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
continuallywarning us to go slow; very good advice
near an African
jungle. "Poley-poley! Poley-poley!" he warned
again and again; which is good Swahili for "slowly! slowly!" 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
contractednumber. With final relieved chirp he ended.
It has been said that African birds are "songless." This is a
careless statement that can easily be read to mean that African
birds are silent. The
writerevidently 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
exceedinglypopulous 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.
Naturally under the
equator one expects and demands the "gorgeous
tropical plumage" 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.
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
edible" target="_blank" title="a.不能相信的;惊人的">
incredibleswiftness to seize a
piece of meat. Sometimes they would
snatch their prize almost
from the hands of its
rightful owner, and would swoop
triumphantlyupward 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.
IX. THE FIRST LION
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
exceedinglyunlikely to get
within a
liberal half mile of anything; but the native has sneaky
ways.
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.
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.
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.
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.
They were side by side,
apparently dozing. We squatted on our
heels for a consultation.
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.
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.
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
nervousdisposition, so he does not stamp his feet
nor change his position. It is
useless for him to wag his tail;