rise inquiringly.
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.
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
bulletthrew 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.
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.
We finished caring for the oryx, and returned to camp. To our
surprise we found we were at least seven or eight miles out.
In this fashion days passed very quickly. The early dewy start in
the cool of the morning, the
gradualgratefulwarming 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.
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
picturesquefigure 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 up
standingstructure made of marabout wings.
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 "layin' low and sayin' nuffin'."
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.
VII. ON THE MARCH
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.
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, s
warmingwith 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 "fresh" meat. We found it
advisable to pass to windward of these; but they themselves did
not seem to mind.
It became very hot; for we were now descending to the lower
elevations. The marching through long grass and over
volcanicstones 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.
Then suddenly, without
warning, we pitched over a little rise to
the river.
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
breathlessintimacy. Great leaved plants as
tall as little trees, and trees as small as big plants, bound