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.
*This is an important
distinction in estimating the inherent
courage of man or beast. Even a mouse will fight when cornered.
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.
*I seem to be generalizing here, but all these conclusions must
be understood to take into
consideration the
ability" target="_blank" title="n.责任 负债">
liability of
individual variation.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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
uneasinessabroad on the veldt.
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
victimproperly; or perhaps they were
merely examples of the great vari
ability in the habits of felis
leo.
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
considerableportion 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.
It is
ordinarilyuseless to expect to see the lion
actually" target="_blank" title="ad.事实上;实际上">
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" target="_blank" title="ad.事实上;实际上">
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