The Eagle Cliff by R. M. Ballantyne (good books to read for women .TXT) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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âAunt Moss is a buster,â was Junkieâs ambiguous opinion, in which Flo and the black doll coincided.
âTonalâ,â said Roderick, as he groomed the bay horse, âthe old wumman iss a fery tough person.â
To which âTonalââ assented, âshe iss, what-Ă«-ver.â
There came a rainy day at last at Kinlossie House. Such days will come at times in human experience, both in metaphor and fact. At present we state a fact.
âIt will bring up the fush,â was Roderickâs remark, as he paused in the operation of cleaning harness to look through the stable door on the landscape; âanâ that wull please Maister MacRummle.â
âIt will pe good for the gress too, anâ that will please Muss Mully,â said Donald, now permanently appointed to the stables.
âHâm! she wull pe carinâ less for the gress, poy, than she wass used to do,â returned the groom. âIt iss my opeenion that they wull pe all wantinâ to co away sooth pefore long.â
We refer to the above opinions because they were shared by the party assembled in Barretâs room, which was still retained as a snuggery, although its occupant was fully restored to normal health and vigour.
âYouâll be sure to get âthat salmonâ next time you try, after all this rain, MacRummle,â said Mabberly. âAt least, I hope you will before we leave.â
âAy, and you must have another try with the repeater on the Eagle Cliff, Mac. It would never do to leave a lone widdy, as Quin calls it, after murdering the husband.â
âPerhaps I may have another day there,â answered the old gentleman, with a pleased smile; for although they roasted him a good deal for mistaking an eagle for a raven, and only gave him credit for a âfluke,â it was evident that he congratulated himself not a little on his achievement.
âArchie is having an awful time skinning and stuffing it,â said Eddie, who sat by the window dressing trout flies.
Junkie, who was occupied at another window, mending the top of his rod, remarked that nothing seemed to give Archie so much pleasure as skinning and stuffing something. âHeâs always doing it,â said the youngster. âWhatever happens to die, from a tom-cat to a tom-tit, he gets hold of. I do believe if he was to die, he would try to skin and stuff himself!â
At that moment Archie entered the room.
âIâve got it nearly done now,â he said, with a pleased expression, while he rubbed his not-over-clean hands. âIâll set him up to-night and photograph him to-morrow, with Flo under his wings to show his enormous size.â
âOh! that minds me oâ the elephants,â cried Junkie, jumping up and running to Jackman, who was assisting. Barret to arrange plants for Milly. âWe are all here nowâanâ you promised, you know.â
A heavy patter of rain on the window seemed to emphasise Junkieâs request by suggesting that nothing better could be done.
âWell, Junkie, I have no objection,â said the Woods-and-Forester, âif the rest of the company do not object.â
As the rest of the company did not object, but rather expressed anxiety to hear about the hunt, Jackman drew his chair near to the fire, the boys crowded round him, and he began with,ââLet me see. Where was I?â
âIn India, of course,â said Junkie. âYes; but at what part of the hunt?â
âOh! you hadnât begun the hunt at all. You had only made Chand somethinâ or other, Isri Per-what-dâee-call-it, anâ Raj Mung-thingumy give poor Mowla Buksh such an awful mauling.â
âJust so. Well, you must know that next day we received news of large herds of elephants away to the eastward of the Ganges, so we started off with all our forcesâhunters, matchlock-men, onlookers, etcetera, and about eighty tame elephants. Chief among these last were the fighting elephants, to which Junkie gave such appropriate names just now, and king of them all was the mighty Chand Moorut, who had never been known to refuse a fight or lose a victory since he was grown up.
âIt was really grand to see this renowned mountain of living flesh towering high above his fellows. Like all heroes, he was calm and dignified when not in actionâa lamb in the drawing-room, a lion in the field. Even the natives, accustomed as they were to these giants, came to look at him admiringly that morning as he walked sedately out of camp. He was so big that he seemed to grow bigger while you looked at him, and he was absolutely perfect in form and strengthâthe very Hercules of brutes.
âThe trackers had marked down a herd of wild elephants, not three miles distant, in a narrow valley, just suited to our purpose. On reaching the ground we learned that there was, in the jungle, a ârogueâ elephantâthat is, an old male, which had been expelled from the herd. Such outcasts are usually very fierce and dangerous. This one was a tusker, who had been the terror of the neighbourhood, having killed many people, among them a forester, only a few days before our arrival.
âAs these âroguesâ are always very difficult to overcome, and are almost sure to injure the khedda, or tame elephants of the hunt, if an attempt is made to capture them, we resolved to avoid him, and devote our attention entirely to the females and young ones. We formed a curious procession as we entered the valleyârajah and civilians, military men and mahowts, black and white, on pads and in howdahsâthe last being the little towers that you see on elephantsâ backs in pictures.
âGun-men had been sent up to the head of the valley to block the way in that direction. The sides were too steep for elephants to climb. Thus we had them, as it were, in a trap, and formed up the khedda in battle array. The catching, or non-combatant elephants, were drawn up in two lines, and the big, fighting elephants were kept in reserve, concealed by bushes. The sides of the valley were crowded with matchlock-men, ready to commence shouting and firing at a given signal, and drive the herd in the direction of the khedda.
âIt was a beautiful forenoon when we commenced to move forward. All nature seemed to be waiting in silent expectation of the issue of our hunt, and not a sound was heard, the strictest silence having been enjoined upon all. Rich tropical vegetation hung in graceful lines and festoons from the cliffs on either side, but there was no sign of the gun-men concealed there. The sun wasââ
âOh! bother the sun! Come on wiâ the fight,â exclaimed the impatient Junkie.
âAll in good time, my boy. The sun was blazing in my eyes, I was going to say, so, you see, I could not make out the distant view, and therefore, canât describe it,â (âGlad of it,â murmured the impertinent Junkie); âbut I knew that the wild elephants were there, somewhere in the dense jungle. Suddenly a shot was heard at the head of the valley. We afterwards learned that it had been fired over the head of a big tusker elephant that stood under a tree not many yards from the man who fired. Being young, like Junkie, and giddy, it dashed away down the valley, trumpeting wildly; and you have no conception how active and agile these creatures can be, if you have seen only the slow, sluggish things that are in our Zoos at home! So terrible was the sound of this elephantâs approach, that the ranks of the khedda elephants were thrown into some confusion, and the mahowts had difficulty in preventing them from turning tail and running away. Our leader, therefore, ordered the gladiator, Chand Moorut, to the front. Indeed, Chand ordered himself to the front, for no sooner did he hear the challenge of the tusker, than he dashed forward alone to accept it, and his mahowt found it almost impossible to restrain him. Fortunately the jungle helped the mahowt by hiding the tusker from view.
âWhen the wild elephant caught sight of the line of the khedda, he went at it with a mighty rush, crashing through bush and brake, and overturning small trees like straws, until he got into the dry bed of a stream. There he stopped short, for the colossal Chand Moorut suddenly appeared and charged him. The wild tusker, however, showed the white feather. He could not, indeed, avoid the shock altogether, but, yielding to it, he managed to keep his legs, turned short round, and fled past his big foe. Chand Moorut had no chance with the agile fellow in a race. He was soon left far behind, while the tusker charged onward. The matchlock-men tried in vain to check him. As he approached the line, the khedda elephants fled in all directions. Thrusting aside some, and overturning others that came in his way, he held on his course, amid the din of shouting and rattling of shots, and finally, got clear away!â
âOh, what a pity!â exclaimed Junkie.
âBut that did not matter much,â continued Jackman; âfor news was brought in that the herd we had been after were not in that valley at all, but in the next one, and had probably heard nothing of all the row we had been making; so we collected our forces, and went after them.
âSoon we got to the pass leading into the valley, and then, just beyond it, came quite suddenly on a band of somewhere about thirty wild elephants. They were taken quite by surprise, for they were feeding at the time on a level piece of ground of considerable extent. As it was impossible to surround them, away the whole khedda went helter-skelter after them. It was a tremendous sight. The herd had scattered in all directions, so that our khedda was also scattered. Each hunting elephant had two men on its backâone, the nooseman, sitting on its neck, with a strong, thick rope in his hands, on which was a running noose; the other, the driver, who stood erect on the animalâs back, holding on by a loop with one hand, and in the other flourishing an instrument called the mungri, with sharp spikes in it, wherewith to whip the poor animal over the root of his tail; for of course an ordinary whip would have had no more effect than a peacockâs feather, on an elephantâs hide!
âI ordered my mahowt to keep near one of the noosemen, whom I knew to be expert in the use of the giant-lasso. His name was Ramjee. Both Ramjee and his driver were screaming and yelling at the pitch of their voices, and the latter was applying his mungri with tremendous energy. The elephant they were after was a small female. It is always necessary that the chasing elephant should be much heavier than the one chased, else evil results follow, as we soon found. Presently the khedda elephant was alongside. Ramjee lifted the great loop in both hands, and leaned over till he almost touched the wild animal. Frequently this noosing fails from various reasons. For one thing, the wild creatures are often very clever at evading the noose: sometimes they push it away with their trunks; occasionally they step right through it, and now and then get only half through it, so that it forms a sort of tow rope, and the other end of this rope being made fast to the neck of the tame elephant, the wild one drags it along violently, unless the tame one is much heavier than itself. This is exactly what happened to Ramjee. He dropped the noose beautifully over the creatureâs head, but before it could be hauled tightâwhich was accomplished by checking the tame animalâthe active creature had got its forelegs through. The loop caught, however, on its hind quarters, and away it went, dragging the tame elephant after it, Ramjee shrieking wildly for help. Two of the
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