minutes to raise my glasses for the
periodicalexamination 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.
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.
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,
seeminglyreluctant 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.
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.
In order to reach them we would have to slip down the face of the
hill on which we sat, cross the
streamjungle 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 pre
cautions against noise. Even in my haste, however, I had
opportunity to notice its high and
austerecharacter, 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" target="_blank" title="ad.小心地;谨慎地">
cautiously through the thick border-screen
of bush.
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.
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
plainlyoutlined 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!
"Faru!" 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.
In fact our main necessity was to get through the river
junglebefore 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.
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
cautiousretreat 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.
It was
absolutely impossible to see anything ten yards away
unless it happened to be
silhouetted against the sky. I backed
cautiously" target="_blank" title="ad.小心地;谨慎地">
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, "Anything, even a newspaper, would have come
handy." 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.
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.
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.
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
jungleat 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