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<h2> CHAPTER III </h2>
<h3> NORTHWARDS </h3>
<p>I make no apology to myself, or to anybody who may happen to read this
narrative in future, for having set out the manner of my meeting with
Indaba-zimbi: first, because it was curious, and secondly, because he
takes some hand in the subsequent events. If that old man was a humbug, he
was a very clever one. What amount of truth there was in his pretensions
to supernatural powers it is not for me to determine, though I may have my
own opinion on the subject. But there was no mistake as to the
extraordinary influence he exercised over his fellow-natives. Also he
quite got round my poor father. At first the old gentleman declined to
have him at the station, for he had a great horror of these Kaffir wizards
or witch-finders. But Indaba-zimbi persuaded him that he was anxious to
investigate the truths of Christianity, and challenged him to a
discussion. The argument lasted two years—to the time of my father's
death, indeed. At the conclusion of each stage Indaba-zimbi would remark,
in the words of the Roman Governor, "Almost, praying white man, thou
persuadest me to become a Christian," but he never quite became one—indeed,
I do not think he ever meant to. It was to him that my father addressed
his "Letters to a Native Doubter." This work, which, unfortunately,
remains in manuscript, is full of wise saws and learned instances. It
ought to be published together with a <i>pr�cis</i> of the doubter's
answers, which were verbal.</p>
<p>So the talk went on. If my father had lived I believe it would be going on
now, for both the disputants were quite inexhaustible. Meanwhile
Indaba-zimbi was allowed to live on the station on condition that he
practised no witchcraft, which my father firmly believed to be a wile of
the devil. He said that he would not, but for all that there was never an
ox lost, or a sudden death, but he was consulted by those interested.</p>
<p>When he had been with us a year, a deputation came to him from the tribe
he had left, asking him to return. Things had not gone well with them
since he went away, they said, and now the chief, his enemy, was dead. Old
Indaba-zimbi listened to them till they had done, and, as he listened,
raked sand into a little heap with his toes. Then he spoke, pointing to
the little heap, "There is your tribe to-day," he said. Then he lifted his
heel and stamped the heap flat. "There is your tribe before three moons
are gone. Nothing is left of it. You drove me away: I will have no more to
do with you; but when you are being killed think of my words."</p>
<p>The messengers went. Three months afterwards I heard that the whole
community had been wiped out by an Impi of raiding Pondos.</p>
<p>When I was at length ready to start upon my expedition, I went to old
Indaba-zimbi to say good-bye to him, and was rather surprised to find him
engaged in rolling up medicine, assegais, and other sundries in his
blankets.</p>
<p>"Good-bye, Indaba-zimbi," I said, "I am going to trek north."</p>
<p>"Yes, Macumazahn," he answered, with his head on one side; "and so am I—I
want to see that country. We will go together."</p>
<p>"Will we!" I said; "wait till you are asked, you old humbug."</p>
<p>"You had better ask me, then, Macumazahn, for if you don't you will never
come back alive. Now that the old chief (my father) is gone to where the
storms come from," and he nodded to the sky, "I feel myself getting into
bad habits again. So last night I just threw up the bones and worked out
about your journey, and I can tell you this, that if you don't take me you
will die, and, what is more, you will lose one who is dearer to you than
life in a strange fashion. So just because you gave me that hint a couple
of years ago, I made up my mind to come with you."</p>
<p>"Don't talk stuff to me," I said.</p>
<p>"Ah, very well, Macumazahn, very well; but what happened to my own people
six months ago, and what did I tell the messengers would happen? They
drove me away, and they are gone. If you drive me away you will soon be
gone too," and he nodded his white lock at me and smiled. Now I was not
more superstitious than other people, but somehow old Indaba-zimbi
impressed me. Also I knew his extraordinary influence over every class of
native, and bethought me that he might be useful in that way.</p>
<p>"All right," I said: "I appoint you witch-finder to the expedition without
pay."</p>
<p>"First serve, then ask for wages," he answered. "I am glad to see that you
have enough imagination not to be altogether a fool, like most white men,
Macumazahn. Yes, yes, it is want of imagination that makes people fools;
they won't believe what they can't understand. You can't understand my
prophecies any more than the fool at the kraal could understand that I was
his master with the lightning. Well, it is time to trek, but if I were
you, Macumazahn, I should take one waggon, not two."</p>
<p>"Why?" I said.</p>
<p>"Because you will lose your waggons, and it is better to lose one than
two."</p>
<p>"Oh, nonsense!" I said.</p>
<p>"All right, Macumazahn, live and learn." And without another word he
walked to the foremost waggon, put his bundle into it, and climbed on to
the front seat.</p>
<p>So having bid an affectionate adieu to my white friends, including the old
Scotchman who got drunk in honour of the event, and quoted Burns till the
tears ran down his face, at length I started, and travelled slowly
northwards. For the first three weeks nothing very particular befell me.
Such Kaffirs as we came in contact with were friendly, and game literally
swarmed. Nobody living in those parts of South Africa nowadays can have
the remotest idea of what the veldt was like even thirty years ago.</p>
<p>Often and often I have crept shivering on to my waggon-box just as the sun
rose and looked out. At first one would see nothing but a vast field of
white mist suffused towards the east by a tremulous golden glow, through
which the tops of stony koppies stood up like gigantic beacons. From the
dense mist would come strange sounds—snorts, gruntings, bellows, and
the thunder of countless hoofs. Presently this great curtain would grow
thinner, then it would melt, as the smoke from a pipe melts into the air,
and for miles on miles the wide rolling country interspersed with bush
opened to the view. But it was not tenantless as it is now, for as far as
the eye could reach it would be literally black with game. Here to the
right might be a herd of vilderbeeste that could not number less than two
thousand. Some were grazing, some gambolled, whisking their white tails
into the air, while all round the old bulls stood upon hillocks sniffing
suspiciously at the breeze. There, in front, a hundred yards away, though
to the unpractised eye they looked much closer, because of the dazzling
clearness of the atmosphere, was a great herd of springbok trekking along
in single file. Ah, they have come to the waggon-track and do not like the
look of it. What will they do?—go back? Not a bit of it. It is
nearly thirty feet wide, but that is nothing to a springbok. See, the
first of them bounds into the air like a ball. How beautifully the
sunshine gleams upon his golden hide! He has cleared it, and the others
come after him in numberless succession, all except the fawns, who cannot
jump so far, and have to scamper over the doubtful path with a terrified
<i>bah</i>. What is that yonder, moving above the tops of the mimosa, in
the little dell at the foot of the koppie? Giraffes, by George! three of
them; there will be marrow-bones for supper to-night. Hark! the ground
shakes behind us, and over the brow of the rise rush a vast herd of
blesbock. On they come at full gallop, their long heads held low, they
look like so many bearded goats. I thought so—behind them is a pack
of wild dogs, their fur draggled, their tongues lolling. They are in full
cry; the giraffes hear them and are away, rolling round the koppie like a
ship in a heavy sea. No marrow-bones after all. See! the foremost dogs are
close on a buck. He has galloped far and is outworn. One springs at his
flank and misses him. The buck gives a kind of groan, looks wildly round
and sees the waggon. He seems to hesitate a moment, then in his despair
rushes up to it, and falls exhausted among the oxen. The dogs pull up some
thirty paces away, panting and snarling. Now, boy, the gun—no, not
the rifle, the shot-gun loaded with loopers.</p>
<p>Bang! bang! there, my friends, two of you will never hunt buck again. No,
don't touch the buck, for he has come to us for shelter, and he shall have
it.</p>
<p>Ah, how beautiful is nature before man comes to spoil it!</p>
<p>Such a sight as this have I seen many a hundred times, and I hope to see
it again before I die.</p>
<p>The first real adventure that befell me on this particular journey was
with elephants, which I will relate because of its curious termination.
Just before we crossed the Orange River we came to a stretch of
forest-land some twenty miles broad. The night we entered this forest we
camped in a lovely open glade. A few yards ahead tambouki grass was
growing to the height of a man, or rather it had been; now, with the
exception of a few stalks here and there, it was crushed quite flat. It
was already dusk when we camped; but after the moon got up I walked from
the fire to see how this had happened. One glance was enough for me; a
great herd of elephants had evidently passed over the tall grass not many
hours before. The sight of their spoor rejoiced me exceedingly, for though
I had seen wild elephants, at that time I had never shot one. Moreover,
the sight of elephant spoor to the African hunter is what "colour in the
pan" is to the prospector of gold. It is by the ivory that he lives, and
to shoot it or trade it is his chief aim in life. My resolution was soon
taken. I would camp the waggons for a while in the forest, and start on
horseback after the elephants.</p>
<p>I communicated my decision to Indaba-zimbi and the other Kaffirs. The
latter were not loth, for your Kaffir loves hunting, which means plenty of
meat and congenial occupation, but Indaba-zimbi would express no opinion.
I saw him retire to a little fire that he had lit for himself, and go
through some mysterious performances with bones and clay mixed with ashes,
which were watched with the greatest interest by the other Kaffirs. At
length he rose, and, coming forward, informed me that it was all right,
and that I did well to go and hunt the elephants, as I should get plenty
of ivory; but he advised me to go on foot. I said I should do nothing of
the sort, but meant to ride. I am wiser now; this was the first and last
time that I ever attempted to hunt elephants on horseback.</p>
<p>Accordingly we started at dawn, I, Indaba-zimbi, and three men; the rest I
left with the waggons. I was on horseback, and so was my driver, a good
rider and a skilful shot for a Kaffir, but Indaba-zimbi and the others
walked. From dawn till mid-day we followed the trail of the herd, which
was as plain as a high road. Then we off-saddled to let the horses rest
and feed, and about three o'clock started on again. Another hour or so
passed, and still there was no sign of elephants. Evidently the herd had
travelled fast and far, and I began to think that we should have to give
it up, when suddenly I caught sight of a brown mass moving through the
thorn-trees on the side of a slope about a quarter of a mile away. My
heart seemed to jump into my mouth. Where is the hunter who has not felt
like this at the sight of his first elephant?</p>
<p>I called a halt, and then the wind being right, we set to work to stalk
the bull. Very quietly I rode down the hither side of the slope till we
came to the bottom, which was densely covered with bush. Here I saw the
elephants had been feeding, for broken branches and upturned trees lay all
about. I did not take much notice, however, for all my thoughts were fixed
upon the bull I was stalking, when suddenly my horse gave a violent start
that nearly threw me from the saddle, and there came a mighty rush and
upheaval of something in front of me. I looked: there was the hinder part
of a second bull elephant not four yards off. I could just catch sight of
its outstretched ears projecting on either side. I had disturbed it
sleeping, and it was running away.</p>
<p>Obviously the best thing to do would have been to let it run, but I was
young in those days and foolish, and in the excitement of the moment I
lifted my "roer" or elephant gun and fired at the great brute over my
horse's head. The recoil of the heavy gun nearly knocked me off the horse.
I recovered myself, however, and, as I did so, saw the bull lurch forward,
for the impact of a three-ounce bullet in the flank will quicken the
movement even of an elephant. By this time I had realized the folly of the
shot, and devoutly hoped that the bull would take no further notice of it.
But he took a different view of the matter. Pulling himself up in a series
of plunges, he spun round and came for me with outstretched ears and
uplifted trunk, screaming terribly. I was quite defenceless, for my gun
was empty, and my first thought was of escape. I dug my heels into the
sides of my horse, but he would not move an inch. The poor animal was
paralyzed with terror, and he simply stood still, his fore-legs
outstretched, and quivering all over like a leaf.</p>
<p>On rushed the elephant, awful to see; I made one more vain effort to stir
the horse. Now the trunk of the great bull swung aloft above my head. A
thought flashed through my brain. Quick as light I rolled from the saddle.
By the side of the horse lay a fallen tree, as thick through as a man's
body. The tree was lifted a little off the ground by the broken boughs
which took its weight, and with a single movement, so active is one in
such necessities, I flung myself beneath it. As I did so, I heard the
trunk of the elephant descend with a mighty thud on the back of my poor
horse, and the next instant I was almost in darkness, for the horse, whose
back was broken, fell over across the tree under which I lay ensconced.
But he did not stop there long. In ten seconds more the bull had wound his
trunk about my dead nag's neck, and, with a mighty effort, hurled him
clear of the tree. I wriggled backwards as far as I could towards the
roots of the tree, for I knew what he was after. Presently I saw the red
tip of the bull's trunk stretching itself towards me. If he could manage
to hook it round any part of me I was lost. But in the position I
occupied, that was just what he could not do, although he knelt down to
facilitate his operations. On came the snapping tip like a great
open-mouthed snake; it closed upon my hat, which vanished. Again it was
thrust down, and a scream of rage was bellowed through it within four
inches of my head. Now it seemed to elongate itself. Oh, heavens! now it
had me by the hair, which, luckily for myself, was not very long. Then it
was my turn to scream, for next instant half a square inch of hair was
dragged from my scalp by the roots. I was being plucked alive, as I have
seen cruel Kaffir kitchen boys pluck a fowl.</p>
<p>The elephant, however, disappointed with these moderate results, changed
his tactics. He wound his trunk round the fallen tree and lifted. The tree
stirred, but fortunately the broken branches embedded in the spongy soil,
and some roots, which still held, prevented it from being turned over,
though he lifted it so much that, had it occurred to him, he could now
easily have drawn me out with his trunk. Again he hoisted with all his
mighty strength, and I saw that the tree was coming, and roared aloud for
help. Some shots were fired close by in answer, but if they hit the bull,
their only effect was to stir his energies to more active life. In another
few seconds my shelter would be torn away, and I should be done for. A
cold perspiration burst out over me as I realized that I was lost. Then of
a sudden I remembered that I had a pistol in my belt, which I often used
for despatching wounded game. It was loaded and capped. By this time the
tree was lifted so much that I could easily get my hand down to my middle
and draw the pistol from its case. I drew and cocked it. Now the tree was
coming over, and there, within three feet of my head, was the great brown
trunk of the elephant. I placed the muzzle of the pistol within an inch of
it and fired. The result was instantaneous. Down sunk the tree again,
giving one of my legs a considerable squeeze, and next instant I heard a
crashing sound. The elephant had bolted.</p>
<p>By this time, what between fright and struggling, I was pretty well tired.
I cannot remember how I got from under the fallen tree, or indeed
anything, until I found myself sitting on the ground drinking some peach
brandy from a flask, and old Indaba-zimbi opposite to me nodding his white
lock sagely, while he fired off moral reflections on the narrowness of my
escape, and my unwisdom in not having taken his advice to go on foot. That
reminded me of my horse—I got up and went to look at it. It was
quite dead, the blow of the elephant's trunk had fallen on the saddle,
breaking the framework, and rendering it useless. I reflected that in
another two seconds it would have fallen on <i>me</i>. Then I called to
Indaba-zimbi and asked which way the elephants had gone.</p>
<p>"There!" he said, pointing down the gully, "and we had better go after
them, Macumazahn. We have had the bad luck, now for the good."</p>
<p>There was philosophy in this, though, to tell the truth, I did not feel
particularly sharp set on elephants at the moment. I seemed to have had
enough of them. However, it would never do to show the white feather
before the boys, so I assented with much outward readiness, and we
started, I on the second horse, and the others on foot. When we had
travelled for the best part of an hour down the valley, all of a sudden we
came upon the whole herd, which numbered a little more than eighty. Just
in front of them the bush was so thick that they seemed to hesitate about
entering it, and the sides of the valley were so rocky and steep at this
point that they could not climb them.</p>
<p>They saw us at the same moment as we saw them, and inwardly I was filled
with fears lest they should take it into their heads to charge back up the
gully. But they did not; trumpeting aloud, they rushed at the thick bush
which went down before them like corn before a sickle. I do not think that
in all my experiences I ever heard anything to equal the sound they made
as they crashed through and over the shrubs and trees. Before them was a
dense forest belt from a hundred to a hundred and fifty feet in width. As
they rushed on, it fell, so that behind them was nothing but a level
roadway strewed with fallen trunks, crushed branches, and here and there a
tree, too strong even for them, left stranded amid the wreck. On they
went, and, notwithstanding the nature of the ground over which they had to
travel, they kept their distance ahead of us. This sort of thing continued
for a mile or more, and then I saw that in front of the elephants the
valley opened into a space covered with reeds and grass—it might
have been five or six acres in extent—beyond which the valley ran on
again.</p>
<p>The herd reached the edge of this expanse, and for a moment pulled up,
hesitating—evidently they mistrusted it. My men yelled aloud, as
only Kaffirs can, and that settled them. Headed by the wounded bull, whose
martial ardour, like my own, was somewhat cooled, they spread out and
dashed into the treacherous swamp—for such it was, though just then
there was no water to be seen. For a few yards all went well with them,
though they clearly found it heavy going; then suddenly the great bull
sank up to his belly in the stiff peaty soil, and remained fixed. The
others, mad with fear, took no heed of his struggles and trumpetings, but
plunged on to meet the same fate. In five minutes the whole herd of them
were hopelessly bogged, and the more they struggled to escape, the deeper
they sunk. There was one exception, indeed, a cow managed to win back to
firm shore, and, lifting her trunk, prepared to charge us as we came up.
But at that moment she heard the scream of her calf, and rushed back to
its assistance, only to be bogged with the others.</p>
<p>Such a scene I never saw before or since. The swamp was spotted all over
with the large forms of the elephants, and the air rang with their screams
of rage and terror as they waved their trunks wildly to and fro. Now and
then a monster would make a great effort and drag his mass from its peaty
bed, only to stick fast again at the next step. It was a most pitiable
sight, though one that gladdened the hearts of my men. Even the best
natives have little compassion for the sufferings of animals.</p>
<p>Well, the rest was easy. The marsh that would not bear the elephants
carried our weight well enough. Before midnight all were dead, for we shot
them by moonlight. I would gladly have spared the young ones and some of
the cows, but to do so would only have meant leaving them to perish of
hunger; it was kinder to kill them at once. The wounded bull I slew with
my own hand, and I cannot say that I felt much compunction in so doing. He
knew me again, and made a desperate effort to get at me, but I am glad to
say that the peat held him fast.</p>
<p>The pan presented a curious sight when the sun rose next morning. Owing to
the support given by the soil, few of the dead elephants had fallen: there
they stood as though they were asleep.</p>
<p>I sent back for the waggons, and when they arrived on the morrow, formed a
camp, about a mile away from the pan. Then began the work of cutting out
the elephants' tusks; it took over a week, and for obvious reasons was a
disgusting task. Indeed, had it not been for the help of some wandering
bushmen, who took their pay in elephant meat, I do not think we could ever
have managed it.</p>
<p>At last it was done. The ivory was far too cumbersome for us to carry, so
we buried it, having first got rid of our bushmen allies. My boys wanted
me to go back to the Cape with it and sell it, but I was too much bent on
my journey to do this. The tusks lay buried for five years. Then I came
and dug them up; they were but little harmed. Ultimately I sold the ivory
for something over twelve hundred pounds—not bad pay for one day's
shooting.</p>
<p>This was how I began my career as an elephant hunter. I have shot many
hundreds of them since, but have never again attempted to do so on
horseback.</p>
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