begins to look things over. There is a
+ double tent, folding camp chair, folding easy chair, folding table, wash
+ basin, bath tub, cot, mosquito curtains, clothes hangers; there are oil
+ lanterns, oil carriers, two loads of mysterious cooking utensils and cook
+ camp stuff; there is an open fly, which his friend explains is his dining
+ tent; and there are from a dozen to twenty boxes standing in a row, each
+ with its padlock. &ldquo;I didn't go in for luxury,&rdquo; apologizes the English
+ friend. &ldquo;Of course we can easily add anything you want but I remember you
+ wrote me that you wanted to travel light.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are those?&rdquo; our American inquires, pointing to the locked boxes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He learns that they are chop boxes, containing food and supplies. At this
+ he rises on his hind legs and paws the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Food!&rdquo; he shrieks. &ldquo;Why, man alive, I'm alone, and I am only going to be
+ out three months! I can carry all I'll ever eat in three months in one of
+ those boxes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Englishman patiently explains. You cannot live on &ldquo;bacon and
+ beans&rdquo; in this country, so to speak. You must do yourself rather well, you
+ know, to keep in condition. And you cannot pack food in bags, it must be
+ tinned. And then, of course, such things as your sparklet siphons and lime
+ juice require careful packing-and your champagne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Champagne,&rdquo; breathes the American in awestricken tones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Exactly, dear boy, an absolute necessity. After a touch of sun there's
+ nothing picks you up better than a mouthful of fizz. It's used as a
+ medicine, not a drink, you understand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The American reflects again that this is the other fellow's game, and that
+ the other fellow has been playing it for some time, and that he ought to
+ know. But he cannot yet see why the one hundred and fifty men. Again the
+ Englishman explains. There is the Headman to run the show. Correct: we
+ need him. Then there are four askaris. What are they? Native soldiers. No,
+ you won't be fighting anything; but they keep the men going, and act as
+ sort of sub-foremen in bossing the complicated work. Next is your cook,
+ and your own valet and that of your horse. Also your two gunbearers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold on!&rdquo; cries our friend. &ldquo;I have only two guns, and I'm going to carry
+ one myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this, he learns, is quite impossible. It is never done. It is
+ absolutely necessary, in this climate, to avoid all work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That makes how many? Ten already, and there seem to be three tent loads,
+ one bed load, one chair and table load, one lantern load, two
+ miscellaneous loads, two cook loads, one personal box, and fifteen chop
+ boxes-total twenty-six, plus the staff, as above, thirty-six. Why all the
+ rest of the army?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very simple: these thirty-six men have, according to regulation, seven
+ tents, and certain personal effects, and they must have &ldquo;potio&rdquo; or a
+ ration of one and a half pounds per diem. These things must be carried by
+ more men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; murmurs the American, crushed, &ldquo;and these more men have more
+ tents and more potio, which must also be carried. It's like the House that
+ Jack Built.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So our American concludes still once again that the other fellow knows his
+ own game, and starts out. He learns he has what is called a &ldquo;modest
+ safari&rdquo;; and spares a fleeting wonder as to what a really elaborate safari
+ must be. The procession takes the field. He soon sees the value of the
+ four askaris-the necessity of whom he has secretly doubted. Without their
+ vigorous seconding the headman would have a hard time indeed. Also, when
+ he observes the labour of tent-making, packing, washing, and general
+ service performed by his tent boy, he abandons the notion that that
+ individual could just as well take care of the horse as well, especially
+ as the horse has to have all his grass cut and brought to him. At evening
+ our friend has a hot bath, a long cool fizzly drink of lime juice and
+ soda; he puts on the clean clothes laid out for him, assumes soft mosquito
+ boots, and sits down to dinner. This is served to him in courses, and on
+ enamel ware. Each course has its proper-sized plate and cutlery. He starts
+ with soup, goes down through tinned whitebait or other fish, an entree, a
+ roast, perhaps a curry, a sweet, and small coffee. He is certainly being
+ &ldquo;done well,&rdquo; and he enjoys the comfort of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There comes a time when he begins to wonder a little. It is all very
+ pleasant, of course, and perhaps very necessary; they all tell him it is.
+ But, after all, it is a little galling to the average man to think that of
+ him. Your Englishman doesn't mind that; he enjoys being taken care of: but
+ the sportsman of American training likes to stand on his own feet as far
+ as he is able and conditions permit. Besides, it is expensive. Besides
+ that, it is a confounded nuisance, especially when potio gives out and
+ more must be sought, near or far. Then, if he is wise, he begins to do a
+ little figuring on his own account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My experience was very much as above. Three of us went out for eleven
+ weeks with what was considered a very &ldquo;modest&rdquo; safari indeed. It comprised
+ one hundred and eighteen men. My fifth and last trip, also with two
+ companions, was for three months. Our personnel consisted, all told, forty
+ men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In essentials the Englishman is absolutely right. One cannot camp in
+ Africa as one would at home. The experimenter would be dead in a month. In
+ his application of that principle, however, he seems to the American point
+ of view to overshoot. Let us examine his proposition in terms of the
+ essentials-food, clothing, shelter. There is no doubt but that a man must
+ keep in top condition as far as possible; and that, to do so, he must have
+ plenty of good food. He can never do as we do on very hard trips at home:
+ take a little tea, sugar, coffee, flour, salt, oatmeal. But on the other
+ hand, he certainly does not need a five-course dinner every night, nor a
+ complete battery of cutlery, napery and table ware to eat it from. Flour,
+ sugar, oatmeal, tea and coffee, rice, beans, onions, curry, dried fruits,
+ a little bacon, and some dehydrated vegetables will do him very well
+ indeed-with what he can shoot. These will pack in waterproof bags very
+ comfortably. In addition to feeding himself well, he finds he must not
+ sleep next to the ground, he must have a hot bath every day, but never a
+ cold one, and he must shelter himself with a double tent against the sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those are the absolute necessities of the climate. In other words, if he
+ carries a double tent, a cot, a folding bath; and gives a little attention
+ to a properly balanced food supply, he has met the situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, in addition, he takes canned goods, soda siphons, lime juice, easy
+ chairs and all the rest of the paraphernalia, he is merely using a basic
+ principle as an excuse to include sheer luxuries. In further extenuation
+ of this he is apt to argue that porters are cheap, and that it costs but
+ little more to carry these extra comforts. Against this argument, of
+ course, I have nothing to say. It is the inalienable right of every man to
+ carry all the luxuries he wants. My point is that the average American
+ sportsman does not want them, and only takes them because he is
+ overpersuaded that these things are not luxuries, but necessities. For,
+ mark you, he could take the same things into the Sierras or the North-by
+ paying; but he doesn't.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I repeat, it is the inalienable right of any man to travel as luxuriously
+ as he pleases. But by the same token it is not his right to pretend that
+ luxuries are necessities. That is to put himself into the same category
+ with the man who always finds some other excuse for taking a drink than
+ the simple one that he wants it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Englishman's point of view is that he objects to &ldquo;pigging it,&rdquo; as he
+ says. &ldquo;Pigging it&rdquo; means changing your home habits in any way. If you have
+ been accustomed to eating your sardines after a meal, and somebody offers
+ them to you first, that is &ldquo;pigging it.&rdquo; In other words, as nearly as I
+ can make out, &ldquo;pigging it&rdquo; does not so much mean doing things in an
+ inadequate fashion as DOING THEM DIFFERENTLY. Therefore, the Englishman in
+ the field likes to approximate as closely as may be his life in town, even
+ if it takes one hundred and fifty men to do it. Which reduces the &ldquo;pigging
+ it&rdquo; argument to an attempt at condemnation by calling names.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The American temperament, on the contrary, being more experimental and
+ independent, prefers to build anew upon its essentials. Where the
+ Englishman covers the situation blanket-wise with his old institutions,
+ the American prefers to construct new institutions on the necessities of
+ the case. He objects strongly to being taken care of too completely. He
+ objects strongly to losing the keen enjoyment of overcoming difficulties
+ and enduring hardships. The Englishman by habit and training has no such
+ objections. He likes to be taken care of, financially, personally, and
+ everlastingly. That is his ideal of life. If he can be taken care of
+ better by employing three hundred porters and packing eight tin trunks of
+ personal effects-as I have seen it done-he will so employ and take. That
+ is all right: he likes it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the American does not like it. A good deal of the fun for him is in
+ going light, in matching himself against his environment. It is no fun to
+ him to carry his complete little civilization along with him, laboriously.
+ If he must have cotton wool, let it be as little cotton wool as possible.
+ He likes to be comfortable; but he likes to be comfortable with the
+ minimum of means. Striking just the proper balance somehow adds to his
+ interest in the game. And how he DOES object to that ever-recurring
+ thought-that he is such a helpless mollusc that it requires a small
+ regiment to get him safely around the country!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both means are perfectly legitimate, of course; and neither view is open
+ to criticism. All either man is justified in saying is that he,
+ personally, wouldn't get much fun out of doing it the other way. As a
+ matter of fact, human nature generally goes beyond its justifications and
+ is prone to criticise. The Englishman waxes a trifle caustic on the
+ subject of &ldquo;pigging it&rdquo;; and the American indulges in more than a bit of
+ sarcasm on the subject of &ldquo;being led about Africa like a dog on a string.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By some such roundabout mental process as the above the American comes to
+ the conclusion that he need not necessarily adopt the other fellow's
+ method of playing this game. His own method needs modification, but it
+ will do. He ventures to leave out the tables and easy chair, takes a camp
+ stool and eats off a chop box. To the best of his belief his health does
+ not suffer from this. He gets on with a camper's allowance of plate, cup
+ and cutlery, and so cuts out a load and a half of assorted kitchen
+ utensils and table ware. He even does without a tablecloth and napkins! He
+ discards the lime juice and siphons, and purchases a canvas evaporation
+ bag to cool the water. He fires one gunbearer, and undertakes the
+ formidable physical feat of carrying one of his rifles himself. And, above
+ all, he modifies that grub list. The purchase of waterproof bags gets rid
+ of a lot of tin: the staple groceries do quite as well as London fancy
+ stuff. Golden syrup takes the place of all the miscellaneous jams,
+ marmalades and other sweets. The canned goods go by the board. He lays in
+ a stock of dried fruit. At the end, he is possessed of a grub list but
+ little different from that of his Rocky Mountain trips. Some few items he
+ has cut down; and some he has substituted; but bulk and weight are the
+ same. For his three months' trip he has four or five chop boxes all told.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then suddenly he finds that thus he has made a reduction all along the
+ line. Tent load, two men; grub and kitchen, five men; personal, one man;
+ bed, one man; miscellaneous, one or two. There is now no need for headmen
+ and askaris to handle this little lot. Twenty more to carry food for the
+ men-he is off with a quarter of the number of his first &ldquo;modest safari.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You who are sportsmen and are not going to Africa, as is the case with
+ most, will perhaps read this, because we are always interested in how the
+ other fellow does it. To the few who are intending an exploration of the
+ dark continent this concentration of a year's experience may be valuable.
+ Remember to sleep off the ground, not to starve yourself, to protect
+ yourself from the sun, to let negroes do all hard work but marching and
+ hunting. Do these things your own way, using your common-sense on how to
+ get at it. You'll be all right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That, I conceive, covers the case. The remainder of your equipment has to
+ do with camp affairs, and merely needs listing. The question here is not
+ of the sort to get, but of what to take. The tents, cooking affairs, etc.,
+ are well adapted to the country. In selecting your tent, however, you will
+ do very well to pick out one whose veranda fly reaches fairly to the
+ ground, instead of stopping halfway.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 1 tent and ground sheet
+ 1 folding cot and cork mattress,
+ 1 pillow, 3 single blankets
+ 1 combined folding bath and ashstand (&ldquo;X&rdquo; brand)
+ 1 camp stool
+ 3 folding candle lanterns
+ 1 gallon turpentine
+ 3 lbs. alum
+ 1 river rope
+ Sail needles and twine
+ 3 pangas (native tools for chopping and digging)
+ Cook outfit (select these yourself, and cut out the extras)
+ 2 axes (small)
+ Plenty laundry soap
+ Evaporation bag
+ 2 pails
+ 10 yards cotton cloth (&ldquo;Mericani&rdquo;)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ These things, your food, your porters' outfits and what trade goods you
+ may need are quite sufficient. You will have all you want, and not too
+ much. If you take care of yourself, you ought to keep in good health. Your
+ small outfit permits greater mobility than does that of the English
+ cousin, infinitely less nuisance and expense. Furthermore, you feel that
+ once more you are &ldquo;next to things,&rdquo; instead of &ldquo;being led about Africa
+ like a dog on a string.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_APPE5" id="link2H_APPE5">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ APPENDIX V. THE AMERICAN IN AFRICA
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ WHAT HE SHOULD TAKE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Before going to Africa I read as many books as I could get hold of on the
+ subject, some of them by Americans. In every case the authors have given a
+ chapter detailing the necessary outfit. Invariably they have followed the
+ Englishman's ideas almost absolutely. Nobody has ventured to modify those
+ ideas in any essential manner. Some have deprecatingly ventured to remark
+ that it is as well to leave out the tinned carfare-if you do not like
+ carfare; but that is as far as they care to go. The lists are those of the
+ firms who make a business of equipping caravans. The heads of such firms
+ are generally old African travellers. They furnish the equipment their
+ customers demand; and as English sportsmen generally all demand the same
+ thing, the firms end by issuing a printed list of essentials for shooting
+ parties in Africa, including carfare. Travellers follow the lists blindly,
+ and later copy them verbatim into their books. Not one has thought to
+ empty out the whole bag of tricks, to examine them in the light of reason,
+ and to pick out what a man of American habits, as contrasted to one of
+ English habits, would like to have. This cannot be done a priori; it
+ requires the test of experience to determine how to meet, in our own way,
+ the unusual demands of climate and conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And please note, when the heads of these equipment firms, these old
+ African travellers, take the field for themselves, they pay no attention
+ whatever to their own printed lists of &ldquo;essentials.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, premising that the English sportsman has, by many years' experience,
+ worked out just what he likes to take into the field; and assuring you
+ solemnly that his ideas are not in the least the ideas of American
+ sportsman, let us see if we cannot do something for ourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At present the American has either to take over in toto the English idea,
+ which is not adapted to him, and is-TO HIM-a nuisance, or to go it blind,
+ without experience except that acquired in a temperate climate, which is
+ dangerous. I am not going to copy out the English list again, even for
+ comparison. I have not the space; and if curious enough, you can find it
+ in any book on modern African travel. Of course I realize well that few
+ Americans go to Africa; but I also realize well that the sportsman is a
+ crank, a wild and eager enthusiast over items of equipment anywhere.
+ He-and I am thinking emphatically of him-would avidly devour the details
+ of the proper outfit for the gentle art of hunting the totally extinct
+ whiffenpoof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us begin, first of all, with:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Personal Equipment Clothes. On the top of your head you must have a sun
+ helmet. Get it of cork, not of pith. The latter has a habit of melting
+ unobtrusively about your ears when it rains. A helmet in brush is the next
+ noisiest thing to a circus band, so it is always well to have, also, a
+ double terai. This is not something to eat. It is a wide felt hat, and
+ then another wide felt hat on top of that. The
+ vertical-rays-of-the-tropical-sun (pronounced as one word to save time
+ after you have heard and said it a thousand times) are supposed to get
+ tangled and lost somewhere between the two hats. It is not, however, a
+ good contraption to go in all day when the sun is strong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As underwear you want the lightest Jaeger wool. Doesn't sound well for
+ tropics, but it is an essential. You will sweat enough anyway, even if you
+ get down to a brass wire costume like the natives. It is when you stop in
+ the shade, or the breeze, or the dusk of evening, that the trouble comes.
+ A chill means trouble, SURE. Two extra suits are all you want. There is no
+ earthly sense in bringing more. Your tent boy washes them out whenever he
+ can lay hands on them-it is one of his harmless manias.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your shirt should be of the thinnest brown flannel. Leather the shoulders,
+ and part way down the upper arm, with chamois. This is to protect your
+ precious garment against the thorns when you dive through them. On the
+ back you have buttons sewed wherewith to attach a spine pad. Before I went
+ to Africa I searched eagerly for information or illustration of a spine
+ pad. I guessed what it must be for, and to an extent what it must be like,
+ but all writers maintained a conservative reticence as to the thing
+ itself. Here is the first authorized description. A spine pad is a quilted
+ affair in consistency like the things you are supposed to lift hot
+ flat-irons with. On the outside it is brown flannel, like the shirt; on
+ the inside it is a gaudy orange colour. The latter is not for aesthetic
+ effect, but to intercept actinic rays. It is eight or ten inches wide, is
+ shaped to button close up under your collar, and extends halfway down your
+ back. In addition it is well to wear a silk handkerchief around the neck;
+ as the spine and back of the head seem to be the most vulnerable to the
+ sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For breeches, suit yourself as to material. It will have to be very tough,
+ and of fast colour. The best cut is the &ldquo;semi-riding,&rdquo; loose at the knees,
+ which should be well faced with soft leather, both for crawling, and to
+ save the cloth in grass and low brush. One pair ought to last four months,
+ roughly speaking. You will find a thin pair of ordinary khaki trousers
+ very comfortable as a change for wear about camp. In passing I would call
+ your attention to &ldquo;shorts.&rdquo; Shorts are loose, bobbed off khaki breeches,
+ like knee drawers. With them are worn puttees or leather leggings, and low
+ boots. The knees are bare. They are much affected by young Englishmen. I
+ observed them carefully at every opportunity, and my private opinion is
+ that man has rarely managed to invent as idiotically unfitted a
+ contraption for the purpose in hand. In a country teeming with poisonous
+ insects, ticks, fever-bearing mosquitoes; in a country where vegetation is
+ unusually well armed with thorns, spines and hooks, mostly poisonous; in a
+ country where, oftener than in any other a man is called upon to get down
+ on his hands and knees and crawl a few assorted abrading miles, it would
+ seem an obvious necessity to protect one's bare skin as much as possible.
+ The only reason given for these astonishing garments is that they are
+ cooler and freer to walk in. That I can believe. But they allow ticks and
+ other insects to crawl up, mosquitoes to bite, thorns to tear, and
+ assorted troubles to enter. And I can vouch by experience that ordinary
+ breeches are not uncomfortably hot or tight. Indeed, one does not get
+ especially hot in the legs anyway. I noticed that none of the old-time
+ hunters like Cuninghame or Judd wore shorts. The real reason is not that
+ they are cool, but that they are picturesque. Common belief to the
+ contrary, your average practical, matter-of-fact Englishman loves to dress
+ up. I knew one engaged in farming-picturesque farming-in our own West, who
+ used to appear at afternoon tea in a clean suit of blue overalls! It is a
+ harmless amusement. Our own youths do it, also, substituting chaps for
+ shorts, perhaps. I am not criticising the spirit in them; but merely
+ trying to keep mistaken shorts off you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For leg gear I found that nothing could beat our American combination of
+ high-laced boots and heavy knit socks. Leather leggings are noisy, and the
+ rolled puttees hot and binding. Have your boots ten or twelve inches high,
+ with a flap to buckle over the tie of the laces, with soles of the
+ mercury-impregnated leather called &ldquo;elk hide,&rdquo; and with small Hungarian
+ hobs. Your tent boy will grease these every day with &ldquo;dubbin,&rdquo; of which
+ you want a good supply. It is not my intention to offer free
+ advertisements generally, but I wore one pair of boots all the time I was
+ in Africa, through wet, heat, and long, long walking. They were in good
+ condition when I gave them away finally, and had not started a stitch.
+ They were made by that excellent craftsman, A. A. Cutter, of Eau Claire,
+ Wis., and he deserves and is entirely welcome to this puff. Needless to
+ remark, I have received no especial favours from Mr. Cutter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Six pairs of woollen socks, knit by hand, if possible-will be enough. For
+ evening, when you come in, I know nothing better than a pair of very high
+ moosehide moccasins. They should, however, be provided with thin soles
+ against the stray thorn, and should reach well above the ankle by way of
+ defence against the fever mosquito. That festive insect carries on a
+ surreptitious guerrilla warfare low down. The English &ldquo;mosquito boot&rdquo; is
+ simply an affair like a riding boot, made of suede leather, with thin
+ soles. It is most comfortable. My objection is that it is unsubstantial
+ and goes to pieces in a very brief time even under ordinary evening wear
+ about camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You will also want a coat. In American camping I have always maintained
+ the coat is a useless garment. There one does his own work to a large
+ extent. When at work or travel the coat is in the way. When in camp the
+ sweater or buckskin shirt is handier, and more easily carried. In Africa,
+ however, where the other fellow does most of the work, a coat is often
+ very handy. Do not make the mistake of getting an unlined light-weight
+ garment. When you want it at all, you want it warm and substantial. Stick
+ on all the pockets possible, and have them button securely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For wet weather there is nothing to equal a long and voluminous cape.
+ Straps crossing the chest and around the waist permit one to throw it off
+ the shoulders to shoot. It covers the hands, the rifle-most of the little
+ horses or mules one gets out there. One can sleep in or on it, and it is a
+ most effective garment against heavy winds. One suit of pajamas is enough,
+ considering your tent boy's commendable mania for laundry work. Add
+ handkerchiefs and you are fixed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You will wear most of the above, and put what remains in your &ldquo;officer's
+ box.&rdquo; This is a thin steel, air-tight affair with a wooden bottom, and is
+ the ticket for African work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sporting. Pick out your guns to suit yourself. You want a light one and a
+ heavy one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I came to send out my ammunition, I was forced again to take the
+ other fellow's experience. I was told by everybody that I should bring
+ plenty, that it was better to have too much than too little, etc. I rather
+ thought so myself, and accordingly shipped a trifle over 1,500 rounds of
+ small bore cartridges. Unfortunately, I never got into the field with any
+ of my numerous advisers on this point, so cannot state their methods from
+ first-hand information. Inductive reasoning leads me to believe that they
+ consider it unsportsmanlike to shoot at a standing animal at all, or at
+ one running nearer than 250 yards. Furthermore, it is etiquette to
+ continue firing until the last cloud of dust has died down on the distant
+ horizon. Only thus can I conceive of getting rid of that amount of
+ ammunition. In eight months of steady shooting, for example-shooting for
+ trophies, as well as to feed a safari of fluctuating numbers, counting
+ jackals, marabout and such small trash-I got away with 395 rounds of small
+ bore ammunition and about 100 of large. This accounted for 225 kills. That
+ should give one an idea. Figure out how many animals you are likely to
+ want for ANY purpose, multiply by three, and bring that many cartridges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To carry these cartridges I should adopt the English system of a stout
+ leather belt on which you slip various sized pockets and loops to suit the
+ occasion. Each unit has loops for ten cartridges. You rarely want more
+ than that; and if you do, your gunbearer is supplied. In addition to the
+ loops, you have leather pockets to carry your watch; your money, your
+ matches and tobacco, your compass-anything you please. They are handy and
+ safe. The tropical climate is too &ldquo;sticky&rdquo; to get much comfort, or
+ anything else, out of ordinary pockets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition, you supply your gunbearer with a cartridge belt, a leather or
+ canvas carrying bag, water bottle for him and for yourself, a sheath knife
+ and a whetstone. In the bag are your camera, tape line, the whetstone,
+ field cleaners and lunch. You personally carry your field glasses, sun
+ glasses, a knife, compass, matches, police whistle and notebook. The field
+ glasses should not be more than six power; and if possible you should get
+ the sort with detachable prisms. The prisms are apt to cloud in a tropical
+ climate, and the non-detachable sort are almost impossible for a layman to
+ clean. Hang these glasses around your neck by a strap only just long
+ enough to permit you to raise them to your eyes. The best notebook is the
+ &ldquo;loose-leaf&rdquo; sort. By means of this you can keep always a fresh leaf on
+ top; and at night can transfer your day's notes to safe keeping in your
+ tin box. The sun glasses should not be smoked or dark-you can do nothing
+ with them-but of the new amberol, the sort that excludes the ultra-violet
+ rays, but otherwise makes the world brighter and gayer. Spectacle frames
+ of non-corrosive white metal, not steel, are the proper sort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To clean your guns you must supply plenty of oil, and then some more. The
+ East African gunbearer has a quite proper and gratifying, but most
+ astonishing horror for a suspicion of rust; and to use oil any faster he
+ would have to drink it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other Equipment. All this has taken much time to tell about, it has not
+ done much toward filling up that tin box. Dump in your toilet effects and
+ a bath towel, two or three scalpels for taxidermy, a ball of string, some
+ safety-pins, a small tool kit, sewing materials, a flask of brandy, kodak
+ films packed in tin, a boxed thermometer, an aneroid (if you are curious
+ as to elevations), journal, tags for labelling trophies, a few yards of
+ gun cloth, and the medicine kit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter divides into two classes: for your men and for yourself. The
+ men will suffer from certain well defined troubles: &ldquo;tumbo,&rdquo; or
+ overeating; diarrhaea, bronchial colds, fever and various small injuries.
+ For &ldquo;tumbo&rdquo; you want a liberal supply of Epsom's salts; for diarrhaea you
+ need chlorodyne; any good expectorant for the colds; quinine for the
+ fever; permanganate and plenty of bandages for the injuries. With this lot
+ you can do wonders. For yourself you need, or may need, in addition, a
+ more elaborate lot: Laxative, quinine, phenacetin, bismuth and soda,
+ bromide of ammonium, morphia, camphor-ice, and aspirin. A clinical
+ thermometer for whites and one for blacks should be included. A tin of
+ malted milk is not a bad thing to take as an emergency ration after fever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time your tin box is fairly well provided. You may turn to general
+ supplies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
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