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.
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.
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
instantlyobeyed. 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!
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.
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.
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.
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.
I sat there for some time hugging my knees,
waiting for the men
to come. The
tremendouslandscape 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
celebratedimitation 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.
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
patheticmonkey "jockeys" one sees strapped to the backs
of big dogs in circuses. When they had approached to within fifty
yards, remarked "hullo!" 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
silentlyretired. Once more I was left to the
familiar gentle bird calls, and the vast silence of the