Frederick C. Selous, Travel and Adventure
Frederick C. Selous, Travel and Adventure
Frederick C. Selous, Travel and Adventure
F. C. Selous
TRAVEL &ADVENTURE
IN SOUTH-EAST AFRICA
Introduction by Hammond Innes
Y
TRAVEL AND A D V E N T U R E IN
SOUTH-EAST AFRICA
SOUTH-EAST AFRICA
BEING THE NARRATIVE OF THE LAST ELEVEN YEARS SPENT BY
THE AUTHOR ON THE ZAMBESI AND ITS TRIBUTARIES ; WITH
AN ACCOUNT OF THE COLONISATION OF MASHUNALAND
AND THE PROGRESS OF THE GOLD INDUSTRY
IN THAT COUNTRY
CENTURY PU B L ISH IN G
LONDON
W H O TO O K P A R T IN
T H E E X P E D IT IO N TO M A S H U N A L A N D ,
IN R E M E M B R A N C E OF
T H E G R E A T E N T E R P R IS E I N W H IC H W E W E R E ALL
P R IV IL E G E D TO T A K E A P A R T ,
I D E D IC A T E
THIS BOOK
INTRODUCTION
b y a G erm an sn ip er a t B eh o B eh o . T h is w as in 1917
a n d th re e years la te r a s ta tu e o f h im w as erected in th e
S o u th K e n s in g to n M u seu m su rro u n d ed b y b ig gam e
tro p h ies. H e h a d shot a t le a s t th irty -o n e lio n s, som e
tw o h u n d re d b u ffa lo , in n u m e ra b le e le p h a n t, an d h a d
becom e th e p ro to ty p e fo r a ll those b o ys’ stories illu s
tra te d b y p ic tu re s o f a lo n e m an firin g a t a ch arg in g
e le p h a n t o r a sp rin g in g lio n . H a g g a rd m u s t s u rely
h a v e h a d h im in m in d w h en c re a tin g his A lla n Q u a te r-
m a in c h a ra c te r.
A t th is p o in t m ost th in k in g people w ill p ro b a b ly
feel lik e th ro w in g th e b o o k d o w n , rem em b erin g th e
te rrib le s la u g h te r c o m m itte d by th e h u n te rs w ho
fo llo w e d in th e w ake o f Selous. B u t Selous h im s e lf
w o rk e d m u ch o f th e tim e in close association w ith th e
R o y a l G eo g rap h ical S o ciety, p a rtic u la rly as regards
th e c o lle c tin g o f specim ens. H e w as b o m v e ry close to
th e L o n d o n Z o o a n d th is is p ro b a b ly th e k e y to his lif e ;
also p erh ap s th e fa c t th a t his fa th e r w as c h a irm a n o f
th e London S to c k E xch a n g e . He to o k v e ry lit t le
acco u n t o f m o n ey, excep t in so fa r as i t was a necessary
re q u ire m e n t in e q u ip p in g h is exp ed itio n s, m ost o f w h ic h
w ere ru n on a shoestring.
B y th e 1880s he w as a lre a d y conscious o f w h a t w as
b eg in n in g to h ap p en to th e g re a t w e a lth o f A fric a n
fa u n a — “ m a n y fo rm s o f w h ic h are b eco m in g scarcer,
w h ile som e, alas! are a lre a d y ve rg in g upo n e x tin c tio n .” .
I f he co u ld h a v e seen w h a t w o u ld h ap p en to A fric a
in th e n e x t h u n d re d years, th e exp lo sio n o f p o p u la tio n ,
th e d e s tru c tio n o f th e w ild life th a t w as so m u ch a p a rt
o f h is existen ce, I d o n ’t th in k i t w o u ld h ave m ade a n y
INTRODUCTION IX
B u t th e y w e re n ’t re a l h u n te rs . T h e y w ere gam e
w ard en s going o u t to cage a b la c k rh in o th a t h a d fo u n d
a w a y o u t o f th e reserve, a n d also to d eal w ith som e
lio n s. T h is fo rm o f h u n tin g can be e x tre m e ly d an g er
ous, p a rtic u la rly as th e y h a d to ld m e th e rifles w o u ld
be b e n t if th e y w ere o rd ered to shoot “ th e ir ” lio n s,
a p rid e o r tw o o f lio n s b ein g w o rth several gam e w ardens
a n d a d eal o f c u llin g in th e m an ag em en t o f a reserve.
T h e re a l h u n tin g n o w is o f poachers, a n d th e sad
th in g is th a t i t is th e u n th in k in g s tu p id ity o f people in
d is ta n t cities th a t is th e cause o f i t a ll. I f th e re w ere no
m a rk e t in w ild life p ro d u cts th e re w o u ld be no poachers,
a n d no te rrib le lin g e rin g d eath s in th e bush. A nybody,
in a n y c ity o f th e w o rld , w ho b u ys a n y th in g o f iv o ry
is c o m m ittin g an offence ag ain st G od— a w ire snare
ro u n d th e leg o f an e le p h a n t, w orse s till d ra w n tig h t
ro u n d th e tru n k , to o o fte n th e slow m eans o f a c q u irin g
th a t iv o ry . A s fo r those w om en in th e ir le o p a rd sk in
coats, th e fu r so im m a c u la te because th e a n im a l has
been n e tte d a n d k ille d in a p it b y re d h o t steel th ru s t
u p its anus . . .
T h e re are m en lik e Selous n o w in A fric a , b u t th e y
are gam e w ard en s, a n d ju s t as o u r a ttitu d e to w ild life
has changed, so I suspect has w ild life ’s a ttitu d e to
h u m an s, so m a n y an im als h a v in g le a rn e d to a v o id m an
w h en ever possible. B u t w h en Selous w ro te th is b o o k
th e c lim a te o f o p in io n w as v e ry d iffe re n t, his w o rld
s till a p lace o f pioneers, h im s e lf th e spokesm an o f his
p e rio d a n d his w a y o f life .
CHAPTER I
Return to England in 1881— Mandy’s ostrich farm near Port Elizabeth— Resolve
to give up hunting— Return to South Africa— Variety entertainment at Port
Elizabeth— Go to Kimberley— M y horse Diamond— African horse sickness—
Ride to Klerksdorp— Dutch hospitality— Notes on the Boers— Reach Klerks-
dorp and fit out expedition to the interior— Meet Mr. Arnot— Journey through
the Transvaal— Reach D e Lange’s farm— A snake-stone— Proceed to the Lim
popo— Death of my horse Diamond— D ry weather— Antelope - shooting—
Butterfly-collecting— Ox killed by crocodile— Death of Bems Niemand.
Page i
CHAPTER II
Drought and heat— Determine to ride on to Bamangwato— Lions heard roaring—
Ride by moonlight— Moruling “ v le y ” dry— Off saddle at the Brack Reeds—
Adventure with lioness— Reach Bamangwato— Kindness of Khama— Rainy
weather sets in— Return to my waggon— Form hunting camp in Mashunaland
— Shoot three sable antelopes— Set gun for hysena— Gun goes off without
result— Lions ! lions ! the lions have caught the big dog— Sable antelope skins
carried off by lions— W aiting for daybreak— Unsuccessful search for the lions—
Return to camp— Set guns for the lions— Blucher comes back— But eventually
dies— Hysena shot— Shoot three tsessebe antelopes— Lion shot— Ride on to a
second lion— Wound the lion— Lose sight of him, and follow up his spoor—
Laer in trouble— Second lion killed— Another hysena shot . . Page 19
CHAPTER III
Collecting specimens of natural history— Meet Mr. and Mrs. Dorehill— Shoot
leopard— Start for the Zambesi— Reach Manyanga’s village— Timidity of the
natives— Shoot sable antelope— Chikasi’s village— M y donkey is killed by
hysenas— Cross the Mutiki river— Reach S e-fu -p i’s — Mount Inyambari—
Descend to the valley of the Zambesi— The Umsengaisi river— Impala ante
lopes— Reach the Zambesi— José Miguel Lobo— Start for Zumbo— Pass Peri-
zengi’s town— Black rhinoceros spoor— Sleep at Matakania’s town— Cross the
Panyami— A jovial host— Reach Kanyemba’s— Arrival at Zumbo— Hospitality
of the Portuguese— Collecting butterflies on the River Loangwa— Ruins o f old
Zumbo— Start for Mashunaland— W ild jasmine bushes— Cross the River Angwa
xviii T R AV E L AN D AD VEN TU RE IN A F R IC A
CHAPTER IV
Prepare for journey to the Mazoe and Sabi rivers— Lichtenstein’s hartebeest— Shoot
wart-hog and tsessebe antelope— Shoot roan antelope cow with fine horns—
Eland-hunting— Large wart-hog shot— Cross the Manyami— Fine country—
Devastations of the Matabili— Ostrich-shooting— Find ostrich’s nest— Wound
cock ostrich— A cold wet night— Resume my journey— Roan antelope shot—
Reach Sadza’s villages— Eland - hunting — Hyaena carries off eland skin —
Hyaena killed— Another eland shot— Skin spoilt by the natives— Reach the
Sabi— Description of natives of this district— Search for Lichtenstein’s hartebeest
— Mount Gato— Cross the Masheki— Large baboon shot— Scarcity of game—
Cross the Sabi— Black rhinoceros shot— Lion heard at night— Return to main
camp . . . . . . . . . . . Page 7 2
CHAPTER V
First expedition sent by L o Bengula against the Batauwani— Difficulties of the
journey— Expedition only partially successful— Vitality of savages— Failure of
the second expedition to Lake Ngami— Pulinglela, a brother of L o Bengula,
shot— Many Matabili drowned in the Botletli— Horrors of the return journey
across the desert— Murder of Bushmen— The Masarwas — Their language—
Racial affinities— Weapons, e tc .— Great antiquity of the Bushman race— R e
searches of Dr. H illier— Further notes on the Masarwas— Their sense of
locality— The Bakalahari— Chameluga, the wizard of Situngweesa— Prosperity
of his people— Their country devastated by the Matabili— Murder of Chame
luga— Escape of his son— Flight of his people— Massacre of Mashunas on
the Bembisan river . . . . . . . . . Page 101
CH APTER VI
Break up camp— W aggon breaks down— Send Laer to Grant’s camp for another
wheel— Follow on horseback— Laer meets five lions— Return to my waggons
— Shoot a leopard — Oxen attacked by a lion at the Umfuli — Laer kills
the lion — Move camp to the River Zweswi — Shoot another large lion —
Return to Matabililand— The Sea-Cow row— Unjust treatment at the hands of
the Matabili . . . . . . . . . . Page 118
CH APTER VII
Return to the Transvaal— Meet Mr. Montagu Kerr— W e travel together to M ata
bililand— Mr. Kerr starts for Lake Nyassa— Journey to the Mababi— Man-
eating lion— Another lion story— Return to Sode Gara— Giraffe - hunting—
A tropical thunderstorm— Meet Mr. Watson— Trek out to Tati . Page 139
CH APTER VIII
shooting horse lamed— Cross the Umniati river— Reach the Umgezi— The
klipspringer antelope— Lioness shot on the Umgezi river— Reach the Zweswi
— Large herd of elephants— Hyaena shot— Zebra wounded— A day with the
elephants— Six elephants killed . . . . . . Page 155
CHAPTER IX
Chop out the tusks of the dead elephants— Immense numbers of vultures— The
stallion lame— Resolve to proceed to the Manyami river— Form a main camp—
Game plentiful— Hyaena shot— My big cauldron— Trek to Golodaima’s kraals—
Another hyaena shot— Hyaena killed at the Tchangani river— Find the big bull
elephant— Shoot another fine bull— Obtain specimens of Lichtenstein’s harte-
beest— Return to Matabililand— A sable antelope amongst the cattle— Several
of our best dogs are killed— Danger of approaching wounded antelopes.
Page 180
CHAPTER X
Return to England in 1886— Another hunting expedition to Mashunaland— Twelve
lions shot— Discovery of the caves of Sinoia— Various journeys made from the
main camp on the Manyami river— Return to the Transvaal— Start for the
Zambesi— Reach Panda-ma-tenka— Civil war in the Barotsi country— Letter
from Mr. Arnot— Cross the Zambesi at W ankie’s— Death of Daniel— Reach
Shampondo’s— Have trouble with the Batongas— Their extortionate character—
Death of Father Teroede— Murder of David Thomas— Reach the River Muga
— Tw o impala antelopes shot— Zebra (Burchell’s) shot— Scarcity of game—
Hire fresh guides— Return of Shamedza’s men . . . . Page 195
CHAPTER XI
A rough country— Scarcity of water and game— Surefootedness of the donkey— Death
from acute dysentery— The country improves— Obtain guides to Monzi’s— Roan
antelope shot— Herd of wildebeests seen— Pleasant travelling— Delightful
climate— Abundance of game— Reach Monzi’s— Friendly relations with the
people— Proceed northwards— The first Mashukulumbwi village— Interview
with Sikabenga’s men— Cross the Magoi-ee river— Reach the Ungwesi— Shoot
three Lichtenstein’s hartebeests— Arrival at Minenga’s village— A musical
entertainment— Shoot zebras and hartebeest— Description of the Mashuku
lumbwi— Night attack on our camp— Escape into the long grass— Alone in
Central Africa— Swim across the Magoi-ee river— Commence a lonely journey.
Page 209
CHAPTER XII
Reach our first camp on the Magoi-ee river— Await the arrival of some of my own
people— Proceed on my journey— Shoot a wildebeest— Suffering from cold—
Reach a small native village— Lose my rifle— Narrowly escape getting shot—
Reach Monzi’s— Resolve to make for Sikabenga’s town— Experiences by the
way— Arrive at Sikabenga’s— Start for Panda-ma-tenka— Arrive at Shoma’s—
Fall in with Paul and Charley— Twelve of my people killed— Escapes of the
survivors— Recross the Zambesi— Reach Panda-ma-tenka— Some explanations
concerning the attack on my camp . . . . . . Page 226
XX T R A V E L AN D AD VE N T U R E IN A F R IC A
CHAPTER XIII
Resolve to visit the Barotsi chief Lewanika — Shoot five elands— Meet Harry
W are— Cross the Zambesi— Reach the Kasaia river— Great abundance of
game— Horses frightened by zebras— Owl and chameleon— Reach Sesheki—
Kindness o f the missionaries— Anecdote o f Sepopo— The Loanja swamp—
Uninteresting country— Scarcity of game— Cross the Lumbi river— The mission
station at Sefula— Visit to Lialui— Lewanika, chief of the Barotsi— Mr.
Coillard— The Barotsi valley— Natives saluting the chief— Unhealthiness of the
climate— Embark on the Zambesi— Bird life on the river— Visit to the grave
of Nonambing— Pleasing scenery— Elephants and buffaloes— The Falls of
Gonyi— Canoe capsized by a hippopotamus— Loss of goods— Pass the Nambwi
rapids— Arrive at Kazungula— Great drought— Journey to and arrival at
Bamangwato . . . . . . . . . Page 244
CHAPTER XIV
Arrange for journey to the Upper Mazoe— Mr. Edward Burnett— Mr. Thomas— A
trip home to England— Take passage for Quillimani— Description of town—
Portuguese custom-house— Boat journey up the Quaqua river— Reach the
Zambesi— Start for Tete— Pass Shupanga— And Sena— Scarcity of animal life—
Bush-buck shot— Lions heard— The Lupata gorge— Pass the mouth o f the
Ruenya— Reach Tete— Portuguese system of government on the Zambesi—
Secure a good interpreter— Difficulty of obtaining carriers— Rumours of war—
Abandon the idea of following the course of the Mazoe river . Page 264
CHAPTER XV
Leave T ete— Follow caravan route to Zumbo— Trouble with our carriers—-Dry
country— Burnett sees a troop of lions— Lioness shot— Reach Inya-tsu-tsu—
Mount Bungwi— Scarcity of water— Cross the Luia river— -Reach Rusambo’s
— Collection of taxes— Wooden dishes for washing gold— Desertion o f our
carriers— Reach Maziwa’s— Our troubles with that chief— Return to Rusambo’s
— A gain start for Magomo— Reach Kandaya’s— Arrival at Mapondera’s— An
enterprising Indian— Obtain a mineral concession— W ild lemon - trees—
Profusion of wildflowers— The source of the Mazoe— Scarcity of game.
Page 278
CHAPTER XVI
Mount Hampden— Return to Inyota— W ildflowers— Journey down the Mazoe—
Cross the River Inyagui— Hippopotamus shot— Rejoin Mr. Thomas at R u
sambo’s— Return to the Mazoe— A stockaded town— Pass Sanyara’s— Burnett
sees five lions— Reach the Ruenya— Hippopotamus-shooting — A freshwater
shark caught— Return to T ete— Interview with the Portuguese Governor—
Portuguese hospitality— Leave T ete — Reach Vicenti— Down the Quaqua to
Quillimani— Go on board the C ourland — Return to Cape Town Page 294
CHAPTER XVII
Portuguese claim to Mashunaland— Lord Salisbury’s proclamation— Expeditions of
Colonel d’Andrada and Lieutenant Cordon— Letter to the Selous syndicate—
Interview with Mr. Rhodes— Scheme for the occupation of Mashunaland— Letter
to the Times . . . . . . . . . . Page 309
CONTENTS xxi
CH APTER XVIII
CH APTER XIX
CH APTER XX
CH APTER XXI
CH APTER XXII
CH APTER XXIII
Reach Fort Salisbury— Write a supplement for the Graphic — Its fate— Report of
a journey to Motoko’s country, and the conclusion of a treaty with that chief.
Page 395
CH APTER XXIV
Travel from Motoko’s country to Umtali— Find the Odzi river impassable— Resolve
to set about cutting a new road to Salisbury— Freedom from sickness— The
right sort of men— Mr. Armstrong and Mr. Coope— Reach Salisbury— Rumours
of wars— Leave again for M anica— Reach Umtali after the fight is over —
Account of the attack on Captain Heyman’s position by the Portuguese— Start
for Umliwan’s — Arrival there — Visit the Revui river in search of hippo
potami— Horses attacked by tse-tse flies— Return to U m tali— O x killed by
lions— Night adventure with five lions— Account of my various employments
during a year’s service with the British South Africa Company— Lion shot—
Elephant shot— Return to England . . . . . Page 405
CH APTER XXV
Remarks concerning the relative merits of large and small bore rifles— Some
hunting reminiscences . . . . . . . . Page 428
CH APTER XXVI
“ Just within the bush the dogs again brought him to bay alongside a large
ant-hill, and I galloped round in front of him ” . . . . . 1 3 1
“ When within about one hundred yards, as they still stood defiant, and one
of them, a very fine dark - skinned animal with a handsome mane,
seemed particularly furious, I slightly turned my horse’s head, so as to
pass them at a distance of sixty or seventy yards ” . . . . 1 4 5
PAGE
Mapondera , a C hief of the Makori -k o r i ........................................... 289
“ M y joy may therefore be imagined when I saw that the most superb
specimen of a koodoo bull that my eyes had ever looked upon lay dead
before m e ” ..................................................................................................................365
“ A little later on, having resumed our march, we sighted a herd of giraffes
stalking quietly through the forest in front of us. There were sixteen of these
stately beasts in all, and a grand sight it was to view so many together” 457
IN T H E TEXT
PAGE
A nt-Heap . . . . 25 Portion of Wall of the A n
say, “ Gij kan maar, darum aff saal ” (“ You may, however, saddle
o ff”). Had I done so, and talked with him and his wife for a
bit, I have no doubt I should soon have overcome his suspicions
and obtained all I required— a supper and a shake down,
and a good feed for my horse; but having, as I say, been
accustomed to the unquestioning hospitality of my friends the
Transvaal Boers, I was hurt and indignant at the old man’s
suspicions ; so, taking off my hat, I made him a low bow, with
out dismounting, and said, “ Ik dank yo, om, voor yo groot
vrijndlijkhet, maar lieberster zal ik in de regen gaan slaap, als
in en huis waar ik niet welkom is ” (“ I thank you, uncle, for
your great friendliness, but I would rather go and sleep in the
rain than in a house where I am not welcome ”) ; then turning
my horse’s head, I rode slowly away into the fast-gathering
darkness of a stormy night.
Before long the rain commenced to fall, but not very
heavily, though it soon grew very dark ; the road I was following
was, however, well defined, and the frequent flashes of lightning
would have enabled me to follow a much less well defined
track.* After riding for about an hour, and no heavy rain
having yet fallen, I met some waggons loaded with firewood
for Kimberley, and learned from one of the drivers that there
was an “ hotel ” about three miles ahead. This place I pre
sently reached, and found it to be a wattle-and-daub structure
of the roughest description. However, I was able to get some
thing to eat, and a shake down, and Diamond was also put
under cover and got a good feed of forage. This, as I have
said before, is the only time that I have ever met with inhospi
tality at the hands of a South African Boer, though experiences
of the same kind are no doubt common along the main roads
for the reasons I have given. Wherever their confidence has
not been abused, however, I say it without fear of contradiction,
no people in the world can be more genuinely kind and hospi
table to strangers than the South African Dutch, whether in the
Transvaal, the Free State, or the Cape Colony; and besides
hospitality they possess in such an eminent degree so many
of the qualities that Englishmen profess to admire, that, with a
better knowledge of one another, the two races would, I feel
sure, soon shake off their mutual prejudices, and agree to work
1 THE G R E A T T R E K 7
certain white men, the fact remains that as a whole the Kafirs
are an inferior people, and in their present state of development
are with some few exceptions only fit to be hewers of wood and
drawers of water. However, this is a difficult question, and one
which I am not competent to discuss. I will only say that in
my opinion the average Dutch Boer treats the natives in South
Africa quite as well as the average Englishman.
When I first went out to South Africa I used to play a
little Bavarian instrument— the zither— and I kept up my
playing for many years, and when travelling through the Trans
vaal my musical talents used to keep me in butter, milk, and
eggs. When we outspanned near a Boer farm, Edwin Miller,
a young colonist who was usually with me, and who was
thoroughly at home with the Boers, used to go up to the house,
and in the course of conversation ask the goodwife if she was
fond of music, and then tell her about my little instrument,
when of course I was asked to play, and my pathetic Bavarian
airs used to be much appreciated, and the old illustrated Bible
was usually brought down, and the drawing of the “ Harp that
David played ” compared to my zither ; and then I was offered
milk, eggs, butter, and fresh bread if it was baking day.
Miller, at my suggestion, always brought up an immense bucket
for the milk, with many apologies because we had nothing
sm aller; for the goodwives in the Transvaal do not care about
parting with much fresh milk, as they want it for butter-making.
However, if you bring up a big bucket, they are obliged to pour
a good deal in to make any kind of show at all. Once we
came to a farm on a Sunday morning, and Miller at once tried
to open negotiations for obtaining milk and fresh butter. The
ladies were most anxious to hear the music, but the old Boer
had scruples of conscience, it being Sunday, and it was only
when Miller pointed out that my zither was the same instru
ment as the harp that David used to play that he consented to
have it brought up to the house. When I had tuned it up he
insisted that nothing must be played but hymns ; so I played
him the Danube Waltz, and noticing his astonishment, assured
him that it was a French hymn. He seemed puzzled, but only
muttered that it did not sound like a hymn. I then played him
“ II bacio,” when he jumped up, and striking his hand on the
T h e A utho r pla yin g Z it h e r in Bo er F arm ho use .
‘ *When I had tuned it up he insisted that nothing must be played but hymns ; so I played him the Danube Waltz. .
With the help of the ladies of his family we persuaded him that it was an Italian hymn, and he took all the rest
quietly, and his wife and daughters set us up again in butter, milk, and eggs.”
C H .I R E A C H K LE R K SD O R P AN D PU R C H ASE O UTFIT 13
took the best watered of the roads leading to the Marico river,
passing through the farm of one of the old voortrekkers,
Friedrich de Lange by name.
I am not quite sure, but I think the old man was no
longer living at this time. He had been the possessor of a
very curious snake-stone, which I first saw in 1 8 7 5 . I was
then travelling with an old interior trader named John
Cruickshank, who took me to De Lange’s farm on purpose
to see the stone. I saw it on several occasions afterwards,
and for the last time in 1 8 8 4 . This stone old De Lange
kept carefully packed away in cotton wool in a small box ;
and this box was in an old desk, which he kept locked.
He certainly believed himself in its efficacy, and said he would
not part with it on any consideration. Mr. Cruickshank offered
him £ 5 0 for it in my presence, but he refused to sell it. He
told us then that the value of the stone was well known in the
district, as it had saved the lives of so many people— whom he
named— and several horses. Amongst other names he men
tioned that of a daughter of an old elephant-hunter named
Antony Fortman, who, he averred, had been bitten by a cobra
some years before when quite a child. As the stone had to be
sent for, it had only reached her, he said, just in time to save her
life. Two years later, in 1 8 7 7 , this story at any rate met with a
curious confirmation. A t that time Antony Fortman was at
Tati in Matabililand with his family, his eldest daughter being
a girl about sixteen years of age. I had quite forgotten about
the snake-stone, when one day the conversation turning on
snakes, Antony Fortman said to his daughter, “ Turn up your
sleeve and show Mr. Selous where the snake bit you.” This
she did, and on the girl’s left arm near the shoulder was a very
large and ugly scar, as if a piece of flesh had sloughed away
and the wound had then skinned over. Fortman then pro
ceeded to tell me how the girl had been bitten some years be
fore in Marico, when quite a child, and that a horse had been
saddled up at once and a messenger despatched for De Lange’s
snake-stone, how the little girl had become insensible and
turned nearly black before the stone arrived, and that it had
been twice applied before it drew out the snake poison. The
stone itself was, as far as I remember, of a very light porous
I A SN A K E -ST O N E 15
came across some antelopes not far away from the water, and
shot and preserved the skins of several hartebeests, wildebeests,
etc. Diamond I found to be a splendid shooting horse, but
another very good animal that I had bought in Klerksdorp,
though an excellent horse for a journey, was so gun shy I could
do nothing with him after game at this time, though ultimately
I made a very good shooting horse o f him, and he did me
splendid service for some years— indeed until the end of 1888,
when I sold him to Lewanika, the chief of the Barotsi tribe on
the Upper Zambesi. About a month later than the time I am
speaking of, and soon after I had passed Bamangwato on my
way to Matabililand, both my horses, Diamond and Nelson,
contracted the fatal horse sickness. Poor Diamond died, but
Nelson just pulled through ; however, he had become so thin
and weak during the progress of the sickness that it was some
months before I could ride him again.
During the very hot weather we experienced on the
Crocodile river I only travelled at nights, so as to save the
bullocks as much as possible. My days I spent in shooting
and preserving antelope skins for mounting in museums, or in
collecting butterflies, for I may say that I have made extensive
collections of these beautiful and interesting insects in all parts
of Central South Africa, all of which collections I have
presented to the South African Museum in Cape Town, where
they have been catalogued and described by my friend, Mr.
Rowland Trimen, the curator of the Museum, who not only has
a most comprehensive knowledge of every branch of natural
history, but is besides the best living authority on African
lepidoptera. It is now a very hard matter, as I can vouch, to
catch a butterfly that Mr. Trimen does not know, but it is a
real pleasure to get him a new species, for he is so delighted
to see it.
One day whilst walking along the bank of the Crocodile
river with my net, I thought I heard a kind of moaning
noise in the river, and pushing my way through the scrub
which here clothed the bank, I found one of my best oxen
with his fore-legs stuck fast in the mud, and the rest of his
body under water. A huge crocodile that had been tearing at
the poor animal, and inflicting the most excruciating torture
I O X S E I Z E D B Y A C R O C O D ILE 17
A n t -H ea p .
down, with our backs close against the fence, and peered
intently into the darkness before us ; but for some time we
neither saw nor heard anything. After sitting perfectly quiet
for perhaps a quarter of an hour, I began to get very cold, and
as the whole camp was now perfectly still, and the puppies had
ceased barking, I thought the lion was probably satisfied with
catching Blucher, and had withdrawn ; so I crossed to my
camp, a distance of less than twenty yards, and again turned
in. The boys sleeping in the hut within my camp had now
made up a large fire, and one of them was sitting in the
entrance behind it. I suppose I had been lying in the waggon
for perhaps half an hour, and was just dropping off to sleep,
when the puppies once more commenced to bark outside the
encampment, and then came rushing through the gap in the
fence. A t the same moment the Kafir sitting by the fire, one
of Khama’s people, called out, “ Here’s the lion ! here’s the
lion ! he has taken the skin ! ” I thereupon jumped out of the
waggon again to find out what had happened. The Kafir boy
whose cry had roused me had retreated into the hut, but came
out when I called him. H e said that a lion had come in
through the opening in the fence, close behind the dogs, had
stood for an instant in the full light of the fire, then seized one
of the fresh-killed antelope skins and gone out with it. I went
and looked, and, sure enough, there were now only two instead
of three skins ; that o f the bull was gone. Neither of my
horses had stirred, though the lion must have been within ten
yards of one of them when he seized the skin, and both of
them must have seen him. I now loosened them, and Norris
and I led them round to a small clear space behind the
waggon, and there tied them up to the fence.
I thought that the lion would now be satisfied, for there is
a good deak of eating in the skin of a sable antelope bull, and
he had had the dog besides, by way of an entrée ; so, believing
there was nothing more to be done, I again turned in. But on
this night I was not destined to enjoy much sleep, for certainly
within an hour of the last depredation, during the whole of
which time my two young dogs had kept up a desultory
barking, they again came suddenly rushing through the fence,
and I felt sure that the lion was once more behind them. I
II C A M P V IS IT E D B Y L IO N S 29
heard Norris say to Laer, “ It’s the lion that's driving the dogs
in again ; ” but none of the Kafirs in the hut spoke, and, with
the exception that the dogs kept on growling and barking,
everything remained quiet. Again I got out of the waggon,
and saw that the fire in front of the hut had burned quite
low, and that the Kafirs, having barricaded the entrance with
logs o f wood, were apparently asleep within. On calling to
them I found, however, that this was not so, but that they were
wide awake.
I now went to look at the sable antelope skins, and found
there was only one left, proving conclusively that the lion had
again come in and carried off the other. Being determined
not to lose the third and last, I picked it up and threw it on
to the waggon, and then, not knowing what else to do, went
to bed again. I now felt no inclination to sleep, so lit the
candle and commenced to read, wishing for daybreak, that I
might come to conclusions with the lion or lions. I felt very
vexed at the loss of my dog, and was determined to exact
vengeance if possible. I now felt pretty sure that more than
one lion was about, and feared they might yet get into my
cattle kraal, which no doubt would have happened before this,
if the fence had been in the same condition it was in on the
previous d a y ; but the Mashunas had luckily made it very
high and strong, and the gate was blocked by thick thorn-
bushes. My horses were in the safest place it was possible to
find for them, so there was nothing more to be done but await
events.
I had been reading for perhaps an hour, when the large
empty packing-case which, as I have said before, was standing
just outside the entrance to my camp, was violently moved,
so that the augers and other tools lying on the bottom of it
began to rattle loudly. I sat up and listened, hardly know
ing what to make of it. “ Master, master, hear the lion,"
called out Norris from beneath the waggon. Seizing my rifle,
I jumped out, and proceeded cautiously to the entrance,
followed by Norris. On looking out I could see the shadowy
form of the large white case being moved about, whilst the
tools in it rattled loudly. The lion must have been standing
over it, and probably clawing about inside it, in the hope of
30 T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A CHAP.
front of the camp, and, as far as I could judge, not more than
thirty yards off. Norris was standing beside me, and kept
asserting that he could see the lion, and wanted me to let
him fire ; but, as I was quite sure he was mistaken, I would
not do so, though, as the rattling noise continued, I thought
I would fire a shot m yself as near as I could at the spot
whence the sounds appeared to issue. This I did : the noise
at once ceased. Then, after a few moments’ pause, the silence
which had followed immediately upon the shot was broken by
a single roar or growl, which, had there been any doubt about
it before, would at once have settled the question as to what
kind of animal it was that we had to deal with. This was the
first and the last sound to which the lions gave utterance
during the whole of this eventful night. My shot, I fancy,
must have gone very near the animal, and slightly disturbed
his equanimity, for, after having expressed his annoyance by
this single growl, he retreated, dragging with him the skin,
which rattled as he went, towards the stream which ran down
the valley about one hundred and fifty yards below the camp.
During the remainder of the night nothing further occurred.
I did not turn in again, but dressed and then sat by the fire
and had some coffee made. Every now and then I could hear
the noise made by the lions down by the water, as they gnawed
at the hard skin and rattled the leg-bones ; but they seemed
satisfied with the very tough nut they had to crack and not
inclined to revisit the camp.
When it was near daydawn I cleaned my rifle and had
two horses saddled up, one for myself and the other for
Norris. A t last day really began to break, and a rosy tinge
in the eastern sky showed where the sun would presently
make his appearance ; and as the darkness gradually gave
way to a dim grayish light, through which objects rapidly
became more and more distinguishable, I walked to the
gap in my fence and looked across the valley before me.
A t first I could see nothing, but presently, on the open
ground close down to the water, I thought I could distin
guish a something, which might have been a small ant-heap
or a little bush, but that I knew nothing of the kind existed
there. Presently I saw another something, longer and lower
32 T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A CHAP.
refractory pony, backing towards the lion, and pulling with him
Laer, who, of course, was looking full into his open jaws, which
he did not seem to admire. I think I shall never forget the
momentary glimpse I had o f his face. H e was at that time
only a lad of about fifteen or sixteen years of age, and there
is no wonder that he was frightened— but frightened he most
certainly was ; his hat had fallen off, his mouth was wide open,
and his eyes staring, and he was pulling desperately against the
horse, which was steadily dragging him nearer to the lion. I
was a little to the right of Laer and a little farther from
the lion, but not much, and he looked alternately at the two
of us. I am sure it was simply want of strength that pre
vented him from coming on and mauling either Laer or the
pony, for before I could raise my rifle he sank down on the
ground, but still kept his head up, and, with his mouth
wide open, never ceased growling or roaring (I do not know
which is the better word). O f course I fired as quickly as
I could, the circumstances not admitting of any delay. I
aimed right for his open mouth, and at the shot his head fell
so suddenly, and in such a way, that I knew the bullet had
reached his brain.
The whole of this scene, which has taken so long to
describe, was, of course, only a matter o f a few seconds. On
going up to the lion I found that my bullet had struck him
in the right eye, which was, of course, wide open at the time,
and had not touched or injured in any way the lid or eye
lashes either above or below— not a very good shot, as I aimed
for his open mouth at not more than forty yards, but a very
effective one. W e could now hear the two young dogs
barking at the waggon, from which we were distant about
a quarter of a mile, and by the time the lion was skinned it
was quite dusk. There was no doubt about his being one oi
those that were at the camp two nights before, as on cutting
him open we found large pieces of sable antelope skin still
undigested in his belly. Like the lion first shot, he was an
animal in the prime of life, in very good hair, but without
much mane. As the spot where we first saw him was less
than half a mile from my camp, I feel sure that had we not,
by mere chance, ridden right on to him and killed him, he
L a er and t h e L io n .
“ T he lion was standing with open mouth, from which blood was flowing, growling savagely, and looking like nothing but a wounded and
furious lion, whilst right in front of him, and within thirty yards, stood L aer’s refractory pony, backing towards the lion, and pulling
with him Laer, who, of course, was looking full into his open jaw s.”
CHAP. II A N O T H ER H YAEN A SH O T 43
N a tive V illage, M a sh u n a l a n d .
any of the women and children had ever seen— and the donkey,
an equally strange sight to them, being the great attractions.
The name of the hill near the base of which we encamped was
Ushamba, that of the head man being Umfan-ee-chee-ha. We
were now close to the western end of the Umvukwi hills, and
on their northern side. This range of hills, I found, commencing
in a series of low wooded ridges, extends for a considerable
distance from the Manyami towards the Zambesi, and forms a
watershed, all the streams flowing from its northern slope
running either into the Manyami or Zambesi, whilst those from
its southern side flow into the Mazoe. A s the natives here
50 TRAVEL AN D AD VEN TU RE IN AFRICA CHAP.
said there were lots of elands about, which fed every night
through their cornfields, and were very insistent that I should
try and shoot one, and as I myself would also have been glad
to get a little fat for cooking, I resolved to stand over a day
and see what I could do.
The following morning, therefore, I was early astir, and,
under the guidance of the Mashunas, made a long round.
However, we saw no elands, for, although there was much spoor
in their old cornfields, none of it was that night’s, and none,
consequently, fresh enough to follow. Late in the afternoon
we came upon a small herd of sable antelopes, of which I shot
the bull. He was a fine, handsome animal, but carried a small
pair of horns ; being in good condition, however, his meat was
excellent. The Mashunas brought every fraction of the animal
(intestines included, of which they are very fond) into camp,
and I then gave about half the meat to the town, and with part
of the rest bought some rice and ground nuts.
On 9th August I again resumed my journey, travelling in
a general direction somewhat to the north of east, our route
running parallel to the great range of Umvukwi. During the
morning we crossed the River Umkwasi, a tributary of the
Manyami, a pretty little purling stream, whose limpid waters
ran noisily over a pebbly bed. Both before and after crossing
the Umkwasi, we passed several native villages, all perched
amongst small detached rocky hills. The inhabitants, however,
must have seen us from afar and fled at our approach, as,
although the fires were still burning (on some of which pots
were left cooking), we saw neither man, woman, nor child.
Some of them were doubtless watching us as we looked about
amongst the huts, examining their household utensils, yet,
although my fellows shouted lustily that we were not Maziti
(Matabili), but a party of peaceful travellers, no one mustered
up sufficient courage to come near us. The country about
here is undulating and well watered, open glades and patches
of forest alternating.
In the evening, after a hard day’s walk, we reached Chikasi’s
hill. On this day the sun set exactly west-north-west by
compass. Chikasi’s hill is one of many very remarkable rocks
about here, immense blocks of stone rising sheer from the level
I ll A M ASH U N A VILLAGE 5i
(for the donkey) for sale. The head man, Chikasi, a venerable
barbarian, with a placid and dignified expression of countenance,
presented me with a hen and several eggs, and later on sent me
three plates of prepared food, and seemed much pleased with
the beads with which I, on my side, presented him.
My donkey now refusing to eat the maize which I had
had cooked for him, and the natives assuring me that lions
were unknown in this part of the country, I hobbled him, and
turned him loose to graze during the night, as there was a
nice patch of young grass round the spring, close alongside
of our camp.
It must have been about an hour before daybreak when I
heard the donkey clattering over a large flat stone just behind
the camp. Surmising that something was behind him persuad
ing him to run like this (for he was fast hobbled), I jumped up
and ran out to try and get in front of h im ; but the short, sharp
stubble of the burnt-off grass cut my naked feet so cruelly that
I was soon obliged to halt. A t this moment the donkey
gave a cry— something between a bray and a scream— which
sounded quite unearthly in the stillness of the night, and I
knew the poor brute was in trouble. I now shouted to my
Kafirs, and, as they came running up, we again heard the
donkey making most distressing noises not far off, and whilst I
returned to camp to get my shoes they ran to his assistance, as
we already guessed he was attacked by hyaenas. Almost im
mediately afterwards my boys returned with the news that they
had reached the poor animal too late, having found him upon
the point of death, a wretched hyaena having torn his entrails
out. It was now very near daybreak, so I sat by the fire until
it was just getting light, and then, taking my rifle, went to
where my poor donkey lay, in the hope of finding his destroyer
still at the carcase. The loathsome brute, however, had never
returned, after having been scared away by my boys, and
so had only killed the donkey, without eating a morsel
o f the meat. He had seized the unfortunate animal from
behind, between the legs, and tearing open his belly, had
dragged out the entrails. It was whilst undergoing this
dreadful torture that the poor creature must have shrieked out
in his agony.
I ll A B A D GAM E COUNTRY 53
reach Tete, and, moreover, that the road to the latter place led
for much of the way through a very rough and hilly country.
Although I should have preferred going to Tete, and getting
back from thence to the Mashuna country along the course of
the River Mazoe, two reasons decided me to make for Zumbo
instead, and then ascend the Panyami, until I got somewhere
near to Lo Magondi’s country, whence I could strike straight
for my waggon. The first reason that led me to adopt this
plan was the dilapidated state of my one pair of “ veldschoon,”
which were already in such a state of disintegration that I felt
sure they would never hold out through eight days of rough
walking to Tete ; and the second was the time that such a
journey would occupy, for, as my waggon was standing all
alone in the Mashuna country, with no one to look after my
property but some Kafir boys, I did not care about remaining
too long absent. Having finally decided to start the following
day for Zumbo, I set to work to patch up my shoes with some
Impala skin, which occupied me for the greater part of the day.
The heat of the sun was now very great here, although the
nights were still cool and refreshing. I noticed in the fields
round the town great quantities of tomatoes ; and old Lobo
told me that he raised a good quantity of wheat along the river,
and was always able to supply the Portuguese passing up or
down with as much as they wanted. Just opposite here, on
the northern bank of the river, was a high flat-topped mountain,
called Matemwi.
On 19th August, after having breakfast with old Lobo, I
bade him adieu, and started westwards towards Zumbo, getting
as far that day as the mouth of the River Umsengaisi, near the
farther bank of which we slept. Just where this river emptied
itself into the Zambesi, and on the eastern bank, there was a
small native town, with a couple of square houses with broad
verandahs standing out conspicuously among the round native
huts. This town belonged to a half-caste Portuguese named
Perizengi, who at the time of my visit was absent on a slave
trading and hunting expedition to the Senga country, north of
the Zambesi. A t this village I noticed three women tied
together by their necks, newly-caught slaves doubtless ; but at
this time, although illegal by Portuguese law, slavery on the
58 TRAVEL AN D A D VEN TU RE IN A FR IC A ch ap.
heavy chain between each two. The chain was very new-
looking, clean, and bright— which was doubtless a great
consolation to the poor wretches. This town of Kanyemba’s
was on the banks of a small stream, a tributary of the
Zambesi, but several miles from the great river itself.
After breakfast, Kanyemba, having first given me a sheep
and a large basketful of meal, told off five Kafirs to take me
across the river to Zumbo. It took us quite two hours to
get down to the boat, which was about four miles above
Zumbo, and from the point of embarkation we had a very
pleasant trip down the river. Just above Zumbo the Zambesi
emerges from a deep gorge in the mountains, and broadens
out into a fine sheet of dark blue water, with only here and
there a sandbank cropping up above the surface. About a
mile above the town the River Loangwa, coming from the
far north, pours a fine broad stream of water into the
Zambesi. W e passed a herd of hippopotami just before
reaching Zumbo, and there was also a big old bull disporting
himself within a hundred yards of the landing-place. As
we stepped ashore one of the five white men (Portuguese)
who were then living at Zumbo— Senhor Joaquim Andre
Gourinho— came down, and, bidding me welcome, offered me
the use of one of the many unoccupied houses, for the accom
modation of m yself and Kafirs during my stay— which was,
however, only to be of a few days’ duration— and I sub
sequently found him most kind and hospitable.
All the Portuguese here were mere wrecks of men—
frail, yellow, and fever-stricken— and offered a strong contrast
to the robust and powerful figures o f the natives. Yet one
would not imagine that the country about was very un
healthy, as both banks of the river were very dry and
barren, and there was no appearance of marsh or swamp in
the neighbourhood. The trade of Zumbo is confined to ivory
alone, all of which comes from the countries to the north of
the Zambesi, on both sides of the River Loangwa. Senhor
Gourinho, who was the principal merchant at the time of my
visit, and was also, I fancy, the agent for a house in Quili-
mane, had a good deal of fine ivory in his storehouse, and told
me that not long before my arrival he had sent off two large
I ll ZUMBO 63
and I was not far behind them. Here the ground was level
though stony, and after trotting across it they descended on the
opposite side. A t the base of the range lay a broad open plain,
and beyond it a second range of stony hills, and I saw that I must
head my eland before she crossed the valley and reached this
second range. How my good horse got down the descent without
falling or breaking his legs I do not know, but when I reached
the level ground the elands were not more than two hundred
yards ahead of me. I now raced them, and was soon along
side of the finest cow, a beautiful animal, striped almost as
distinctly as a koodoo. I did my best to turn her towards my
waggon, but she would not swerve from her course, and when I
got slightly in front of her she shot past behind my horse and
resumed her way. There was now nothing to be done but to
shoot her at once before she got into the hills which we were
fast approaching, so, passing her again, I reined in, and as she
came by gave her my only bullet. She fell at once to the shot
and lay quite still.
W alking up to her, I found that I had struck her just be
hind the shoulder, but a good deal too high ; in fact, the ball
must have jarred her backbone, causing her to fall so suddenly.
I saw, however, that she was not dead, but only paralysed, and
she soon began to raise her head and forequarters, but her
whole body seemed powerless behind the bullet wound.
Nevertheless, I felt pretty sure that during the night, if left
alone, she would recover; and as, besides being fat, she was a
beautiful specimen of a striped eland, one that would do very
well for the British Museum, I resolved to despatch her at once.
Feeling for my knife, I now discovered for the first time that it
was gone, and knew I must have left it on the ground after
disembowelling the oribi. What was to be done ? I had not
another cartridge with which to kill her, nor even a knife. The
only thing I could think of was to bind her hind legs securely
together with the thong which in South Africa one always has
round o n es horse’s neck. This I at once set about doing, and
as I thought, soon bound her hind legs together just above the
hough in such a way that, struggle as she might, she would
not be able to get them loose. A ll this time the eland had
been struggling desperately with her forequarters, but her hind
76 TRAVE L AN D AD VE N TU RE IN A FR IC A chap, iv
1 The following passages were written in my diary in 1 8 8 3 , long before any one ever
dreamed that Mashunaland would one day become a British colony. I reproduce them just
as I wrote them ten years ago.
So T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A CHAP.
grow to a far greater size on the sites of old villages than any
where else. On the summit of every hill may be found the
walls, in more or less perfect preservation, of what, I think,
must have been cattle kraals. These walls are very neatly
built of squared stones, nicely fitted together, but uncemented
with any kind of mortar. The peaceful people inhabiting this
part of Africa must then have been in the zenith of their pros
perity. Herds of their small but beautiful cattle lowed in
every valley, and their rich and fertile country doubtless
afforded them an abundance of vegetable food. About 1840,
however, the Matabili Zulus, under their warlike chief Umzili-
gazi, settled in the country which they now inhabit, and very
soon bands o f these ferocious and bloodthirsty savages overran
the peaceful vales of the Mashuna country in every direction.
The poor Mashunas, unskilled in war, and living, moreover, in
small communities scattered all over the country, without any
central government, fell an easy prey before the fierce invaders,
and very soon every stream in their country ran red with their
blood, whilst vultures and hyaenas feasted undisturbed amidst
the ruins of their devastated homes. Their cattle, sheep, and
goats were driven off by their conquerors, and their children,
when old enough to walk and not above ten or twelve years of
age, were taken for sla v es; the little children too young to
walk were, o f course, killed together with their mothers. In a
very few years there were no more Mashunas left in the open
country, the remnant that had escaped massacre having fled
into the mountainous districts to the south and east o f their
former dwellings, where they still live. Thus, in a short time
an immense extent of fertile country, that had, perhaps, for
ages past supported a large and thriving community, was again
given back to nature : and so it remains to the present day—
an utterly uninhabited country, roamed over at will by herds of
elands and other antelopes.
In the north-eastern corner of this high country, in the bed
of the River Mazoe and its tributary streams, the natives obtain
alluvial gold, not very much it is true, but as they only work in
the most primitive way they cannot wash much ground in a
day. W hether a rich alluvial gold-field will or will not event
ually be opened up in this district is a point upon which I will
82 T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A chap, iv
O strich and N e s t .
CHAP. IV O S T R IC H - H U N T IN G 85
for as, besides the direct loss entailed, my man told me that
the feathers of the bird I had shot were remarkably fine.
On the 18th of July I was again ready to make a move,
and finding a practicable road, trekked up on to the high country
again, and held away across the downs to the south. In the
afternoon I shot a fine roan antelope bull, and the following
morning a cow carrying the finest pair of horns I have ever
seen, as they measure two feet seven inches over the curve. On
the 20th we crossed the River Ruwa, one of the main tributaries
of the upper Manyami, close to a cluster of Mashuna villages
under a head man named Entakwasheki, and the following
day reached See-kwanka’s, near which we slept, having passed
other towns about mid-day. There was little or no game to
be found in this part of the country as there were a good many
natives in the district. After leaving See-kwanka’s we held
away in a southerly direction, crossing the heads of numerous
small streams flowing to the eastward. Though the country
appeared to be very suitable for game, there was nevertheless
very little to be seen, a few hartebeests and an odd roan ante
lope being apparently the only surviving species. During the
morning I came across a solitary old roan bull, but he was very
wild, and went off at a great pace when I was still a long way
from him. However, after a sharp gallop I got a shot at him
as he was crossing a small stream, and breaking his hip had
him at my mercy. After killing him with a bullet through
the lungs, I brought the waggon to the carcase and loaded up
every scrap of the meat, as I wanted it all to buy rice and
maize from the Mashunas on ahead.
About mid-day on the 23rd we reached a lot of villages
under a petty chief named Sadza. Here I determined to remain
for a couple of days, in order to rest the oxen and buy pro
visions from the natives. A s they told me there were plenty
of elands in the neighbourhood, I rode out the following morn
ing in search of them, and as luck would have it, came across
a small herd of these fine animals within two miles of my
camp. The herd consisted of a magnificent old bull, two
younger bulls, and four cows, two of which had small calves
with them only a few days old— beautiful little creatures of a
reddish-fawn colour, profusely banded with perpendicular white
IV A LAR G E E LA N D B U LL 9i
stripes. I shot the old bull and the two younger ones, and as
the former was a magnificent animal, prepared his skin for
setting up, and hoped some day to see him in the British
Museum,1 set up in a manner that would recall to my mind, in
some degree, the splendid creature he looked when alive, though
I was fully aware how difficult it must be to mount these large
skins so as to do them justice.
To give an idea of the size and bulk of a large eland bull,
I think I cannot do better than record a few measurements
of this particular animal, taken on the spot with a tape-line.
Standing height at withers, five feet nine inches ; girth of neck
midway between jaw and shoulder, five feet one inch ; depth of
body, measured over the curve behind the shoulder from the
wither to the middle of chest, four feet one in ch ; breadth of
chest between the forelegs, one foot two inches. These last three
measurements were taken on the naked carcase after the skin
had been removed.
I also wanted a well-striped cow and a young calf for the
museum ; but although I might have got them this day, after
slaying the three bulls I did not care about shooting any
more ; and indeed, had it not been that I wanted a lot of meat
for the crowds of Mashunas who had accompanied me, I should
only have killed the one.
The following day I was busy preparing the big eland’s
skin with arsenical soap, melting down the fat, and buying
provisions from the Mashunas.
During the two previous nights that we had been here a
hyaena had been prowling round the camp trying to get hold of
som ethin g; but as the moon was not long past the full, the
nights had been light, and the dogs had kept him out. This
evening, however, as the moon did not come up much before
ten o’clock, there were some hours of darkness after the sun
went down. My whole camp was fenced in, the waggon
standing in the centre, and my two horses being tied on the
farther side. Beside them, spread out on the hide of one of
the young eland bulls, lay their feed of boiled maize cooling,
as it was just hot out of the pot. It must have been about
1 This hope has been realised, and this magnificent animal may now be seen in our
national collection.
92 T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A CHAP.
despatched him with a bullet through the lungs. This was really
a most beautiful animal. He had not yet attained the immense
neck or the large bunch of black bristly hair on the forehead
that are only found on an old bull eland, but on the other hand,
whereas the old bulls have never much hair upon their bodies,
this younger animal possessed a splendid coat, the ground
colour being of a rich, warm reddish-fawn, with a broad black
line running down the centre of his back from the mane on the
wither to the tail, while on each side he was banded with nine
broad white stripes, quite as distinct as those on a koodoo.
H e had also a splendid long even pair of horns measuring two
feet seven inches in length, whereas in an old bull the horns,
being worn down, seldom exceed twenty-eight inches. A lto
gether he was a most beautiful specimen, and I determined to
preserve him for setting up.
It was now too late to do anything, but I had three
Mashunas with me who agreed to sleep at the carcase to keep
off any prowling hyaenas that might be about. I gave them
the most strict orders not to touch the eland before my return
with the waggon the next morning, as of course they could not
be expected to know how to skin him properly for setting up.
A s one of them went with me to the waggon, which was quite
close, in order to get a fire stick, I there again told him through
my own boys, who spoke his language well, and whom he
thoroughly understood, that he was not to touch the eland
until my arrival with the waggon in the morning.
A s I was anxious to get early to work upon the eland, I
inspanned before sunrise the following day, and, crossing the
river, trekked up to where I had shot him. Being on horseback
I rode a little in advance, and what was my surprise and rage
upon coming up to the carcase to find that the Mashunas had
skinned and cut it up during the night. A glance at the skin
showed me that they had destroyed it for the purpose for which
I wanted it. I was— and naturally I think— very exasperated,
and as I came towards the rascals who had played me such a
trick they saw that my intentions were not friendly and bolted
in different directions, leaving their assegais, bov/s and arrows,
etc., behind them. These I at once seized, and smashing them
over my knee threw one after the other upon the fire. My
96 T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A CHAP.
which rose sheer from the plain in the form of a sugar loaf, a
gigantic naked mass, nearly a thousand feet in height. It would
be a conspicuous landmark for many miles around were it not
that there are other similar masses of rock in this district.
A couple of miles after passing Gato we crossed the River
Masheki, a pretty little stream of crystal-clear water about sixty
yards broad, and from two to four feet deep, flowing rapidly
over a sandy bed. Shortly after crossing this river we saw two
koodoos, one of which I shot, and a few miles farther on came to
a small stream, on the banks of which my guide advised me to
make a camp from which to hunt for Unkwila nondo antelope.
A s there was still an hour’s sun when we got here I took my
rifle and made a round on foot, but saw nothing whatever in
the shape of game. W hilst returning just at dusk, and when
not more than two hundred yards from camp, I met an
enormous old male baboon coming up from the water. H e
was walking along very slowly with his head turned towards
the camp listening to the Kafirs talking, and never saw me.
I looked at him coming and he seemed to me to be the very
largest baboon I had ever seen, and, as I wanted the head of
a very large male, I prepared to shoot him. A s he stalked
slowly past, chewing the wild fruits of which his mouth was
full, I fired, and the bullet going right through both shoulders
killed him on the spot. He just fell on his face perfectly dead
and never moved again. When I came to examine him I was
astonished at his size and the great length of his face from the
eyes to the tip of his nose, which was eight inches. He was
so old that he had no canine teeth with the exception of one
broken fang, so that his head was useless to me. But the
Kafirs carried him into camp, and one of them took his skin,
and thus his life was not sacrificed altogether for nothing.
On the following day, 1st August, I had a long day’s ride
in search of Unkwila nondo antelopes, but though I saw a little
spoor, I did not come across any of the animals themselves.
In the course of the day I shot a wart-hog, the only living
creature I saw. Several times during the day we came across
the tracks of a herd of buffaloes, which animals seemed to fre
quent this part of the country; the freshest spoor, was, how
ever, several days old.
IV S H O O T A B L A C K R H IN O C E R O S 99
difficult to make out their true race affinities, but their language
is undoubtedly nearly allied to that spoken by the Koranas
and Namaquas living along the Orange river. I make this
statement on the strength of the following facts. In 1871 a
Korana boy named John entered my service, and went to the
interior with me the following y e a r ; and as he had previously
learned to speak Dutch from a Griqua master, I could converse
freely with him. In 1873, when elephant-hunting in the
Linquasi district to the west of Matabililand, we saw a great
many Masarwas (Bushmen), and noticing that their language,
full of clicks and clucks and curious intonations of the voice,
was similar in character to that I had heard spoken by the
Koranas on the banks of the Orange river in 1871, I asked
John if he could understand them ; but he only laughed and
said “ No, sir.” During the next two years, however, John
had a lot to do with the Masarwas, and one day towards the
end of 1874, as we were returning from the Zambesi to
Matabililand, I heard him conversing quite familiarly with
some of these people. “ Hullo ! John,” I said, “ I thought you
told me that you couldn’t understand the Bushm en?”— “ Well,
sir,” he answered, “ at first I thought I couldn’t, but gradually
I found that I could understand them, and that they understood
me ; and in fact I can say that with a few slight differences
these Bushmen speak the same language as my people (the
Koranas) on the Orange river.” A Griqua family, too, the
Neros, who have for many years past been living in Matabili
land, all speak Sasarwa (the language of the Masarwas) with
perfect fluency, and they have all assured me that they had no
difficulty in learning it, as it was only a dialect of the Korana.
Physically, however, speaking generally, the Masarwas
whom I have met— and they are many— although they differ
essentially from the Kafir tribes by whom they are surrounded,
also differ very considerably from the Koranas and Hottentots.
Usually, though not invariably, they are lighter in colour and
slighter-built men than the Kafirs ; but they are not so short
in stature as the Koranas and Hottentots, the greater part of
them being from five feet six inches to five feet nine inches in
height, and some of them standing over six feet. Occasionally,
however, one notices men amongst them of a distinctly Hottentot
V BU SH M EN AND T H E IR W EAPO N S 107
have become quite fat and lazy. There is one faculty which
the Bushmen possess in an extraordinary degree, and that is
the sense which enables them to find their way, by day or
by night, through level pathless forests, where there are no
landmarks whatever, to any point which they wish to reach,
where they have ever been before. This sense is often well
developed in oxen and horses, and elephants possess it in
perfection, and will travel immense distances by night in a
direct line, to a certain patch of dense bush, where they
wish to stand during the heat of the day, or to a pool of
water, which has not been visited by them, or by any other
elephants, for months or perhaps years previously. Amongst
highly-civilised races this sense is conspicuously wanting, and I
should say that the greater part of our most profound philo
sophers would make very poor backwoodsmen. Amongst
the various Kafir tribes with which I am acquainted, the sense
of locality and direction is, as a rule, not nearly so well
developed as with the Bushmen, though some individuals are
certainly very good at finding their way in the bush.
When the first Matabili expedition that was sent against
the Batauwani returned from Lake Ngami in 1883, they
brought back with them some Masarwa children that they had
captured in the desert. About a dozen boys were handed over
to the king, the eldest probably not being more than ten years
old, whilst most of them were little mites of only five or six.
They were very thin on their arrival at Bulawayo, but being
well fed, as the king’s slave-boys always are, they soon got fat,
and seemed quite contented with their lot. A t night they
slept round the fires in the king’s courtyard, within the high
palisades by which it is enclosed, the entrance to it being of
course blocked up. One morning it was discovered that the
little Masarwas were gone. Search was at once made for
them, and as some of the children were so young it was
expected that they would soon be discovered and brought
back. However, they were never seen again in Matabililand.
When Lo Bengula told me about the escape of these little
Bushmen, he wound up his account by saying, “ Asi ubantu,
Amasiri ; inyamazana godwa ” (“ The Bushmen are not human
beings ; they are only wild animals ”).
V ESC A PE OF M ASARW A C H IL D R E N
same time that the first of the two expeditions I have already
spoken of went westwards towards Lake Ngami.
Chameluga was, however, not killed in his own country,
but in Matabililand, and I heard the story of his death from
one of the youngest of his wives, who was an actual eye
witness of the event. This girl, Bavea by name, was born in
Matabililand of slave parentage, and was sent by Lo Bengula
as a present to Chameluga in 1880. When quite a child she
had previously been apprenticed to Mrs. Helm (the wife of the
well-known missionary in Matabililand) by the king’s sister,
and had been brought up in her house, and during that time
had learnt to understand and speak English quite fluently. In
1880, as I have said above, very much against her will, she
was taken away from Mrs. Helm, and sent for a wife to the
wise man of Situngweesa. Early in 1 8 8 3 Lo Bengula, for the
last time, sent presents and friendly messages to Chameluga,
at the same time requesting that he would pay him a visit at
Bulawayo. Such an invitation was tantamount to a command,
and the old man set out on his last earthly journey, accom
panied by a small party of his own people, amongst whom were
the girl Bavea and one of his sons (a boy of about fifteen
years of age). Some time after despatching his messengers to
Situngweesa to summon Chameluga, Lo Bengula sent out the
greater part of the fighting men from the eastern side of his
country to meet his visitor on the road. The orders given to
his general appear to have been— “ Meet the wizard at the
Tchangani river, kill him and all who are with him, and then
hasten on and destroy all his people at Situngweesa, and bring
back their cattle and ivory.” Thus when Chameluga and his
little party reached the Tchangani river, the Matabili were
already there. The warriors, however, kept out of sight, and
only a few head men came forward as if to greet the chief. As
they advanced Bavea said to her aged husband, “ They are
going to kill you ; I know the Matabili. R un! run ! I see
blood in their eyes; run ! ru n !” But the old man answered,
“ Child, I am too old to run. If his day has come, Chameluga
does not fear to die ; but bid my son, who is young and swift
of foot, creep away in the bushes whilst there is yet time, and
carry the news to my people.”
V MURDER OF CHAMELUGA US
The girl was rig h t; she knew the Matabili only too
well. V ery soon the little party were surrounded by Lo
Bengula’s savage warriors, and one more of those tragedies
took place which are so com
mon in the interior of Africa
that they excite but little
attention. Chameluga and his
whole party were murdered,
with the exception of Bavea,
who was taken back to Mata-
bililand. Her life amongst
the Mashunas must, however,
have been to her liking, as
she subsequently ran away, and
in 1887 I saw her amongst
Lo Magondi’s people in North
western Mashunaland, and it
was then that she told me
this story. But the boy had
escaped, having crept away
just before the attack without
attracting notice, and even as
the massacre proceeded he was
fleeing fast to the north-east.
Fear lent him wings, and in an M ata b ili W arrio r.
incredibly short space of time,
having escaped being killed by lions— a very real danger in
this part of Africa— he carried the news of the murder of his
father to Situngweesa. The people did not require to be told
that the Matabili, having killed Chameluga and his party,
would be sure to come on in order to destroy his towns with
all their inhabitants and take their cattle. They fled at once
across the Manyami river, and down into the hilly country
between the Mazoe and Inyagui rivers. So hurriedly, indeed,
did they leave their homes, that they left most of their grain
stores and a small herd of cattle behind them.
When the Matabili, a couple of days later, arrived upon
the scene, eager for slaughter, and expecting to find their
would-be victims in blissful ignorance of the fate which had
ii6 TRAVE L AN D A D V E N T U R E IN AFR ICA CHAP.
befallen their chief, they found all the towns deserted. They
captured the small herd of cattle that had been left behind,
and which were still feeding close to one of the villages, and
they also killed a small party of Mashunas who were coming
from a distant kraal on a visit to Situngweesa, and who, un
fortunately for themselves, arrived there on the very same day
as Lo Bengula’s warriors. These men were certainly out of
luck, and they were all assegaied. Four months later, in the
month of August, on my return from the Sabi, I visited the
deserted towns of Situngweesa. Some of the villages had been
burnt, but others were still standing; and although all the
corn-bins had been overturned, many of them were still full of
maize. I saw the remains of two of the murdered Mashunas.
In the fields surrounding the villages the rice and “ pogo ”
corn had been harvested before the flight of the people, but
there were great quantities of ground nuts and sweet potatoes
still in the ground at the time of my visit. The Matabili at
once followed on the spoor of the escaped tribe, and raided
part of the country of Umsa-washa, near the head waters of
the Mazoe river. As, however, the inhabitants were on the
look-out for them, they were not very successful, and returned
without having killed many people or captured many cattle.
On their way home to the Matabili country this “ im pi ”1
passed the kraals of a tribe of Mashunas living on the head
waters of the Bembisan river, under the petty chiefs Musigaguva
and Madabuga. These Mashunas had long before been taken
under the protection of Umziligazi, Lo Bengula’s father, and
had been tributary to the , Matabili for many years. They
had large herds of Matabili cattle in their keeping, many of
them wore the Matabili dress, and most of them spoke the
language of their conquerors. W hy they were destroyed is to
me a mystery to this day, nor have I heard any reason given
by any of the Matabili who took part in the massacre, except
that it was the king’s command.
With the Matabili army of which I am now speaking
was a man of the waggon-driver class named John Matoli,
who many years previously had accompanied Sir John Swin
burne to Matabililand as a waggon driver, and who, having
1 Army.
V M A T A B IL I ATRO CITIE S ii 7
Break up camp— Waggon breaks down— Send Laer to Grant’s camp for another
wheel— Follow on horseback— Laer meets five lions— Return to my waggons
— Shoot a leopard— Oxen attacked by a lion at the Umfuli— Laer kills the lion
— Move camp to the River Zweswi— Shoot another large lion— Return to Mata-
bililand—The Sea-Cow Row— Unjust treatment at the hands of the Matabili.
“ The whole five of them then emerged on the other side and walked away, continually stopping and looking round by the way,
towards the forest skirting the valley."
CHAP. VI L A E R M E E T S F IV E LIO N S 121
has seen many lions— said he thought it had a finer mane than
he had ever seen before. Chukuru, one of the Matabili Kafirs
with him, describing the incident to me, said, “ Maimamo !
wasn't it awful (‘ Sa be ka ’). Such an enormous one (‘ Um ka
la gata'). He looked as if his shoulders were loaded with
bundles of grass, and behind he was so small he looked hungry.
When I saw him coming towards me in the open my heart
died, and I gave thanks whep I saw him turn back.” I was
terribly vexed when I heard that, if I had kept along the
waggon track for another mile or so, I should have come across
these lions. I was well mounted and had a good rifle with me,
and had I only sighted them in so open a part of the country
I think I should have added at least the skin of the big male
to my collection of hunting trophies.
A t daylight the following morning, leaving Laer to come
on with the wheel, I rode on ahead, as I intended to reach my
waggons the same evening, but knew that my boys would have
to sleep on the road. I now followed the waggon track, as I
thought it just possible that I might still find the lions along
the creek where they had been seen the day before. However,
on reaching it a flock of vultures sitting on the bank and others
flying overhead showed me where the carcase of the eland lay,
and at the same time assured me that the lions themselves had
finally abandoned their prey. I now left the waggon track
and rode along the creek, intending to follow it to its junction
with the River Lundaza, a tributary of the Umfuli, and then
take a bee-line for my waggons. I had not proceeded very
far when I saw, a considerable distance ahead of me, a smallish
animal emerge from the forest and cross the open ground ex
tending along the creek. It very soon reached the bank, and,
going down to drink, at once disappeared. On first sighting it
I had seen that it was some cat-like animal, and as it was too
small for a lioness, had guessed it to be a leopard. As soon as
it was in the creek and well out of sight, I galloped as hard as
I could in order to get up to it before it had finished drinking.
However, it must have heard me, and came up the bank again
when I was still about one hundred and fifty yards distant from
it I saw at once that it was a fine leopard, but had little time to
examine him, as, after glancing towards my rapidly-advancing
VI SHOOT A LEO PARD 123
horse for the briefest time possible, he bounded away across
the open towards the forest which skirted the valley. He had
not very far to go, but, instead of keeping up his pace he soon
changed from a gallop to a trot, so that I gained upon him
fast, and, pulling in and jumping off, got a shot just as he was
entering the bush. The bullet, as I afterwards found, struck
him in the right thigh, breaking the bone, and passed out on
the left side behind the ribs. He did not stop or turn round,
but, with a loud snarl and a flourish of his tail, galloped in
among the trees.
Hastily remounting, without having taken my eye off
him, I was soon close up again, when he ran into a patch of
grass at the foot of a large bush and became invisible. I
did not know at this time that his right thigh was broken,
but I knew that a wounded leopard is a very dangerous
animal to deal with (as savage as a lion and as agile as a cat),
and so rode cautiously, completely round the bush beneath
which he lay, to see if I could not get a sight of him. How
ever, he was so well concealed by the grass that I could
see absolutely nothing of him, although, being on horseback,
my eyes were well above the ground. I now rode nearer and
began to think he was dead or dying, as he allowed me to
come to within twenty-five yards before making a sign. When
at about this distance, however, he suddenly raised his head
with a loud snarling grunt, and gave me a fine view of his open
mouth garnished with a very serviceable-looking set of teeth.
Thinking he was coming, I instantly jerked my horse half
round ; but the apparition disappeared, and I could see nothing
again. However, I had seen whereabouts he was lying, and so
determined to fire a shot or two to make him show himself;
but before I could do so he again raised his head with another
snarl, and immediately after came straight out at me, and at such
a pace, that before I could turn my horse and get him started
the leopard was right under his tail. He chased me for some
sixty or seventy yards before he stopped, coming right into the
open, and keeping close up the whole time. I pulled in as
quickly as I could, and before the plucky little beast regained
the bush gave him a second shot, which quickly proved fatal.
When charging and chasing me this leopard growled or grunted
124 TRAVE L AN D A D V E N T U R E IN A FR IC A CHAP.
that he would have done so, but his chum prevented him,
saying, “ Let him alone: don't you see how vicious he
is? If you miss him he is sure to come and bite,” and
that whilst they were talking the lion had retreated amongst
some bushes behind an ant-heap. As they said he was a
large lion with a fine mane, I was very anxious to get him,
and so had all my dogs caught and tied up at once. I knew
that he would not go far, but would just lie in the patch
of bush where my men had seen him, waiting for night
to pay a visit to my camp ; and so, as breakfast was nearly
ready, I had something to eat before starting in pursuit.
As soon as I was ready I had my best horse brought up,
and, having all the dogs led, proceeded to where my men had
seen the lion some half-hour previously. Here we took up the
spoor, and I gave strict orders to the boys leading the dogs not
on any account to let them loose until we actually sighted the
quarry. The ground was not very favourable for tracking so
soft-footed an animal as a lion ; still, by looking carefully it
could be made out, and we followed it, step by step, through
the first patch of bush into a narrow valley covered with soft
green grass. Here it was impossible to see anything ; but this
opening in the forest, down which ran a little rill into the
Zweswi, was not more than twenty yards broad, and beyond it
lay another patch of bush in which I felt pretty sure the lion
was then lying. Still holding the line the *spoor had led us,
and crossing the grass to the sandy soil in which the trees grew
beyond it, I told my men to look carefully for the tracks,
whilst I rode on a little ahead, bidding them on no account to
come on until they had got the spoor. I now rode slowly on
by myself, keeping as sharp a look-out as possible both in
front and on each side of me. The bush consisted of small
saplings with very little underwood, but as the trees were
already mostly in leaf, I could not see very far.
I had ridden perhaps one hundred yards in this way when
suddenly, with the corner of my eye, as it were, I saw a some
thing, and, turning my head, instantly became aware that it
was the lion. He was lying exactly at right angles to the
course I was riding, and was watching me intently. His hind
legs were doubled in under him, and his head placed flat upon
130 TRAVE L AN D AD VE N T U R E IN A ERICA chap, vi
me, holding the small of the stock in my right hand and the
barrel in my left, with a vague idea of getting it into the lion’s
mouth, and at the same time yelled as loud as I could, “ Loos
de honden, loos de honden,” which being translated means,
“ Let loose the dogs.” In an instant, as I say, the lion was
close up to me. I had never moved my feet since firing, and,
whether it was my standing still facing him that made him
alter his mind, or whether he heard the noise made by my
people, who, hearing my shot, immediately followed by the
loud growling of the lion, were all shouting and making a
noise to frighten the lion from coming their wray, I cannot take
upon myself to say ; but he came straight on to within about
six yards of me, looking, I must say, most unpleasant, and then
suddenly swerved off, and passing me, galloped away.
I tried to keep my eye on him and get the bridle back
over my horse’s head at the same time, but he was thoroughly
frightened and kept on backing. At this instant the dogs
came up, and Punch and Ruby took the spoor, followed by the
others ; but by the time I had quieted and mounted my horse
both lion and dogs were out of sight. I now galloped in the
direction they had taken, and soon heard a dog bark, immediately
followed by the growling of the lion. Then there was a perfect
chorus of barking and growling and I knew that the dogs were
on to him, and that, bar accidents, his skin was mine.
Putting spurs to my horse, I soon came up with the dogs,
just as they were going through' an open valley with their grim
opponent, a great gaunt, hungry-looking lion, but with a fine
mane. My pack were all round him, barking furiously, Punch
and one of the young dogs going sometimes dangerously near.
Just as the lion entered the bush he faced round at the dogs
and I jumped off for a s h o t; but he turned again, and only
gave me a chance from behind. I fired, and knew I had hit
him by the growl he gave, and I afterwards found that the
bullet had passed through his left thigh without breaking the
bone and out through his flank. Just within the bush the dogs
again brought him to bay alongside a large ant-hill, and I
galloped round in front of him.
As soon as he saw me he paid no further heed to his canine
foes, but stood, with his eyes fixed on the most dangerous
134 TRA VEL AN D A D VE N T U R E IN A F R IC A CHAP.
of his assailants, growling hoarsely, and with his head held low
between his shoulders— just ready to charge, in fact. I knew
my horse would not stand steady, so jumped off, and taking a
quick ainv fired instantly, as it does not do to wait when a lion
is looking at you like this, and when he may make up his mind
to come at any moment. Usually they jerk their tails up over
their backs, holding them perfectly stiff and rigid, two or three
times before charging. They sometimes charge without doing
this, but they never do it without charging. My bullet inflicted
a mortal wound, entering between the animal’s neck and
shoulder and travelling the whole length of his body. H e sat
down like a dog on his haunches immediately after, and was
evidently done for, as he lolled his tongue out of his mouth
and growled feebly when the dogs bit him in the hind quarters.
Not wishing to spoil the skin I would not fire again, and
was standing by my horse waiting for him to give up the ghost,
when a rifle was discharged from behind me, and over the lion
rolled. This shot was fired by John Slaipstein, one of the two
men who had first seen him, and when I found that, firing at
a distance of about fifteen yards, with a io-bore rifle, he had
knocked a hole through the lion’s skin about the size of a shil
ling, I was naturally vexed, and abused him very freely. My own
bullets, being solid 4 5 0 ’s, had scarcely marked the skin at all.
I now examined the dead beast, and could find no sign of
his having been hit by my first shot, but on his cheek a patch
of hair had been knocked off and blood was oozing from the
skin, and what happened I think is this : my first bullet must
have struck the fallen tree, and, glancing off, missed the lion,
but knocked a splinter of wood into his face with sufficient
force to tear some hair off and make the skin bleed. This
made him growl and come out at me. Had he been really
wounded, and then charged, I do not believe he would have
swerved off as he did. He was a fine large lion, and must have
been a very fine animal when in his p rim e : but he was evi
dently very old and in low condition, and his teeth were much
worn and broken. His skin, however, was in good order, and
he had a very nice mane. I have no doubt that he would have
paid a visit to my camp that night had he not been seen and
hunted up, for he must have been suffering from extreme
VI THE S E A -C O W R O W 135
Na t i v e Ba t t l e - A x e s .
CH APTER V II
Return to the Transvaal— Meet Mr. Montagu K err—W e travel together to Mata-
bililand— Mr. Kerr starts for Lake Nyassa—Journey to the Mababi— Man-
eating lion— Another lion story— Return to Sode Gara— Giraffe hunting—
A tropical thunderstorm— Meet Mr. Watson—Trek out to Tati.
A s soon as the sea-cow case was settled I set out for the
Transvaal, and reaching Klerksdorp in January 1884, at once
commenced packing my collections for immediate transmission
to Europe. A t this time I felt so sore at the treatm ent I had
received from Lo Bengula that I determined not to hunt in
his country during the coming dry season, but to spend the
year in the northern parts of Kham a’s territory, shooting and
preserving specimens of those species of antelope for which I
had orders, which are not to be found in Matabili or Mashuna-
land. It was whilst preparing for this expedition that the
late Mr. W alter Montagu Kerr turned up one day in Klerks
dorp. He had come up from Kimberley purposely to see me
and to ask my advice concerning an expedition into the in
terior which he had in view, and as I liked him from the first,
I asked him to travel up with my waggons as far as Bulawayo,
for, although I had no intention of hunting in Lo Bengula’s
country, it was necessary for me to revisit Matabililand on
business, before going westwards to the Mababi. On 5th
March 1884 we set out on our travels northwards, but as my
poor friend Mr. Kerr has given an account of this journey,
which we made together as far as Bulawayo, in his very
interesting book The F ar In terior , I need say no more about
it here. Arrived at Bulawayo we found Lo Bengula very
friendly to all outward appearance, and he made no difficulty
about allowing Mr. K err to set out upon his arduous journey
140 TRAVEL AN D AD VEN TU RE IN A FR IC A CHAP.
had killed the two men a few days previously had since killed
two more, the one again a Bushman, and the other a Makuba.
All these four men had been killed in broad daylight, the two
Makubas whilst digging up mice in the open plain, and the
two Bushmen in the Mopani forest skirting the plain.
The next morning the men who had sold me their maize
left the waggon early, in order to get home before nightfall.
T hat evening I slept close to the top end of the reed bed in
which the Mababi river disappears, and the following day
trekked down to our camping-place of 1879, where some old
buffalo heads still marked the spot. I had scarcely out-
spanned, when two Masubias, both of whom I knew well, as
they had worked for me when I was last here, came up and
told me that their companion had been killed that morning
by a lion. On asking them how it happened, Ramakutzan
replied: “ Yesterday afternoon three of us, thinking your
waggon was still far off, left home with mealies to sell to you,
but had not travelled far when we met those of our people
who first visited you returning. They told us that you were
coming down to your old camp, and would be here that even
ing or the next day early, so we thought it useless to go any
farther, and made a scherm for ourselves under those high trees
yonder,” pointing to some about two thousand yards distant, close
to the edge of the reed bed. “ Here we slept. A little before
daylight, feeling very cold, I got up, and sitting by the fire,
lit my 4dacha ’ pipe, and commenced smoking. My comrades
were lying under their skin blanket, and I was still smoking,
when I saw an indistinct something coming rapidly along the
ground towards them. ‘Tauw, ta u w ! (Lion, lion)/ I cried.
4 W ake ! wake ! ’ and as one of them threw the blanket off
him and raised his head, the something, which even in the dim
gray light I knew to be a lion, was on him, and seizing him
by the head so that he never cried out, dragged him away
from the fire. I seized my gun, which was standing in the
back of the scherm, and fired after the lion ; but I am not a
white man, that knows how to use a gun properly, and my
bullet did nothing.”
Upon hearing this tale of woe I got one of my horses up,
and calling all the dogs, rode down to where the man had
YII A M A N -E A T IN G LION *43
Collison and myself, upon two occasions, saw lions right out in
the open— first two large males, and again two lionesses, one
of them with a small cub. The two latter we shot, but, alack
and alas ! the two males got off untouched, and their skins are
not amongst our hunting trophies. It happened in this wise.
My friend and I having ridden out, as we had to do every few
days, to shoot some Tsessebe and wildebeest to supply our
numerous native retinue as well as Khama’s men with meat,
soon came in sight of several large herds of these animals and
galloped in pursuit They were very wild, and in order to kill
any without galloping our horses to death, we had to fire rather
long shots at about three hundred yards. This day I killed five
animals— two wildebeest and three Tsessebe antelopes— with
my twenty cartridges, and heard Collison firing away to the right
though he was out of sight. As soon as some of my boys
came up to where I stood by the last animal killed, I handed
one of them my now useless rifle and rode back to the first
wildebeest I had shot, where I could see Franz, my Basuto
boy, standing with a pack-horse. I may say that the Mababi
plain was here as flat as a billiard table, without the smallest
bush, and free from holes and long grass, which had been burnt
off some months before. It was impossible, however, to see
anything at a great distance upon it on account of the mirage.
As I came up to Franz I noticed two small objects close
together on the open plain, the best part of a mile off, looking
like two small ant-heaps. As there were no such things about,
I could not make them out, and gazed fixedly at them for
some seconds ; but, as they remained motionless, I turned to
the wildebeest and helped Franz to skin it. I soon looked up
again, however, and at once knew that what I had seen were
two lions’ heads. The animals had now got up and were
walking slowly over the open plain one behind the other. I saw
at once that they were lions, from the length of their bodies
and the way they held their heads below the line of their
backs. I could see, too, that they were males, from the
thick, humpy look of their necks caused by the mane. Oh, for
a rifle and ten cartridges! and then, as I was very well
mounted, in all probability I should have added two more lion
skins to my collection. Thinking that as I could not shoot
‘ When within about one hundred yards, as they still stood defiant, and one of them, a very fine dark-skinned animal with a handsome mane,
seemed particularly furious, I slightly turned my horse’s head, so as to pass them at a distance of sixty or seventy yards.”
CHAP. VII TWO LION S A T B A Y 147
CHAPTER VI I I
the Elliotts, from whom, as well as from all the other mission
aries and their families in Matabililand, I have received the
most constant kindness. I had intended to have waited here
for my friends, Mr. H. C. Collison and Cornelis van Rooyen,
and to have travelled to Mashunaland in company with them ;
but as I knew they would not return from the south before
April, I grew restless, and resolved to go on by myself, the
more especially as I thought that the change of air and scene
might be good for me, and help to shake off the feeling of
languor and weakness from which I was suffering. It was
still early in February, therefore, when I left Matabililand, and
as it was so early in the year I had good hopes of finding
elephants outside the “ fly ” infested districts, and of having a
turn with them on horseback.
As the main object, however, of my expedition was to
collect the skins and skeletons of large mammalia for mounting
in museums, and as such things are very bulky, I took two
waggons with me, and thirty-two bullocks to pull them. In
addition to these I had a good many loose cattle, amongst
which were a bull and ten milk cows, and I also had with
me five pack donkeys and four horses. Of the latter, one was
Nelson, who had now served me well and faithfully for four
years. A second was the stallion I had had with me in the
Mababi. He was a big powerful animal and a wonderfully steady
shooting horse, but liable to become sulky and to refuse to run
at his best pace— a phase of temper recognised by the Transvaal
Boers, and described by them by the word “ steeks,”— and when
in this mood spurring was simply wasted upon him. Of the
other two, one was a horse that I had just bought from a
trader at Tati because of his good looks, and in spite of his
bad character. He, however, turned out hopelessly bad, and
is the only really vicious horse I have ever had anything to
do with in South Africa. I almost cured him of bucking by
riding him with an adze handle, and stunning him by a heavy
blow administered between the ears as soon as he commenced,
which he invariably did as soon as one touched the saddle ;
but I never could make a shooting horse of him, and
finally gave him to Lo Bengula in the hope that he would
present him to Ma-kwaykwi, or some other of his endunas,
158 TRAVEL AN D A D V E N T U R E IN A FR IC A CHAP.
it. The lion, I think, must have been the marauder, and I
fancy he must have roared just after finishing what, if he was
hungry, must have been a very unsatisfactory meal for him.
In the perfect stillness of the very early morning the loud
roars had sounded much nearer than was really the case. Just
beyond here were some low stony ridges, bordering the Umniati
river, and thinking that the lion might possibly be lurking
amongst the rocks and bushes, I rode all round them, and then
along the bank of the river. However, I could see nothing of
him, so gave up the search, and rode down to look at the ford.
This I found to be quite impassable for waggons, as the heavy
summer rains had washed the banks of the river completely
away. I now rode up the river in search of another crossing
place, and found a very good one about two miles off*. Here
I also saw much hippopotamus spoor only a day or two old,
the animals all seemingly travelling up stream towards a range
of hills named Taba Insimbi (the hill of iron). The whole
country is over four thousand feet above the sea-level about
here,'and I myself was surprised to find hippopotami so high
up the course of the river, but these animals wander very
much when undisturbed in search of suitable food, especially
during the rainy season.
Early in the afternoon I spanned in, and crossed the river
with my waggons without difficulty, and then, having nothing
particular to do, recrossed the river, and set a gun across our
track, in the hope that the lion that had taken my reed-buck
in the morning would follow my cattle spoor during the night,
and cross the line attached to the trigger, with unpleasant
results to himself. Just as I had arranged matters to my satis
faction, a small herd of Tsessebe antelopes came in sight, feeding
over a neighbouring rise ; so, taking my rifle, I crept towards
them, and succeeded in killing two, which both lay within a
couple of hundred yards of our waggon track. I then sent for
the donkeys, and had all the meat carried into the camp,
removing the line attached to the trigger of the set gun from
across the road until they had passed, and then resetting it.
I now made sure that either the lion or a hyaena, attracted by
the smell of blood, would follow up our tracks and come to
an untimely end during the night, but was much afraid lest
162 TRAVE L AN D A D V E N T U R E IN A F R IC A c h a p , v iii
the latter should come first, and save the former’s life. How
ever, though I lay awake till late, hoping and expecting, no
report broke the stillness of the night and I at last fell asleep,
and found, on waking in the morning, that the set gun was
still as I had left it on the preceding evening, neither lion nor
hyaena having disturbed it. After breakfast I trekked on, and
in the afternoon reached the River Umgezi, where I slept.
This little river used to be a favourite resort of hippopotami,
small herds of which animals were usually to be found in the
deep black pools (some over a mile in length) that lie on either
side of the Machabi hills. Taking a ride along the course of
the river, late in the afternoon, I came across much recent
spoor, some of it not more than a day or two old, but the
animals themselves seemed to have moved northwards, towards
the deep pools which I knew lay beyond the hills. Whilst
riding down the river I saw a large herd of koodoos and a few
water-bucks, but, as they were all females, did not interfere with
them. I also saw several agile wiry-haired little klipspringers.
It is worthy of remark that in Northern Mashunaland these
compactly-built, though active little antelopes are to be found
along the courses of all the larger rivers, such as the Umgezi,
Umniati, Umfuli, and Manyami, wherever they run (as they
often do) amongst boulders and masses of rock. Thus they
may be shot by walking along the banks of the river, and with
out ever climbing a hill at all. I say this because I have
heard that in the Cape Colony, where these little antelopes are
also to be found, they are only to be got at amongst the
steepest and most rugged hills and mountains, amidst the
highest portions of which they live. This I have heard stated
more than once, though I have had but little actual experience
myself in that part of South Africa. I once shot one years
ago, in 1 8 7 1 , on the top of a high hill overlooking the Orange
river, between Colesberg and Philipolis ; and in 1 8 7 6 , when
snowed up for a week on the highest part of the Sneeuwberg
range of mountains, between Graaf Reinet and Middleburg, I
saw several of these hardy little beasts, but failed to bag any
of them. The snow then lay from one to two feet in depth
on the mountains, and the air was bitterly raw and cold,
especially at nights, yet the klipspringers managed to weather
Pioneer Expedition in the Foreground.
Granite Rook in Southern Mashunaland, with the W asgons of the
CHAP. VIII A LION-SHOOTING IN CID EN T 165
her over. For some seconds I could see nothing of her, but I
knew she was rolling about, as she kept the grass in continual
motion, and, moreover, never ceased growling. Suddenly she
appeared again, evidently in a dying condition, and, half falling,
half walking down the steep bank, lay all of a heap at the
water’s edge, holding her jaws, now all besmirched with blood,
slightly open and growling softly. I might have bombarded
her in perfect sa fety; but, as I thought she was done for, and
did not want to spoil her skin, I refrained from doing so, and,
cantering up to the end of the pool, crossed the river and rode
down the bank close to the spot where the lioness lay. She
was not quite so dead as I thought, for as soon as she saw me
she managed to raise her head and growl savagely, her eyes
gleaming with all the fierce fury of her unutterable though futile
rage. I may here say that any one who has not seen at close
quarters the fierce light that scintillates from the eyes of a
wounded lion, or any other of the large Felidae, can hardly
imagine its wondrous brilliancy and furious concentration. In
the present instance the fury of the wounded lioness was impotent,
as she had not the strength to raise herself from the ground,
and, indeed, could do nothing more than lift her head and growl
savagely. The small 4 5 0 -bore expanding bullet had done its
murderous work, and the life that had so lately been strong
within her was fast ebbing away. However, the sun was low,
my waggons were some distance off, and I was alone, with no
one to help me to skin the lioness ; so I killed her with a shot
through the brain, and at once set to work to remove her hide,
which I then fastened to the saddle and carried back to camp
— the first, but not the last, lion skin my good horse Nelson
ever carried for me.
After leaving the River Umgezi an easy day’s travelling
brought me to the Zweswi, and here I was obliged to delay for
five days in order to give Nelson a rest, as he had become so lame
that I was afraid he might knock up altogether. I found that
about a fortnight before my arrival a large herd of elephants
(probably the big herd of Northern Mashunaland, in which there
were far over a hundred animals) had come up along the river,
through the Machabi hills, and then struck off in the direction of
the thick bush on the upper Umfuli. The whole country near
VIII A H YÆ NA V ISIT S THE C A M P 167
where the waggon track crosses the Zweswi had been cut up by
them ; they had trampled broad paths through the long grass
which still covered all the open valleys. In every patch of
forest numerous trees had been stripped of their bark, or had
had large branches broken off them, and in some cases had even
been uprooted bodily ; whilst the ground had been dug up in
all directions into deep holes in search of roots. On seeing the
spoor of this large herd of elephants that had passed here such
a short time before my hopes were high of meeting them before
very long, as they were well out of the “fly” country, and travelling
still farther away from i t ; and were, moreover, moving very
slowly, feeding along quietly in perfect security. Bitterly, in
deed, did I repent my folly in buying the evil-tempered brute
that had lamed my good horse Nelson. Had he been sound
I should have gone in search of this large herd of elephants
forthwith, taking provisions enough for myself and Kafirs to
last us four or five days, in order not to have had to shoot game,
and run the risk of disturbing the more valuable animals before
actually coming up with them. As it was, I hoped that the
stallion would prove himself to be a good elephant horse when
the day came to test him, but I felt no confidence in him, and
so resolved not to make any actual search for the great beasts
before reaching the next river, the Umfuli.
On the second night of my sojourn on the banks of the
Zweswi, I woke up suddenly about an hour or two after mid
night, and for some reason unknown to myself got up and put
my head out of the front of the waggon. It was a brilliant
moonlight night— and the moonlight of the tropics is very
brilliant indeed. My two waggons stood side by side, the four
horses and the donkeys being tied between them. On the
other side of the buck waggon stood the cattle kraal, between
which and the waggon my drivers and Kafirs were sleeping ;
and, as it happened, my well-fed pack of dogs, all forgetful of
their duty, were doing the same. On the farther side of the
waggon in which I was sleeping there was neither fire nor
fence. A t the back of it hung half the meat of a sable ante
lope bull which I had shot the same morning. As I have said
above, I woke suddenly in the small hours of the morning, and,
getting up, looked out of the waggon across the broad expanse
1 68 TRAVEL AN D A D V E N T U R E IN A F R IC A CHAP.
of veld that lay before me, and over which the brilliant moon
cast a pale soft light. Then I turned my head and looked
round towards the back of the waggon, and there, not ten yards
off, stood a great hyaena, looming white in the strong moon
light. He was standing gazing at the sable antelope meat that
hung within a few yards of him at the back of the waggon.
Cautiously withdrawing my head, I felt in the blankets for the
loaded rifle that always lay beside me, and then looked out
again. The hyaena had advanced a yard or two nearer, and, as
I hastily took aim at him, either did not see me, or, at any rate,
paid no attention to me. The next instant I fired, and, as he
was so near, it was not surprising that I hit him. He fell to the
shot, but picked himself up again and made off into the bush
behind the waggon, closely pursued by all my dogs, which,
awakened by the shot, had rushed out en m a sse from behind
the buck waggon. They soon brought him to bay, and when,
simultaneously with one of my drivers and some of the Kafirs,
I arrived barefooted at the spot where the worrying was going
on, I found the hyaena lying on the ground in the last agonies,
with a dog pulling at each ear, while Punch had him by the
throat and old Ruby was tearing at his flank. A few minutes
later he was dead ; so, calling off the dogs, and bidding the
Kafirs drag' the carcase up to the waggons, I again turned in
and slept till daylight.
After having rested for a few days at the Zweswi, I again
moved on, and on 2 7 th February slept within a few miles of the
Lundaza river, a tributary of the Umfuli. Early the following
morning I saddled up the stallion and rode along the track
ahead of the waggons, not taking any of my Kafirs with me.
Presently I espied a small herd of zebras feeding in an open
glade in the forest, and, being in want of meat for my dogs and
Kafirs, resolved to try to shoot one. As the animals had not
yet observed me, and as there was a large ant-heap standing
conveniently within shot of them, I dismounted, and, leaving
my horse standing amongst the bushes, which completely con
cealed him from view, crept cautiously forward towards the
unsuspecting herd. I reached the ant-heap unobserved, and,
peering cautiously round the side of it, saw that I was well
within shot. Picking out a big fat-looking mare, I at once
VIII A LA R G E HERD OF E L E P H A N T S 169
fired, and she fell to the shot, rolling over on her back with her
legs in the air. She picked herself up again, however, almost
immediately, and galloping off*, soon caught up to her fast
retreating companions. As she regained her legs I saw where
she had been struck, as the blood was running from a wound
in the shoulder, too high to be mortal, but which showed me
that my bullet had just grazed, without injuring, her backbone,
causing her to fall to the ground suddenly. As I was anxious
to secure her, I now ran to my horse, and, mounting quickly,
galloped in pursuit. I was just getting within shot again when
a freshly-broken tree, evidently the work of an elephant, caught
my eye. 1 at once reined in, and, examining the ground, soon
saw that a very large herd of these animals had passed during
the night, and as the trees were broken in all directions, and
many of them stripped of their bark, it was evident that they
had been browsing along slowly without any suspicion of
danger. What was to be done ? To follow them up forth
with was out of the question, as I had only about half-a-
dozen cartridges in my belt, all loaded with expanding bullets,
which were perfectly useless for killing elephants. The first
thing to do was to return to the waggons, so I cantered back
along the road and soon met them. I then hurried them on
to the head of the stream near where I had first seen the
zebras, and outspanned. Knowing the Mashunaland elephants
as well as I did, and their capabilities of travelling enormous
distances in a very short time, I thought it very possible that
I should have to sleep on their spoor, and not overtake them
till the following day, so I resolved to have something to eat
before starting.
Whilst this hasty meal was preparing, I got everything
ready. I determined to mount my Griqua lad Laer on the old
horse Charley, and to take up the spoor with him alone, leav
ing all the Kafirs at the waggons, so that we could follow up
the elephants at a canter. As I was still very weak, I was
afraid that the weight of my io-bore rifle would be too much
for me, and finally decided to see what I could do with my little
4 5 0 -bore single Metford, by Gibbs of Bristol. Of course I
used the military cartridges, loaded with 7 5 grains of powder
and long-pointed, toughened 5 4 0 -grain bullets. I had already
170 TRAVE L A N D AD V E N T U R E IN AF R IC A CHAP.
taking a steady shot for his lungs, aiming rather high up behind
his shoulder, fired. I felt sure I had given him a good shot, but
had no time to mark its effect, for at the very instant of the
report a tuskless cow that was some distance beyond the bull I
had just fired at, wheeled round with a loud scream, whirling
her trunk at the same time high in the air, and then drop
ping it before her chest, came rushing towards me, accom
panying the charge with shrill and oft-repeated screams. A t
first, I suppose, she only heard the shot, and perhaps saw the
smoke of the powder; but, it being perfectly open, she must
very soon have caught sight of me, as she came on in the most
determined manner. I was obliged to gallop away, and so
take my eyes off the bull, but thought that I would be able to
shake my pursuer off by galloping hard for a hundred yards or
so, and could then circle round and get up to him again before
he gained the shelter of the forest on the farther side of the
valley.
I now plied my stallion hard with the spurs, but soon
found that it was one of his sulky days, as I could not get him
to gallop ; in fact, he was going considerably slower than the
enraged elephant behind him, who kept up a constant suc
cession of shrill screams, and who, seeing that she was gaining
on the horse, pertinaciously kept up the chase, which she would
have long ago abandoned had she been losing ground. Nearer
and nearer she came, till at last I saw that it was getting serious,
and that if I did not manage to get into the bush and dodge
her there, she would infallibly catch me. Laer had wisely
galloped straight back into the forest when she first screamed.
I now made for a patch of rather thick machabel bush that
projected into the valley, and, as I entered it, I do not think
she was thirty yards behind me ; and when she first charged,
she was at least one hundred and fifty yards away, probably
considerably more. Of course such an experience could only
happen in a perfectly open piece of country devoid of trees.
Once in the bush, I turned suddenly to the left, and, being no
longer able to see me, and the wind being luckily in my favour,
she lost me immediately.
As soon as I found that I had shaken off my pursuer I
gave my sulky horse a good spurring, and then galloped
VIII A N E L E P H A N T -H U N T 173
across the valley into the forest beyond, which now seemed
alive with elephants. I could not see my bull anywhere, how
ever, and as I was looking for him, I saw a small lot of
elephants coming at a quick pace obliquely from behind me,
amongst which was a big bull, though his tusks were very
poor for his size. These elephants, I feel sure, were not in
the open when I first sighted the main herd, but must have
been still behind in the forest to my left. Thinking that if
I had hit the other bull through both lungs with my first shot
he must be dead, and that if not I had lost him irretrievably,
I now turned my attention to the next best animal I could see.
Just as I got up to him he turned and entered rather a thickish
piece of machabel bush, with two cows just in front of him.
He was not going very fast, so jumping off, I took a careful
aim for the ridge of bone which shows out so distinctly in an
elephant from above the root of the tail to the top of the
back. My bullet, a solid toughened 5 4 0 -grain missile, pro
pelled by only 7 5 grains of powder, struck him exactly in the
centre of the bone, and stopped him instantly. His hind
quarters seemed partially paralysed, as on mounting again and
riding in front of him he was unable to come towards me,
though he tried hard, poor brute, raising his great ears and
screaming fearfully. Though so near the elephant, and in spite
of the terrific trumpeting, my stallion paid no more attention
to the furious though disabled beast than if he had been a rock.
I quickly got on one side of him and gave him a shot through
both lungs, to which he succumbed very rapidly ; then, re
mounting, I was soon galloping on the tracks of a portion of
the retreating elephants, and presently got up to about thirty,
and could see another lot of about the same number to my right.
By this time I think that the whole of this great herd of
elephants had broken up into a number of smaller ones, each
diverging on its own line from the point where I had first dis
turbed them. One of these herds turned right back, recrossing
the Lundaza, and passing through the valley on the edge of
which my waggons were outspanned, in plain view of all my
people. Just as I was getting up to the elephants again, Laer
came up to me. As elephants, when running away, and when
there are a number of them together, go at a very different pace
174 TRAVEL AN D A D V E N T U R E IN A FR IC A CHAP.
again stood still about fifteen yards away from the elephant.
A ll this time I had been afraid to fire, for fear of exasperating
the elephant, and causing it to kill my horse. I now, however,
determined to do so, and was thinking of firing for her brain,
for she was very near me, when she raised her head and ears
and came towards the rocks screaming like a railway engine.
She must have got my wind, I fancy, suddenly. However,
she could not get at me without going round the other rocks ;
and as she did so, she gave me a splendid chance at a distance
of not more than fifteen yards. I fired into the centre of her
shoulder, and immediately the bullet struck her she stopped
screaming, and, dropping her ears, swerved off. She only ran
a hundred yards or so, and then fell over dead, shot through
the large blood-vessels of the upper part of the heart. Directly
she fell I ran to my horse and remounted. Prudence whis
pered to me to give up the hunt, but I could not make up my
mind to do so just yet, though I resolved to be cautious and
not go too near the elephants in future, as my stallion had
evidently not the slightest fear of them, and had made up his
mind that nothing should make him really gallop out this day.
It was not that he could not do so ; he was simply sulky, as
he had a very good turn of speed if he liked to exert himself.
I was soon hard on the spoor again, but had not followed
it a mile before I found that the elephants had scattered,
making it difficult to keep on their line, as they had no longer
left a well-defined trail. However, by taking up the spoors of
different animals, I got along at a good pace, and before long
sighted a few of the hindmost animals. These were, however,
with the exception of two, all scattered and diverging rapidly
one from the other. The two were going off to the right,
walking very quickly in single file, the hindmost animal being
followed by a small calf. Riding out to one side of them
through the open forest, which was just here quite free from
underwood, I saw that they were two fine cows, both having
long white tusks, and at once resolved to attack them. I did
think of the poor little calf, but consoled myself with the
thought that if I destroyed its mother it would follow up the
herd and be adopted by another elephant. This is the case, I
believe, if they are old enough to live without their mother’s
76 TRAVEL AN D A D V E N T U R E IN AFRICA CHAP.
CH APTER IX
put the whole carcase into the cauldron, which was about four
feet deep and three in diameter. I made a fine skeleton of
him— which has gone to America— but the Mashunas and my
own boys thought I had defiled the pot by cooking the unclean
beast in i t ; and when the next day I boiled down a zebra,
they actually would not drink the soup, as they said it would
taste of hyaena. However, they had no scruples about the
third and all subsequent animals, and they used to get the
most glorious feeds out of my big pot, which became well
known in the country-side, and was looked upon by the
Mashunas as a sort of soup-kitchen, as there was almost always
something in i t ; for when I was not using it in the interests
of science my boys used to get the benefit of it.
It was still very early in the season, and as I knew that I
could not expect Collison and Van Rooyen for a month or six
weeks to come, I resolved to cross the Manyami with my
waggon, and trek along the eastern slope of the Umvukwi
hills to Golodaima’s kraals on the Gurumapudzi river. A t
these kraals I had heard from natives that I should be able
to buy a good supply of maize ; for Inyamwenda’s people did
not seem to be very well supplied with that kind of grain. I
expected to be away for about a fortnight, and by the end of
that time I thought the stallion would be sound again, and
also hoped that old Charley would have improved considerably
in condition, as I was feeding him up with as much boiled
maize, with a little salt sprinkled in it, as I could get him
to eat.
On reaching a small stream, a tributary of the Guruma
pudzi, not far from Golodaima’s town, I sent word to the chief
to let him know that I had come and wanted to buy a
waggon load of maize. The next day he turned up with a
lot of his people, and said the women would all come the
following day with grain. He told me there was a large herd
of elands in the neighbourhood, and asked me to go out and
shoot some meat for him and his followers. He also informed
me there was an old lion about that had lately killed several
people. As I wanted to get hold of an eland bull for the
sake of the fat, I saddled up old Charley after breakfast, and
went out with the Mashunas. However, we were not lucky
IX A H Y j EN A K IL L E D 18 3
long been healed. Now the question is, how this hyaena had
been able to feed with her jaws in this condition ; for one
would think that the two lower jaw bones, being independent
as it were, would be useless for crunching bones, and bones
are what hyaenas principally live on. Yet this animal was
excessively fat, and its coat in excellent condition. As it was
living in the near neighbourhood of several native villages I
have no doubt it managed to unearth a corpse now and again,
but it could hardly count upon an unfailing supply of such
luxuries. It has often puzzled me to imagine how this hyaena
could have lived at all, let alone kept itself fat. It was evi
dently unable to make use of its jaws to defend itself against
the dogs.
As, on my return from Golodaima’s to the main camp on
the Manyami, I found that the wound in the stallion’s foot was
quite healed, and as the old horse Charley had by this time
improved considerably in condition, I determined to take a
round in search of elephants through the mahobo-hobo forests
lying to the north-west of my camp. I had made up my mind
not to run any more risks with the stallion, so I rode old
Charley, and mounted Laer on the stronger horse, but told
him not to go near to elephants should we come across any of
those animals. On the evening of the first night we left camp
I asked Laer if he had seen anything of the bull that I had
wounded with my first shot at Umfuli, when the tuskless cow
chased me away from the herd. He told me that he had been
some little distance behind me when I fired, and on seeing the
cow coming towards my horse, had turned Charley round and
galloped into the edge of the forest we had just left. There
he had reined in, and looked round, and had then seen the big
bull, behind all the other elephants and still in the open. He
had then, he said, watched him walk slowly forwards, and gain
the edge of the forest-covered slope beyond the valley in which
we had first seen the herd. “ The last I saw of him, sir,” he
concluded, “ he was standing still among the trees, holding his
trunk straight up in the a ir ; then I heard you firing and
galloped after you.” “ Great Heavens ! ” I said, on hearing
this, “ why on earth didn’t you tell me so the day after the
hunt ? That elephant is dead. He was dying when you saw
186 TRAVE L AN D AD V E N T U R E IN A F R IC A CH AP.
him standing with his trunk in the air, and must have been
shot through the big blood-vessels of the lungs.” Laer pleaded
that he was unused to the ways of elephants, and said that the
fact of the animal’s holding its trunk straight up in the air
conveyed no particular meaning to him. But to me it was
different; I had seen many an elephant shot broadside through
the lungs with a big-bore gun first run two or three hundred
yards, as if there was nothing the matter with him, then walk
slowly forwards a little farther, and then stand, throwing the
blood in all directions from his upraised trunk, which usually
he would stretch straight up in the air several times before
falling dead ; and I felt sure that the remains of this particular
elephant lay just where Laer had last seen the animal standing.
My great fear was lest any Mashunas out hunting or looking
for honey had been guided by the vultures to the carcases, and
had found the remains of the big bull and gone off with the
tusks.
I asked Laer if he thought he could find his way easily to
where he had last seen the elephant standing, and he said he
could. I did not doubt him, as he had Bushman blood in him,
and I knew by experience that he could find his way back to
any spot he had ever visited before with an unerring exactness
to which no European or Kafir could ever hope to attain. I
have already spoken of this faculty in my chapter on the
Masarwas and Bushmen, and they are the only people I have
met with in Africa who possess it in perfection.
The next morning I started straight away for the place
where a month previously I had shot the five elephants, putting
Laer in front. Late in the afternoon we crossed the Umfuli,
and I soon saw that we were nearing the spot where the
carcases lay, as we began to cross the broad trails made by the
great herd through the grassy valleys between the patches of
forest when the frightened animals first took to flight. Pre
sently Laer said, “ Sir, you shot the second bull just over there,”
pointing to a patch of machabel forest, “ and the big bull was
standing out in that direction,” pointing on ahead, “ when I
last saw him.” “ Very well, then go straight to the place,” I
replied ; and Laer rode on. Soon we came to the'sole of an
elephant’s foot, which had rotted off, and had probably been
IX FIN D THE CARCASE OF THE BIG BULL 187
H ead of an A frican E l e p h a n t .
both banks of the Upper Umfuli, and was one day lucky
enough to come on a small herd. I heard one of them trumpet
at a great distance early one morning, and riding in the direction
of the sound at last cut their fresh spoor. Before I came up
with them, however, the keen-scented animals winded me, and
decamped, and almost immediately began to scatter. Galloping
after them, first on the spoor of one, then on that of another, I
soon came up with some young and worthless animals. Old
Charley behaved well and showed no fear. A t last I caught
sight of a fine cow, with long white tusks, and not having seen
a bull, and concluding there were none, I resolved to kill her.
I had given her three shots, and sustained a pretty smart chase,
as the scrubby forest was very awkward to get through with a
horse, when I suddenly saw three big bulls, walking one behind
the other through the bush not far to my left. I thought no
more about the cow, but at once rode towards the more valuable
animals. One bull had a fine pair of tusks standing out well
beyond his trunk. A second had very short tusks, protruding
less than a foot beyond the lip ; whilst the third was a tuskless
male, a great big brute, but without a pound of ivory in his
head. I soon got a chance, and fired at the bull with the best
tusks, upon which each one of the three at once took a line of
his own. I of course followed the one I had wounded. The
bush was excessively dense, and awkward to work in, and once
I nearly lost my elephant, which suddenly doubled back in a
very thick bit. However, I just saw him passing. After giving
him seven or eight shots he stopped, and facing round stood
with his ears extended in a manner that showed me he meant
to charge if he could see me or scent me. The bush was here
so thick that I could not get a good view of him from where
I sat on my horse ; so dismounting I walked away from old
Charley, always facing towards the wounded elephant, and
trying to get a clear space to fire through into his chest. I
was about twenty yards from my horse and was still moving
away from him, when the elephant must have smelt one or
other of us, for he suddenly came rushing on, crashing down
the small trees, and trumpeting shrilly. Old Charley thought
it was not worth while waiting for me, and galloped off directly
the elephant screamed. However, I think that I must have
IX CHARGED B Y A N E L E P H A N T 189
had come quite close up to some of the foremost oxen, and was
then not more.than one hundred and fifty yards or so from Van
Rooyen’s waggon, which was some distance in advance of mine.
My friend had all this time been watching the sable antelope
as well as I, and at this juncture he fired at and wounded it,
shooting from the inside of his waggon. Directly the shot
was fired every dog rushed out from beneath the particular
waggon to which he or she belonged, and the whole motley
pack, about twenty in number, were soon streaming out down
the valley. The foremost dogs soon caught sight of the sable
antelope, which, badly wounded by Van Rooyen’s bullet, was
making off slowly towards the stream which ran down the
centre of the open ground. As it disappeared down the steep
bank the foremost dogs were almost up to it. Van Rooyen,
Dawson, and myself were now running as hard as we could to
call the pack off and despatch the wounded antelope before
any of our valuable dogs were killed ; for we knew from
experience what havoc a wounded sable antelope can make
amongst a pack with its long curved horns. Just as we were
nearing the water two of my own dogs came howling up the
bank, both badly wounded, and the loud barking of the rest of
the pack, coupled with the defiant snorts of the sable antelope,
which proceeded from the bed of the stream, let us know
that the brave beast was still making a gallant fight and doing
his utmost to sell his life dearly. A moment later we de
spatched him with two bullets through the head and neck, and
not a moment too soon. Four of our best dogs lay dead around
their quarry, one of which, a kind of mongrel deer-hound, Van
Rooyen would not have parted with at any price. Besides
the four that were killed outright, four more were badly wounded,
one of which subsequently died. My old bitch Ruby had one
more very narrow escape. She had been struck right through
the throat by the sharp horn of the sable antelope, which, how
ever, had only pierced through between the skin and the wind
pipe. She must, I fancy, have been swung up into the air, and
then twisted off with such violence that the skin had torn ; so
that a great piece of it as large as the palm of my hand hung
down under her jaw. This piece of loose skin, however,
I sewed in its place again, and the wound soon healed up.
192 TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE IN A ERICA C H A P . IX
N a t iv e H o useh o ld U t e n s il s .
Cave of S in o ia (U n d er g r o u n d L a k e ).
CHAPTER X
Return to England in 1886 — Another hunting expedition to Mashunaland— Twelve
lions shot— Discovery of the caves o f Sinoia— Various journeys made from the
main camp on the Manyami river— Return to the Transvaal— Start for the
Zambesi— Reach Panda-ma-tenka— Civil war in the Barotsi country— Letter
from Mr. Arnot— Cross the Zambesi at W ankie’s— D eath of D aniel— Reach
Shampondo’s— H ave trouble with the Batongas— Their extortionate character—
D eath o f Father Teroede— Murder of David Thom as— Reach the River Muga
— T w o impala antelopes shot— Zebra (Burchell’s) shot— Scarcity o f gam e—
H ire fresh guides— Return o f Shamedza’s men.
young men and two boys. A ll the other boys were hired
at Panda-ma-tenka, and no dependence was to be placed on
their sticking to me ; but I trusted to my own people and the
donkeys.
W e took eight days getting to Wankie’s on the Zambesi,
as the road is a most difficult one for donkeys, especially along
the banks of the Matietsi river. One of them was jostled,
pack and all, off a high bank right into a deep pool, everything
of course getting wet, and the donkey being all but drowned
before we could loosen the pack, and even then we had the
greatest difficulty in getting the unfortunate animal out of the
water. As we neared the Zambesi the country became more
and more rugged and barren, the stony, desolate hills being
nevertheless sparsely covered with stunted, leafless trees. In
the way of game there is little else in these hills beyond a few
koodoos and impala antelopes, and we saw nothing at all to
fire at. It took us a whole day, from early morning till nearly
sunset, to get the donkeys and all the goods through the river,
working with two canoes, one a pretty good one, the other very
rickety. The river here is about four hundred yards broad,
and the stream strong. The donkeys were towed across, one
by one, at the tail of the big canoe. A t length everything was
safely landed on the other side, and we camped beneath an
immense baobab-tree, close to Wankie’s Town. Early the
following morning the old fellow came down to our camp.
He must then have been a very old man, but he still managed
to get about, and seemed in the full possession of all his faculties.
I had to pay him for bringing me through the river, and found
him much more grasping and difficult to deal with than when
I crossed here eleven years previously. However, at last I
satisfied him, and at once made ready to start. My boy Daniel
had complained during the morning of severe pains in the head
and back of the neck, and I now found that he had a bad attack
of fever. He evidently could not go on with me, so I left him
in charge of John Weyers, who was going to remain a few days
at Wankie’s. I subsequently learned that the poor fellow only
lived three days, dying on the fourth after he was taken
sick, so dangerous is this disease in the Zambesi valley to
unacclimatised men, whether white, black, or yellow. Striking
202 TRAVE L AN D A D V E N T U R E IN A F R IC A CHAP.
whether horse, ox, or donkey, the better will he resist the “ fly ”
poison.
But I must get on with my narrative. A couple of days’
journey through barren stony hills and dreary leafless forests, in
which we found water very scarce, brought us once more to the
banks of the Zambesi at the village of Shampondo, a Batonga
headman. During these two days I had recruited several fresh
boys at the small Mashapatan villages by which we passed, and
the donkeys were now no longer overloaded. We had heard
that there was at present a scare amongst the Batongas about a
Matabili “ impi,” which was said to be camped on the southern
bank of the river, and on reaching Shampondo’s found that
there were really some Matabili camped there. They wished
to cross the river, and a large force of Batongas had been
collected to prevent their doing so ; but as the latter had all
the canoes on their side it was difficult to see how the Matabili
could have crossed, even if the Batonga army had not been
there. However, they were in a great state of excitement, and
had sent all the women and children and goats away into the
bush. That evening we camped just below Shampondo’s
village, the Batonga army of observation being about a couple
of miles farther up the river. Old Shampondo came down to
my camp. I made him a present, received a goat in return
from him, told him my plans, and that I wished to start again
early the following morning, and everything seemed friendly
and pleasant. A t daylight the next day, however, he came
down again, accompanied by a lot of men, all armed with
barbed spears, and intimated that he was not satisfied with my
present, and that he wanted this, that, and the other. His men
at the same time assumed a threatening attitude, standing
round in a semicircle, talking and gesticulating violently. My
two Mangwato men, alarmed at the warlike aspect of affairs,
now caught up their rifles and commenced putting cartridges
in, whereupon the Batongas seized their assegais, and stood,
every man of them, with a long throwing spear, poised and
quivering, in the right hand, and half-a-dozen more in the left,
their language at the same time becoming very threatening.
These Batonga throwing spears, I may here say, are all
horribly barbed, and altogether most indigestible-looking
204 TRA VEL AN D AD VE N T U R E IN AFRICA CH AP.
the evening. Tse-t$e fly were also pretty numerous, and must
be very much so later on during the hot months.
As our guides had said, we reached on the third day some
small Batonga villages at the junction of the little river Mwedzia
with the Zongwi (or Morongo Mineni, as it is called here). In
the evening, whilst my men were making camp, I took a stroll
through the hills, and shot a zebra whilst returning and when
close to camp, so that we got in all the meat. This was the
fourth shot I had fired since leaving Panda-ma-tenka, the result
being a duiker, impala, and zebra killed, and a koodoo wounded
but lo st; four shots in over two hundred miles of country, the
latter part of which was almost virgin ground to Europeans.
However, even in quite unexplored parts of Africa one must
not expect to find game everywhere plentiful.
A t this camp I hired several Batongas, who had followed
me from the Zambesi, in the hope of entering my service.
They were a good set— strong, active young fellows, and always
willing and cheerful. They agreed to go right through with
me, and I believe they would have done so, for had I got them
across the Kafukwi they would scarcely have dared to leave
me and go home by themselves, but, as will be seen later
on, I was not destined to cross the Kafukwi. I here also got
two men who said they would act as guides through the
mountains to the north, and show me a path that would take
me right on to the high country. Shamedza’s men here left
me and returned home. Besides the men I had hired, several
others accompanied me in the hope that I would shoot game
and give them some meat.
Mashukulum bw i V il l a g e .
CHAPTER XI
A ro u g h c o u n tr y — S c a r c it y o f w a te r a n d g a m e — S u re fo o te d n e s s o f th e d o n k e y — D e a th
f r o m a c u t e d y s e n t e r y — T h e c o u n t r y i m p r o v e s — O b t a in g u id e s to M o n z i’ s — R o a n
a n t e lo p e sh ot — H e rd of w ild e b e e sts se e n — P le a s a n t t r a v e llin g — D e lig h tfu l
c lim a te — A b u n d a n c e o f gam e— R each M o n z i’ s— F r i e n d l y re la tio n s w ith th e
p e o p le — P r o c e e d n o rth w a rd s— T h e f ir s t M a s h u k u lu m b w i v illa g e — In te r v ie w
w ith S ik a b e n g a ’s m e n — C r o s s th e M a g o i-e e r iv e r — R e a c h th e U n g w e s i — S h o o t
th ree L i c h t e n s t e i n ’s h a rte b e e sts— A r r iv a l at M in e n g a ’s v illa g e — A m u s ic a l
e n t e r t a in m e n t — S h o o t zeb ra s and h a r te b e e st— D e s c r ip tio n of th e M ash u ku
lu m b w i— N ig h t a tta c k o n o u r c a m p — E s c a p e in t o th e lo n g g r a s s — A lo n e in
C e n t r a l A f r ic a — S w im a c r o s s th e M a g o i- e e r iv e r — C o m m e n c e a lo n e ly jo u r n e y .
had never heard how Dr. Holub’s camp had been attacked and
plundered two years previously by the Mashukulumbwi, and
told me that I would never cross the Kafukwi. “ You will
live two days more,” they said, “ but on the third day your
head will lie in a different place from your body.” However,
I paid no heed to their threats, and finally gave them a
blanket for Sikabenga, and a few yards of calico for themselves.
They and the Mashukulumbwi then left us to pack the
donkeys and proceed on our journey.
A couple of hours5 walk brought us to the banks of the
Magoi-ee river, which rises a little to the south of U-Kesa-
Kesa, and runs north into the Kafukwi. Here I shot a zebra,
and as there was water close at hand and the day was already
far advanced, I decided to proceed no farther, but to camp for
the night. Moreover I wished to question our guides closely
about the country on ahead, as I did not exactly like the
appearance of the Mashukulumbwi, and had no wish to get
into thé middle of their country, knowing what had happened
to Dr. Holub amongst these same savages not long before.
My idea was that it would be wise to change our course, and
instead of continuing due north direct to the Kafukwi, to
strike to the eastward, and cross it lower down at Semalembui’s,
where Dr. Livingstone had crossed it years before, by which
means we would avoid all but the small outlying villages of
the Mashukulumbwi. Paul and Charley agreed with me, but
we unfortunately allowed ourselves to be dissuaded and led
into the jaws of death by our ignorant guides, who said that
they did not know the country to the eastward, or where
we should get water (which was doubtless true enough), and
that by the route we were taking we should pass no large
Mashukulumbwi towns, but only small isolated villages, where
the people were friendly. Thus we were deterred from taking
a route by which we might have got through to the Kafukwi.
Early the next morning we passed another small village,
where the people were evidently frightened of us. After
leaving this we followed a path leading due north, parallel
with the course of the Magoi-ee. This river is marked Makoe
in Mr. Ravenstein’s map. During the day we travelled through
a country teeming with elands, zebras, and other game, and
XI C AM P ON R IVE R U N G W E SI 215
den, and must brave it out, I gave orders to off-load the donkeys,
and to make a scherm of cornstalks, as he had suggested.
Now, the only spot of level ground to be found was
immediately alongside the village; thus the back of our camp
was within ten yards of the chiefs hut, and on one side of
the cattle kraal. The village therefore lay just at the back of
our scherm, and between it and the river, which was about two
hundred yards distant. In front of us lay an open space of
cleared ground dug into uneven ridges and furrows, bounded
at about sixty yards' distance by a large patch of long grass.
Minenga now sent me a pot of beer, and shortly afterwards I
went with Paul to his hut, and, making him a present of a
blanket and some fancy-coloured calico, told him that I wanted
him to put me through the Kafukwi, and that I should like
to cross the river the following day. He replied that the road
was open for me, and that his own children should take me
through in his own canoe. He then said that he would like
me to remain with him the following day and drink beer, or I
could go out hunting and shoot some game for him, as there
were lots of elands, zebras, etc., to be found close to his town.
He also said that his large canoe was some distance off, but
that if I would remain with him the following day he would
send and have it brought down to the nearest crossing-place,
so that the next day I could get through the Kafukwi without
any delay. This statement induced me to comply with his
wish, and stop a day over, and 1 told him that I would do so,
and that if he would give me men to show me where the game
was I would go out early the next morning and try to shoot
something for him. He thanked me, and gave me some more
beer, and I left him with the impression that he was a very
good fellow, and that I should get through the Kafukwi with
out any trouble. By sundown my boys had made a pretty
good scherm of cornstalks and put the donkeys in the kraal
with Minenga’s cattle. After dark the entire population of
the village came to our camp, and the women and girls sat
round the fires eating meat with my boys and giving them
ground nuts and sweet potatoes in return. The young
men, now without their spears, went in for a dance with my
Batongas, and a fellow with a musical instrument, formed of
218 TRAVEL AN D A D V E N T U R E IN AFR ICA CHAP.
flat bits of hard wood laid across the open mouths of large
calabashes— which, when struck with a stick, emitted a good
deal of noise and no music— made such a din that at last I
was glad to bribe him to silence with a small piece of calico.
Altogether, t as I lay and viewed the whole scene, I thought
that we had thoroughly gained the goodwill of the people, who,
though wild and savage, I decided were easy to deal with if
properly treated.
It was about nine o’clock, I think, when Minenga sent his
so,n to ask Paul, Charley, and myself to come and drink beer
with him. I was already undressed and under the blankets,
or I probably should have gone, but I did not care about
dressing again, and so sent word to say that it was now too
late, and that I had turned in, as I wanted to go out hunting
at daylight the next morning. Nor would Charley go either,
but Paul, being, like most Zulus, very fond of native beer, could
not resist the temptation, and so went up alone. When he
came back he said that Minenga had asked him a lot of ques
tions why I had come there, where I was going to, what was
the object of my journey, what I intended doing with my
goods, etc. etc., and had told him that the natives on the other
side of the Kafukwi were a dangerous people to travel amongst,
but that he would give me one of his own sons to take me
through the unsafe district. Judged by the light of after
events, I now believe that, had I gone that night to drink beer
accompanied by Charley and Paul, all three of us unarmed,
as of course we should have been, we should certainly have
been murdered then and there ; and I feel convinced that the
fellow with the musical instrument was simply sent down with
the young men to get up a dance and make such a noise as
would drown any disturbance we might make whilst being
assassinated. We three disposed of, they knew they had no
one else to fear, as they could see for themselves that my two
Mangwato men, and the two Mashunas who carried guns, were
in an abject state of terror. However, they wanted to get us
all together, and as Paul went up alone they did not molest him.
A t length the dancers went away, and I went to sleep,
never dreaming that anything was wrong, but flattering myself
that we were on excellent terms with the people. The next
XI M A SH U K U L U M B W I D RE SS 2 19
A t length the sun went down, and our visitors all left us.
Just before sunset I went up again to Minenga with Paul, and
told him that I wanted to make an early start in the morning,
and he replied that the road was open for me, that I could start
as early as I liked, and that his own son should take me through
the Kafukwi, and not leave me until we were three days’ journey
on the other side of the river. His wife asked me for a small
piece of brass wire, and I went and cut off a ring and brought
it up to her. She was most profuse in her thanks, and said I
must come and drink some beer with her before starting in the
morning. I went back to camp still thinking that Minenga
was a very good fellow, and his wife a friendly, good-natured
woman. This evening we again put the donkeys in the cattle
kraal. My boys were trading meat for meal, ground nuts, etc.,
until after sundown ; but when it got dark there was not a
single stranger in camp. After a good supper— which I dis
cussed with a light heart, for on the morrow I hoped to cross
the Kafukwi— I turned in. It was the 8th of July, the last
day of the old moon, and a dark though starlight night.
Although on the previous evening our camp had been
thronged with a crowd of men, women, and children, who had
danced and sung and kept up a constant chatter till after mid
night, it did not escape my notice that this day there was not
a single stranger in our camp when it grew dark ; nor, with the
exception of a little conversation carried on in a low tone of
voice, did there appear to be any life or movement in the
village behind us. I must confess that I felt uneasy, for I
could not help contrasting the quiet and constraint with the
noise and revelry of the first night of our arrival in the village.
My boys too seemed uneasy, and sat in groups round their
respective fires, whispering to one another, and all holding their
assegais in their hands. As it grew later, however, they lay
down one by one, and as the fires burnt lower and lower an
absolute quiet and stillness took possession of the night.
I could not sleep, however, and was lying under my blanket,
thinking of many things, and revolving various plans in my
head, when about nine o’clock I observed a man come cautiously
round the end of our scherm and pass quickly down the line
of smouldering fires. As he stopped beside the fire, near the
222 TRAVE L AN D A D V E N T U R E IN A FR IC A CHAP.
R e a c h o u r fir s t c a m p o n t h e M a g o i - e e r i v e r — A w a i t th e a rr iv a l o f so m e o f m y o w n
p e o p le — P r o c e e d o n m y jo u r n e y — S h o o t a w i l d e b e e s t — S u f f e r i n g fr o m c o ld —
R e a c h a s m a l l n a t i v e v i l l a g e — L o s e m y r ifl e — N a r r o w l y e s c a p e g e t t i n g s h o t —
R each M o n z i’ s — R e s o l v e to m a k e fo r S i k a b e n g a ’s t o w n — E x p e r i e n c e s b y t h e
w a y — A r r i v e a t S i k a b e n g a ’s — S t a r t fo r P a n d a - m a - t e n k a — A r r i v e a t S h o m a ’ s—
F a l l in w it h P a u l a n d C h a r l e y — T w e l v e o f m y p e o p le k i l l e d — E s c a p e s o f t h e
s u r v iv o r s — R e c r o s s th e Z a m b e s i— R e a c h P a n d a -m a -te n k a — S o m e e x p la n a tio n s
c o n c e r n in g t h e a t t a c k o n m y c a m p .
steep bank, lay down in the shade, and determ ined to remain
there until the evening, w atching the ford, in the hope that
som e o f m y boys would presently com e along the footpath.
I had seen plenty o f gam e during the morning, but had been
afraid to fire, thinking that I was still too near to M inenga’s ;
but as I was now gettin g hungry I resolved to shoot som e
thing as soon as I got another chance. I had been lying in
the shade cast by the tree on the top o f the river’s bank for
som e hours, when at last I heard voices and was on the point
o f jum ping up and shouting out, as at first I thought that
som e o f m y own people were approaching. L uckily I
restrained myself, and lay quite still with m y loaded rifle in
m y hands. V ery soon tw o heads appeared above the grass,
on the farther bank o f the river, and the shaven crowns and
cone-shaped head-dresses at once assured me that none o f m y
own men were near me, as I had hoped, but on ly tw o o f the
natives o f the country. Each man carried the usual bundle
o f long throwing spears over his left shoulder, and each of
them held one o f these weapons ready for use in his right hand.
T h ey were evidently discussing the imprints left by m y shoes
in the soft sand o f the path which led from our old cam p to
the river. W hen th ey reached the bank th ey were at fault,
for I had crossed the river by a led ge o f rocks, on which of
course there was no trace o f m y footsteps. W ith m y rifle and
four cartridges, I was o f course safe from these men, but, had
they seen me, I should have been obliged to have shot them
both in self-defen ce ; for if th ey had run aw ay after having
seen me, th ey would have alarmed the country-side, and I
should then in all probability have been waylaid and assegaied
in the long grass. I could see them so p lainly from where I
lay that I thought every m om ent th ey would have seen me.
H ow ever th ey did not, and after talking together a little
longer th ey turned round and w ent back the w ay th ey had
come. I then got up and m oved away to a tree a couple of
hundred yards from the river, where I again lay down and
watched the ford until late in the afternoon. H aving had
nothing to eat for nearly twenty-four hours, I was now getting
hungry, and on resum ing m y journey m ade up m y mind to
try to shoot an animal off which I could dine. I had net
230 TRAVEL AN D A D V E N T U R E IN AFR IC A CHAP.
perished with cold, and tired and thirsty besides. It was now
long after midnight, and the inhabitants o f the village were all
wrapped in slumber. G oing close up I could see that there
was a fire burning outside one o f the huts, beside which som e
one was lying. T he village only contained half-a-dozen huts
in all, and, being near M onzi’s and far from M inenga’s, I thought
the inhabitants m ight be friendly. A t any rate I determined
to chance it, and warm myself, so I walked in and sat down by
the fire. T here was a boy lyin g on the ground on the other
side o f it, fast asleep. P resently I woke him up and asked him
for water, but he said there was none. T he talking m ust have
awakened a man in one o f the huts behind me, as he cam e up
to the fire and spoke to me. I saw at a glance that he was
unarmed, and when he sat down beside me I tried to explain
to him what had happened to m e since I had passed his village
about a week before w ith m y boys and donkeys. H e could
not understand me very well, nor were his answers very
intelligible to' me, as I spoke to him in Sintabili with only a
small leaven o f Satonga, and he replied in pure Satonga.
However, when I told him I was thirsty and asked him for
water, he got up, and going to his hut soon brought me a
calabash full. I had ju st finished drinking when I heard som e
whispering going on in a hut just opposite to where I was
sitting, and presently I saw a man em erge from it, and move
stealthily aw ay in the darkness. After* a short interval he
returned, and as he re-entered his hut I saw that he had a gun
in his hand. Presently I heard the sound o f a bullet being
tapped with a ramrod, and knew that the owner o f the gun was
either loading his weapon or m aking sure that it was already
properly charged.
A ll this was not very reassuring, but I felt so comfortable
alongside the fire that I determined to rest there for an hour
or so, and then leave the village and continue m y journey to
M onzis. E verything soon becam e perfectly quiet again, and
every one in the village was apparently asleep. A t any rate
the boy was who was lying on the other side o f the fire.
Presently I too lay down with m y back to the warmth and my
head resting on one o f the logs that protruded from the fire. I
held the butt o f m y rifle between m y thighs, and had m y hands
232 TRAVEL AN D A D VEN TU RE IN A F R IC A CHAP.
had had his cheek grazed by a bullet, and had left his rifle
behind him. Every one had had his escapes. Paul, the Zulu,
got through the first rush of our assailants unhurt, but was
nearly drowned in crossing the river, where he lost my single
io-bore rifle. Charley also got out of the scherm unwounded,
and, making his way to the river, there fell in with two of
our boys, and with their assistance crossed safely with rifle,
cartridge belt, and clothes. I found that we had all done the
same thing, namely, held to the south through the night,
across country. Charley said he was close to me when I shot
the wildebeest; he heard the shot, and ran with the two boys
in the direction, but never saw me. I fancy he must have
passed me whilst I was cooking the meat, as I was then in a
deep hollow. He too had been seen and pursued in the day
time near the village where my rifle was captured, but again
escaped in the long grass. This had also happened to the
survivor of the two Mangwato men, who, being likewise alone
and unarmed, had incautiously approached a village. He said
that one man got close up to him and threw three assegais at
him, one of which cut his right hand. A t last, however, he
outran him and escaped. Neither Paul, Charley, nor the rest
had gone near Monzi’s or any other village, being afraid of the
inhabitants, but had kept through the veld, and only cut into
our trail beyond the hill U-Kesa-Kesa. Here Charley shot
a zebra, and was shortly afterwards joined by Paul, who had
then been three days without food. Farther on Charley shot
another zebra, and here he and Paul remained for three days
more, hoping that I would turn up, and collecting all the other
survivors of our party. Our hardships were now over, except
that we had still to sleep without blankets. Shankopi gave
me a sheep, to be paid for at Panda-ma-tenka, and on the
following day we reached the village where Paul’s wife lived.
Here we got a supply of meal and another sheep to take us to
Panda-ma-tenka, and next day reached W ankie’s and recrossed
the Zambesi.
From here we walked to Panda-ma-tenka in three days,
about the shortest time on record, I think, five days being con
sidered good time. On the third day we did exactly ten hours’
actual walking (by my watch) at a great pace, and Paul,
242 TRAVEL AN D AD VE N TU RE IN AFRICA CHAP.
Resolve to visit the Barotsi chief Lewanika— Shoot five elands — Meet Harry
Ware— Cross thé Zambesi— Reach the Kasaia river— Great abundance of
game— Horses frightened by zebras— Owl and chameleon— Reach Sesheki—
Kindness of the missionaries— Anecdote of Sepopo—The Loanja swamp—
Uninteresting country— Scarcity of game— Cross the Lumbi river— The mission
station at Sefula— Visit to Lialui— Lewanika, chief of the Barotsi— Mr.
Coillard— The Barotsi valley— Natives saluting the chief—Unhealthiness of the
climate— Embark on the Zambesi— Bird life on the river— Visit to the grave
of Nonambing— Pleasing scenery— Elephants and buffaloes—The Falls of
Gonyi— Canoe capsized by a hippopotamus— Loss of goods— Pass the Nambwi
rapids— Arrive at Kazungula— Great drought—Journey to and arrival at
Bamangwato.
when it opened its wings and flew for two or three yards. As
it did so I saw that there was something attached to one of its
legs, and on catching it found that a large chameleon was fast
secured to it, having its tail firmly twisted two or three times
round one of the owl’s legs. How they had got into this
position I cannot say, but I fancy that the little owl must first
have attacked the chameleon, though upon detaching it I could
find no wounds or scratches of any kind upon it. Neither
was there anything amiss with the owl, which, as soon as I had
released it, flew away and perched in a neighbouring thorn-
tree.
Early the following morning I rode on ahead of my boys
to Sesheki, which I reached in an hour and a half. I was here
very kindly received by Messrs. Jeanm airet and Jalla and their
wives— missionaries belonging to Mr. Coillard’s mission to the
Zambesi, which is an offshoot, I believe, of the French Protest
ant Mission so long established in Basutoland.
Mr. Jeanm airet informed me that the crocodiles were a
great nuisance to him, having devoured all his pigs, all his dogs,
and nearly all his goats. These reptiles are very savage and
voracious at Sesheki, as in Sepopo’s time they became accus
tomed to eating human flesh, a practice they are loath to discon
tinue ; so that for a man to fall into the water near Sesheki is
a very dangerous matter. In Sepopo’s time many people were
executed for witchcraft and other offences, and their bodies
thrown to the crocodiles, as in the Matabili country they
are given to the hyaenas. I will here relate a story I had
from the mouth of an eye-witness, and which I think is true,
which shows that Sepopo had a strong sense of humour. In
October 1874, when returning to my waggons from a hunting
trip up the Chobi, I met Mr. T., a trader, who had just returned
from Sesheki. In the course of conversation he told me that
one day, as he was drinking beer with Sepopo, a very old man
crept up and begged for food. The king, turning to some of
his men, asked who he was, and learned that he belonged to
one of the slave tribes. He then said, “ H e’s a very old man ;
can he do any work ? ” and was informed that the old man was
quite past work, and dependent upon charity— a very, very
scarce article in the interior of Africa. Then said the king,
250 TRAVEL AN D A D V E N T U R E IN AFR ICA CHAP.
“ Take him down to the river and hold his head under w ater/’
and the old man was forthwith led down to the river. Presently
the executioners returned. “ Is the old man dead ? ” said Sepopo.
“ Dead he is,” they answered. “ Then give him to the croco
diles,” said the king, and went on drinking beer and chatting to
my friend T.
I left Sesheki on 16th August, and followed Mr. Coillard’s
waggon road to the north, sleeping that evening on the bank
of the Loanja river, or rather swamp. The road from here
follows the western bank of the Loanja for about forty miles, the
whole of which distance is infested with “ fly,” and has therefore
to be traversed at night by both oxen and horses. It can be
done in two nights by ox waggons, but is usually done in three,
and there are two islands in the swamp free from “ fly,” to
which the oxen can be driven to feed and rest during the day
time. These islands are, too, conveniently situated so as to
divide the journey into three easy nights’ work. W ith my
horses, and walking with the boys by bright moonlight, I passed
this “ fly ” infested district in two nights, making my halt at
Kalangu’s, where I had an attack of fever and had to delay a
day in consequence. From the spoor which I saw in the moon
light there must be a great many buffaloes on the Loanja, as
well as other g a m e ; indeed, we saw a herd of the former
animals and several herds of antelopes as we were walking
albng by the brilliant moonlight.
After leaving the Loanja we entered upon a forest country,
with fine white sand under foot, very similar to the country
south of the Zambesi on the road to Bamangwato ; and the
character of the country never altered all the way to the Barotsi
valley. In fact I found the journey by land from Sesheki to
the Barotsi inconceivably monotonous, and utterly devoid of
interest of any kind. Game was exceedingly scarce, far more
so than it is south of the Zambesi. A t some large vleys
between the Loanja and the N ’joko rivers I saw a few wilde
beests and zebras, and also a small herd of Lichtenstein’s harte-
beests. I tried, and failed, to shoot one of the latter animals,
but managed to kill a wildebeest. Near the N’joko I shot three
elands, and managed to get a little fat for cooking purposes.
Before reaching the N’joko we left Mr. Coillard’s waggon track,
X III R E A C H MR. COILLARD’S M/SS/OJV ST AT IO N 251
and, travelling more to the westward, did not re-enter the road
till we were near the Mutondo river. On 25th August we
reached the Lumbi, the largest of the affluents of the Zambesi
between Sesheki and the Barotsi valley. Here we saw a great
many Leechwe antelopes, but as I did not care about wading
through the swamp after them, I gave my rifle to my boy
Charley, who is a very good shot, and he managed to kill two
— a fine ram and a ewe. Where we struck the Lumbi it was
not more than twenty yards broad, though very deep, and
running with a strong current. The water was as clear as
crystal, so that in spite of the depth we could see the bottom
quite plainly. W e crossed everything— goods, boys, and horses
— by the help of a canoe which my guides obtained from a
neighbouring village.
After crossing the Lumbi the country became, if anything,
more uninteresting than it had been, and almost destitute of
game. I managed to shoot a solitary wildebeest near the
Mutondo, the only animal I saw between the Lumbi and the
chiefs village of Lialui. We passed many large lagoons that
seemed to be exactly suited for wildfowl ; but as I saw none,
I suppose there was something wanting. Suffice it to say that
on 2nd September I reached Mr. Coillard’s mission station at
Sefula. Here I was very kindly received by Mr. and Mrs.
Coillard, who, together with a young Scotch artisan (Mr. War-
dell), are living here alone in Central Africa, far indeed from the
busy hum of civilised life. As Mr. Coillard himself said to me,
nothing but a very strong sense of duty could induce a Euro
pean to live in such a country, so utterly out of the world, and
cut off so entirely from all communication with his kind. The
mission station stands upon the top of the wooded sand-ridge
which bounds the Barotsi valley on the east, and is, I suppose, one
hundred feet or so above the level of the poisonous valley itself.
The chiefs town, Lialui, is about fifteen miles distant, situated
in the middle of the Barotsi valley, which I think is about as
unhealthy a spot as could be found in all Africa. Although Mr.
Coillard had not yet been two years at Sefula he had built a
comfortable dwelling-house, and several outhouses and store
rooms, the whole being fenced in. Mr. W ardell at the time of
my visit was hard at work building a church, which was already
252 TRAVEL AN D A D V E N T U R E IN A F R IC A CHAP.
siderable extent. Both banks of the river are wooded, and the
scenery often reminded me of portions of the Upper Thames
between Maidenhead and Pangbourne. The Zambesi itself,
however, is a magnificent river, its waters being of a deep blue
and very clear and pure. As an old friend of mine used to
say, “ There’s life in a draught of Zambesi water.”
On 29th September we reached Sioma, a town about
a mile above the Falls of Gonyi, the river continuing very
broad, and studded with islands all the way. Here we were
delayed three days, as the canoes had to be dragged over
land for about three miles to a point some distance below
the falls.
The day after our arrival at Sioma I went to have a look
at the falls, but found that they were in the centre of the river,
so that I could not get a good view of them from the eastern
bank. On the following morning I again visited them, and, by
the help of a ledge of rocks, waded across the two hundred
yards of river between the eastern bank and the chasm into
which the main river discharges itself. I was well rewarded
for my pains, for the Falls of Gonyi, seen thus at close quarters,
are well worth taking some trouble to get at. They are of
course a small m atter compared with the stupendous and
incomparable Victoria Falls ; but they are, nevertheless, very
beautiful, and were they situated in Scotland, or any accessible
part of Europe, I have no doubt would attract crowds of visitors.
The height of these falls is not more than thirty feet, I should
say, but in the central portion an immense mass of water
rushes into a rocky chasm— a seething torrent of fleecy foam,
very beautiful to look upon. This central fall is flanked by
others, where the mass of water is not so great. As I have
said before, these falls can scarcely be seen from the bank, as
they fall into a chasm in the centre of the river. However,
it is not a difficult m atter to wade out to them, and their
beauty will well repay the trouble.
On 2nd October we again got under way, but did not
get very far, as my boatmen discovered a sort of backwater
with a bar across the entrance, full of fish, and we spent nearly
the whole day spearing fish. Altogether we must have killed
considerably over a hundredweight, many of them very fine
XIII CANOE SU N K B Y H IPPO PO TAM U S 259
went with the three remaining canoes to look for the one that
had been sunk, accompanied by two very small canoes, in which
were four natives whom my headman had collected the previous
day, and who were expert divers. It took us a long time to
find the lost canoe, as the water was very deep, from twelve to
fourteen fe e t; however, after prodding about for a couple of
hours with their long paddles, my men at last found it, and one
of the divers immediately went down to make sure, and came
up with the good news that it was indeed the canoe. Another
now dived down with a rope and attached it to the projecting
prow, and our two largest canoes then towed the sunken one
into shallow water. All that remained in it, however, was the
impala antelope, two small tusks of ivory, and two muskets be
longing to the paddlers. A large tusk of ivory weighing about
60 lbs., two bags containing my cartridges, besides all my trading
goods, provisions, plates, cups, fork, spoon, etc., and all my little
necessary odds and ends, together with a third musket belonging
to one of the boys, were all gone. How on earth the large tusk
of ivory and my cartridges got out of the canoe I cannot under
stand. However, they were gone, and, as it would have been next
to impossible to recover them, I had the canoe bailed out at once,
and we then paddled round to camp, and got ready to proceed
on our journey. The canoe, I may here say, was not injured
in any way. The hippopotamus, my boys said, first came up
underneath it, throwing one end of it out of wrater, at the same
time dipping the other end, and half filling the heavy craft with
water. Two of the paddlers either fell or jumped out at this
first attack, the one swimming to the island, the other to the
bank of the river, and the two who remained in the canoe were
paddling as hard as they could towards the island when the
hippopotamus made a second attack. This time, they said, the
animal raised its head out of the water, and laying it over the
canoe, simply pressed it down under water, when of course it
filled and sank to the bottom, and the two boys swam ashore
without being followed— very luckily, as in these accidents the
enraged hippopotamus often kills one or more of the occupants
of the canoe, biting them with its formidable tusks.
Before mid-day we resumed our journey, and in the afternoon
reached the mouth of the River N ’joko, where we slept. There
2Ó 2 T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A CHAP.
C ape B u ffa lo .
CHAPTER XIV
Arrange for journey to the Upper Mazoe—Mr. Edward Burnett—Mr. Thomas—A
trip home to England—Take passage for Quillimani—Description of town—
Portuguese custom-house—Boat journey up the Quaqua river—Reach the
Zambesi—Start for Tete—Pass Shupanga—And Sena—Scarcity of animal life
—Bush-buck shot—Lions heard—-The Lupata gorge—Pass the mouth of the
Ruenya—Reach Tete—Portuguese system of government on the Zambesi-—
Secure a good interpreter—Difficulty of obtaining carriers—Rumours of war—
Abandon the idea of following the course of the Mazoe river.
and two of the Scotch missionaries pulled off our coats, and
with sleeves tucked up in South African fashion commenced
sorting out the boxes ; but I believe our conduct was taken in
bad part by the custom-house officers, who thought it most
disrespectful on our part to appear before them without coats,
and with bare arms. Certainly no offence was meant, and the
climate of Quillimani is not one to encourage the wearing of
coats and collars. Mr. Ross, the vice-consul, was most kind
and obliging, and did everything he could do to assist us, and
without his help we should have had far more difficulty than
we experienced as it was. A t length we got everything
arranged, and our goods packed in bundles suitable for
carriage by natives, and none of them weighing over 5 0 lbs.
We arranged with Mr. Teixeira to provide a boat as far as
Lokoloko on the Quaqua, from which place we were to get
carriers over to the Zambesi, which is about forty miles distant.
We also hired two personal servants in Quillimani. One of
these, who rejoiced in the name of Rebecca, was being boarded
and lodged at the Government expense at the time of our
visit, but we were able to buy him out for a small sum. Mr.
Ross recommended him to us, as he thought he could speak
English, and would be therefore useful to us as an interpreter.
As Rebecca had once been a mission boy at Blantyre I
suppose he had once known a little English, but he must have
forgotten it, and learned Portuguese instead, as he certainly
knew a good many words in the latter language. When he
was first introduced I said to him, “ Well, Rebecca, can you
speak English ? ” to which he at once replied with great
alacrity and a perfect accent, “ Yes, s ir ! ” and I thought we
had got a treasure. Before many days, however, we found out
that “ Yes, s ir ! ” were the only two words in the English
language that Rebecca knew, and that he trotted them out
with perfect satisfaction to himself on every possible occasion.
Although sodden with the vile drink with which the Portu
guese are destroying the natives of South-Eastern Africa, poor
Rebecca was naturally a good-tempered, harmless creature, and
stuck to us throughout the journey, as did his companion, our
other servant, a boy named Rocky, who had also been much
demoralised by bad drink.
XIV VOYAGE GP THE QU AQ U A 267
level, and very sparsely inhabited, but the natives seemed very
well off for food ; and the soil, I should imagine, must be very
rich and fertile. A t Mazaro I once more stood on the eastern
bank of the mighty Zambesi, a river whose course I have
followed for many hundreds of miles in the interior of this
vast continent. Here the great river runs in several channels
through an immense valley, and altogether does not impress
the mind by its grandeur and the beauty of the scenery on its
banks, as it never fails to do in the interior, whether near
Zumbo, or in the neighbourhood of the Victoria Falls, or about
Sinanga, or near the far-off and little-known Falls of Gonyi.
Its waters appeared to me dull-coloured compared with the
deep blue of the waters of the Central and Upper Zambesi.
From Mazaro a walk of five miles brought us to Vicenti, where
the African Lakes Company have a station, and where Mr.
Peter Moore, the Company’s agent, did all he could to make
us comfortable. The James Stevenson was lying at anchor
by the bank, ready to start for Namalindi, on the Shiri river,
as soon as the mission party for Blantyre had arrived ; for,
as they had proceeded up the Quaqua by boat to Mopea,
a station only three miles distant from Vicenti, we had
reached that place before them by travelling overland from
Lokoloko.
I now hired a light boat and a native canoe from the African
Lakes Company to convey our goods and ourselves up the
Zambesi to Tete. Burnett, Thomas, and myself found sitting
room in the back part of the boat, where we were sheltered
from sun and rain by a light framework of reeds thatched with
grass. There was some little delay about getting crews, but
on the afternoon of 2 7 th July we once more got under way.
W e did not travel very rapidly, as the current of the Lower
Zambesi is strong, and the channels amongst the sand islands
intricate, but our men were a good-tempered, willing lot, and
gave us no trouble. On the day after leaving Vicenti we passed
Shupanga, where lies the neglected and well-nigh forgotten
grave of Mrs. Livingstone, who, poor woman, in the endeavour
to be near her famous husband, made her way to this far-off
spot only to fall a victim to the pestilential climate of the Lower
Zambesi.
XIV THE LO W E R Z A M B E S I 271
one morning, getting in under the eastern bank, which was well
wooded, Burnett and I landed to look for game. W e saw a
good deal -of koodoo and water-buck spoor, though none of the
animals themselves, but came across several bush-bucks, one of
which I killed. This was a full-grown ram, and was interesting
to me, as I found him to be intermediate in colour and markings
between the bush-bucks found farther south, and those I have
seen farther north, along the rivers running into the Zambesi
from Mashunaland. I preserved his skin for mounting, and it
is now in the collection of the Natural History Museum at
South Kensington.
After waiting for our boat to come up, we breakfasted on
the liver of the buck, and then Burnett and I walked on again
along the bank with a couple of the boys. We followed a
native footpath and saw a great deal of game spoor, including
that of elands, Burchell’s zebras, koodoos, water-bucks, and
impala antelopes. We also saw three wart-hogs, and some
water-bucks, but could not get a shot at them. W hilst we had
been walking along at a good pace, expecting to see game
every moment, our canoe and boat had made very poor progress
amongst the sandbanks and islands ; so, late in the afternoon,
after waiting some time and seeing no signs of their approach,
we retraced our steps, and did not get back to the boat till
some time after dark. We then put off from shore and slept
on a very wet sandbank, only a few inches above the level of
the river. During the night some lions roared grandly several
times, not far away, on the eastern bank.
On 7 th August the day broke cool and cloudy, and the air
being clear we saw in the distance a range of hills running
across the course of the river, through which it makes its way
by the narrow gorge of Lupata. By mid-day we were not more
than five or six miles from these hills, but could not make out
the gap through which the Zambesi flows. In the afternoon
we reached Bandari Cliff, which is a bold precipitous mass of
rock, at the foot of which the Zambesi runs in a deep narrow
channel. Bandari forms the southern or eastern entrance to
the gorge of Lupata, during its passage through which the
Zambesi is compressed into a channel from two hundred to three
hundred yards in width. A t Bandari itself the river was not
XIV THE L U P A T A GORGE 273
the Mazoe, and then follow the river up to its source, but this
I found to be impossible, as there was a rumour that Colonel
Paiva d’Andrada and Manoel Antonio de Souza were making
war on Motoko, a powerful chief living to the south of the
Mazoe, whose territory extends to the junction of that river
with the Ruenya, and nothing would induce the cowardly
Shakundas from Tete to travel anywhere near the scene of
the “ guerra de Motoko ” (war with Motoko). Under these
circumstances I determined to first work up to somewhere near
the head of the Luia, one of the principal tributaries of the
Mazoe.
M ashuna V illa g e.
CHAPTER XV
I t w as on th e aftern o o n o f S u n d a y th e 18 th o f A u g u st th a t
we a t la st left T e te , an d as it w as a ra in y d ay we h a d g re a t
difficulty in g e ttin g o u r carriers to m ove. T h e y g rum bled
ab o u t th e ir loads, a b o u t th e ir food, an d a b o u t a n y th in g and
e v e ry th in g th e y could th in k of.
F o r th e first few days we follow ed one o f th e caravan routes
to Z um bo, a lo n g th e course o f th e R iv e r M ufa. W e h ad an
in finity o f tro u b le w ith o u r carriers, an d I th in k th e re is no
d o u b t th a t th e y did all th e y could to d elay us an d an n o y us,
h o p in g th a t one o f us w ould lose his te m p e r and strik e one of
th em , w hen, as A u g u sto inform ed us, th e y w ould have a t once
re tu rn e d to T e te a n d accused us o f h a v in g ill-used them , and
we should h av e g o t no m ore carriers. K n o w in g this dodge,
we w ere v ery careful n o t to strik e one, th o u g h we ex h a u ste d
CHAP. XV A TROOP OF LIONS 2 79
and often bare-legged, carrying his own rifle and running after
game, they think he only does so because he is poor and
cannot afford to pay men to hunt for him, and porters to
carry him in a palanquin, sheltered from the heat of the sun
by an awning or an um brella; and they despise him accord
ingly and contrast him unfavourably with the more effeminate
and luxurious Portuguese, whom they respect more than the
Englishman, because they think he is rich enough to afford
comforts which the latter cannot command.
On making careful inquiries I found that I could take
another route to “ Magomo ” by the kraals of Dombo Chena,
and Kandaya, and after reducing the number of loads as much
as possible— leaving the remaining goods in Rusambo’s charge
until our return — I was able to hire porters as far as
K andaya’s.
On the 1 4 th of September we again started, and leaving
Maziwa’s to the south-west, reached Dombo Chena’s, on the
little river Umkaradzi, on the 1 8 th. We saw a great many
quartz reefs on the upper course of the Umkaradzi, some of
which Mr. Thomas liked the look of very much. The natives
of the little village of Dombo Chena had done a great deal of
work along the river washing for alluvial gold, but Mr. Thomas
did not think it would prove payable for white men. Besides
these recent workings we also found traces of much work
having been done in ancient times in search of gold, which
shows that this little river must have been known as a gold-
producing stream for a very long time.
Near the head of the Umkaradzi valley stands a lofty
mountain, a splendid landmark for many miles round. The
range of hills from which this peak rises is called Fura by the
natives, but as we were now in a country in dispute between
the British and Portuguese, and as I could not discover from
the natives that any white subject of Portugal had ever
travelled in this district, I had what some people will call the
impertinence to name it Mount Darwin, after that illustrious
Englishman whose far-reaching theories— logical conclusions
based upon an enormous mass of incontrovertible facts— have
revolutionised modern thought, and destroyed for ever many
old beliefs that had held men’s minds in thrall for centuries.
XV A P O V E R T Y -ST R IC K E N D IST R IC T 287
Into one o f the deep pools I have spoken o f as being the com
mencement o f the actual river, a small rill o f water, draining
out o f the marsh, falls, forming a tiny waterfall o f twelve or
fifteen feet in height. The Mazoe does not take its rise on the
top o f the high open downs o f Mashunaland like the Manyami,
the Sabi, the Sanyati, etc., but in a marsh just below the high
level, its source being enclosed in low ridges, through which
the water must percolate from the higher ground. A fte r a rest
we started back for camp, which we reached just before sun
down, having done over eight hours’ very fast walking during
the day. W e found that our boys had bought a little rice and
pogo meal, but having no meat we did not sit down to a very
sumptuous repast. Since leaving Mapondera’s we had seen no
game, with the exception o f a few reed-bucks, which were very
wild and unapproachable.
CHAPTER XVII
he and his men played the leading part last year ( 1 8 8 8 ) in the
capture of Bonga’s stockade at Masangano and the dispersal of
his people.
But besides the country to the south of the Mazoe and to
the east of the Sabi, which the Portuguese have been quietly
engaged in absorbing during the last few years, there remains a
large tract of country, ruled over by independent native chiefs,
lying to the north of the Mazoe and to the east of the Upper
Manyami, which also comes within the line which they wish
to have assigned to them, by arbitration or otherwise, as the
western boundary of their East African possessions— a country
about which they know absolutely nothing, except what they
have learnt of late years from the writings and maps of
English hunters and travellers. In order to establish a claim
to this part of Africa, two expeditions were fitted out early
this present year to traverse this country and to conciliate or
frighten the native chiefs into accepting the Portuguese flag.
Captain Cordon was sent up as Governor of Zumbo, with
orders to take Kanyemba, Matakania, and other powerful
chiefs holding official positions under the Portuguese Govern
ment, with all their men, to proceed up the Zambesi to the
mouth of the River Sanyati, and from thence to the junction
of the Umfuli with the latter river, and there to form a
stockade, and await the arrival of Colonel Paiva d’Andrada and
General Manoel Antonio from the south. The two latter
officers were apparently ordered to first overcome Motoko, an
independent chief living near the headwaters of the River
Inyadiri, one of the chief southern tributaries of the Mazoe,
and from thence to proceed to the Upper Manyami, atKl then,
passing by Lo Magondi’s town, to effect a union with Captain
Cordon at the junction of the Umfuli and Sanyati rivers.
Whether this programme has been fully carried out or not I
have not been able to ascertain with certainty. When Mr.
Burnett and myself were at the source of the Mazoe in the end
of September last either Colonel Paiva d’Andrada or General
Manoel Antonio, coming from the direction of Mangwendi’s
town, near the head of the Inyagui river, passed Inyam-
wenda’s town, on the Manyami, and proceeded to Lo
Magondi’s. An Indian trader from the Zambesi, a Mahom-
XVII LE T TE R TO THE “ TIM E S 3 17
between Tete and Zumbo, this influence three years ago no
where extended beyond the low country, which may be called
the Zambesi valley. But the last three years, owing to jealousy
of British expansion, have been a period of unprecedented
activity with the Portuguese Government in South-Eastern
A frica ; and by the judicious employment of such men as
Manoel Antonio and Ignacio de Jesus Xavier, and other in
fluential native chiefs, that Government has very rapidly
extended, and is still extending, its influence all over South-
Eastern Africa. Still, I say decisively that on 1st October
last Portuguese influence, even of the most indirect kind, north
of Tete and on the southern bank of the Zambesi, nowhere ex
tended to any point distant over one hundred miles in a direct
line from that river, or to any country lying at a general eleva
tion of over three thousand feet above sea-level. Rusambo and
Chibonga are the last two chiefs west of Tete and north of the
Mazoe who can be considered within Portuguese influence, and
that of a very indirect kind. Rusambo this year, for the third
time, paid taxes to the native chief, Ignacio de Jesus Xavier,
and not to any representative of the Portuguese Government,
whilst Chibonga’s people paid very unwillingly for the second
time, under threats of having their women seized if they refused
to do so. I was at Rusambo’s . and Chibonga’s kraals whilst
Xavier’s men were collecting the taxes, and so know what I
am writing about. West of Chibonga’s all the native chiefs
are entirely independent. As to the country on the eastern,
southern, and northern slopes of what has come to be known
as Mashunaland— the rich and fertile country in the develop
ment of which I am particularly interested,— with all due
deference to Senhor Serpa Pimental, I maintain that it is a
country with which Portugal has no historic associations what
ever, and one to which the Portuguese can lay no claim, either
upon the score of conquest, discovery, effective occupation,
permanent commercial enterprise, or the political influence of
Portugal at any time up to the present day.
I am not altogether unacquainted with the early records
of Portuguese conquest and discovery in South-Eastern Africa
in the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries, nor
of the enterprises undertaken in the same region during that
320 TRAVEL AN D AD VE N T U R E IN A FR IC A CHAP.
that river and the high plateau lies one of the most inhospitable
countries in Africa. Rough and mountainous, infested with
tse-tse fly, and during half the year almost destitute of water,
this tract of country is so sparsely inhabited and the inhabitants
are usually so badly off for food that any large expedition of
Europeans would have the greatest difficulty in traversing the
country. I speak here of the country between Tete on the
Zambesi and the high plateau. I am aware that Mashunaland
is easier of access from the south-east coast through the Manica
country, but even there a railway must first be made through
the “ fly ” infested district, between the Pungwi river and Massi
Kessi, before anything can be done on an extended scale. Such
a railway, it is true, is spoken of, but before it can be made I
hope and believe that Mashunaland will be occupied by a large
population of British and South Africans, under the govern
ment of the Chartered Company. Portugal can never do any
thing with this, the fairest portion of all South Africa, but
farm it out in districts to men of the stamp of Manoel Antonio
(a Goanese) or Ignacio de Jesus Xavier (a full-blooded African).
I say men of this stamp, for there are many other full-blooded
native chiefs with long Portuguese names besides those I have
mentioned, and it is these men who virtually rule South-Eastern
Africa for the Portuguese, and there is riot one of them whose
treatment of the natives would commend itself to the Aborigines
Protection Society. Yet it is by such men that Mashunaland
will be governed, if the Portuguese can make good their claim
to the country. A certain rental will be paid to the Govern
ment for the administration of each district, the renter being
then left at liberty to squeeze as much as he can out of the
natives under his jurisdiction. This at any rate is what has
been done with the countries I have spoken of as being in
directly under Portuguese influence, and judging the future by
the past, as I think one is justified in doing, it is not too much
to say that, under Portuguese administration, in two hundred
years’ time the natural resources of the Mashuna country would
remain in the same undeveloped condition as they are at the
present day, or in the same condition as the whole of South-
Eastern Africa between the Lower Zambesi and the River Sabi,
the country to which, in the words of Senhor Serpa Pimental,
324 TRAVEL AN D A D V E N T U R E IN A FR IC A CHAP.
S a lisb u r y , Mash u n a la n d .
heard suggested, and the latter, which has been given out o f
compliment to Mr. Cecil Rhodes, to whom alone it is due that
what may soon become a rich and prosperous territory has
been added to the British dominions (practically I think it is
so), seems to be steadily gaining ground in popular favour, as
the principal paper published in Mashunaland is called the
R h odesia H era ld .
People who scurry through the country, and especially
those who do not go beyond Salisbury, have but little idea of
the extent of the high plateau of Mashunaland; Stretching
away to the east and south-east of the main road between
Salisbury and Um tali there is a very fine tract o f country
which is but very little known. In this direction I have
travelled a good deal, and made a careful survey, a glance
at which will show how magnificently watered is this part
of the country. Portions of this district, especially in the
neighbourhood o f the sources of the Rusapi river and its
numerous tributaries, are remarkable for the abundance of
huge naked masses of granite which rise abruptly from the
grassy downs. Some of these, though formed of a single
block o f stone, are worthy to be called hills, notably the
huge cone named Dombo, which, standing as it does on
the extreme eastern edge o f Mashunaland, commands a
tru ly magnificent panoramic view over an immense extent
o f c o u n try; for the plateau itself, on the edge o f which
Dombo stands, here attains a height of six thousand fe e t ;
and whoever climbs this naked crag will stand six thousand
seven hundred feet above the sea, perhaps the highest point
in South-Eastern A fric a ; for I doubt much whether the loftiest
hills in Manica attain a height o f seven thousand feet.
It was in February 1 8 9 1 , during the height o f the rainy
season, that after two attempts, rendered unsuccessful by
blinding storms o f rain (during one o f which m y companion,
Mr. W . L. Armstrong, was nearly washed down a fissure in
the mountain side), we stood at last, compass in hand, on the
summit o f Dombo. W ell indeed were we repaid for our per
severance. The air, freed by months of rain from the smoke
o f the winter grass fires, was extraordinarily clear, and enabled
us to see, at one and the same time, several o f the most
XVIII BOMBO 329
F ir st E n g in e -H ouse and Ba t t e r y e r e c t e d on t h e T a ti G o ld -F ie l d s .
the size of the huts used by the natives at the present day.
Whilst speaking of these carefully-fitted stone foundations on
which to build huts, I may mention that in the centre of
Umtasa’s deserted town on the Chodzani river-—a town which
he built himself, and from which he was driven a few years
ago by the Abagaza—will be found a similar hut foundation,
very carefully built of small slabs of granite, beautifully fitted
without mortar or cement, which proves that the art of build
ing walls of carefully-fitted granite stones is not even yet
dead amongst the Mashunas.”
However, to return to the walled town of Makoni’s
ancestor. Besides the four entrances into the stronghold,
there were numerous small holes let into the wall, some of
which may have served as loopholes through which archers
discharged arrows, but others, from their position, I judge to
have been intended for drains to carry off water. This strong
hold is said to have been built by Chipadzi, the ancient chief
of all this part of the country, and an ancestor of Makoni.
The name of the walled town is Chitiketi.
About half a mile from this old walled town was the
burial-place of Chipadzi, one side of which was enclosed by
a beautifully-built wall about ten feet high, of evenly-laid and
squared granite stones, most carefully fitted together without
mortar or cement of any kind. This wall was an exact fac
simile of the best-built portions of the great Zimbabwi, and
no one who has examined carefully both these relics of a
bygone age can doubt for an instant that they were both
built by the same race of people. This place is the Zimbabwi
or temple of Makoni’s people, and is spoken of by them as
“ The Zimbabwe” Here in time of national trouble the chief
slaughters cattle, and makes propitiatory offerings to the spirit
of Chipadzi, and private individuals make offerings of goats,
fowls, or pots of beer. Now there is no tower or indeed
anything to make one believe that this Zimbabwi was ever
connected with Phallic worship. It was probably built long
after the great temple, when the Arabian element had become
lost amongst the more numerous aboriginal race, and when the
people had replaced the worship of Baal by the still older
form of ancestor-worship.
XVIII EVIDEN CE OF THE F U SIO N O F F A C E S 341
CHAPTER XI X
FORT SALISBURY.
remaining four, from the middle to the end of the rainy season,1
fever is very prevalent in the lower parts of the country, and
will almost certainly be contracted by any one who is unduly
exposed to cold and wet in any part of the country.
The same may probably be said concerning many other
portions of the world, in which large communities of Europeans
are now living; and it has already been thoroughly proved,
alike in Mashunaland, Manica, and Matabililand, at Salisbury,
Umtali, and Bulawayo, that, given the most ordinary conditions
of comfort, and freedom from excessive exposure, white men,
women, and children enjoy as good health in these countries
as in any other part of South Africa.
The development of Mashunaland is now going on so
rapidly that, were I to give a detailed account of its present
condition, my remarks would be out of date before this book
is through the press. However, before I left the country in
August 1 8 9 2 Salisbury had already been in telegraphic com
munication with the rest of the world for some months. Three
1 As a rule, the rainy season may be said to last from the beginning of November till
the end of March. That is to say that during any one of these months a heavy rainfall may
be expected; but in no single season does heavy rain prevail during all these months.
In some years a great deal of rain falls in November, followed by a month or two months
of fine weather, heavy rain again falling in February or March. In other years but
little rain falls before the end of the year, in which case heavy rains may be expected after
the new year. Sometimes the rainfall is evenly distributed over the five months ; but, as a
rule, there is a fair allowance of fine weather during the period called the rainy season.
On the other hand, during the first and last months of the dry season, in April and October,
heavy thunderstorms usually occur, and a year seldom passes without a few light showers
of rain falling during the cold months, either in June, July, or August; more especially
in the south-eastern portions of the country. On the plateau, during May, June, and
July, the sun has little heat, and the nights are very cold. After August the sun gets
hotter and hotter, but the nights continue very cold until October. The month which
immediately precedes the commencement of the rainy season is always the hottest. During
the rainy season itself the heat is seldom oppressive, as the sky is usually overcast and the
sun obscured. The nights are always cool, and in April again become very cold. From
the 1 st of May till the end of December the climate is wonderfully healthy, and fever is
very seldom contracted during this period ; but great care must be taken to guard against
exposure to wet during the months of January, February, March, and April, at which time
the vegetation is rank, and malaria prevalent. To reach the plateau of Mashunaland
either from the east coast or from the Transvaal it is necessary to cross a low-lying belt
of country in which malarial fever is very prevalent from the end of November to the
beginning of June ; and as it is all-important to any one intending to take up his residence
in Mashunaland to arrive in the country with no fever poison in his system, I strongly
advise all intending immigrants to that country to make their way to the plateau between
the months of June and November. Experience has shown that people arriving in Ma
shunaland in good health and with no fever poison in their systems enjoy perfect health in
that country, unless exposed to unhealthy conditions ; whilst others who have contracted
fever in the hot low-lying country on the east coast, or between the Limpopo and Victoria,
suffer from continual relapses, when exposed to the cold rarified air of the plateau, and
in some cases are never able to regain their health.
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CHAP. XIX M A SH U N A L A N D 35i
declared there was no gold there, or that the ore was o f such
low grade that it would not pay to work it. T he accounts
that had been written by Baines and Mauch tw enty years
before twere declared to be absolutely m ythical. T h e parrot
cry was taken up and echoed and re-echoed throughout South
Africa and England. T here was no payable gold in M ashuna-
land it was said. There had been once, perhaps, but if the Jews
had been there in K ing S olom on ’s time, it was not likely they
would have left the country until they had worked out all the
good reefs. However, all this tim e a residuum o f hard-working
men remained in M ashunaland. T h ey found what they thought
to be good reefs in every district— in Victoria, Manica, H artley
H ills, Mazoe, A ngw a, and M ount Darwin. Through good
report and evil report th ey worked away, developing their
properties, buoyed up by the faith that was in them , and the
conviction that truth would at last prevail. A nd so indeed it
has ; for I believe that in the financial world at the present tim e
the future o f the gold-fields o f M ashunaland is considered, as I
have said already, to be absolutely assured. Payable reefs have
now been proved to a considerable depth in every district. A ll
that is required is the capital necessary to erect quartz-crush
ing m achinery and carry on the developm ent. T he introduc
tion o f heavy m achinery into the country is now not only very
difficult but very expensive. W hen the railway, however, has
been com pleted from the east coast into the heart o f M ashuna
land, its gold m ines will be worked at a reasonable c o s t ; and
every mail now brings the m ost encouraging reports from the
different m ining centres.
A s the work o f developm ent has gone on, so have the
prospects improved in every district, till now it can, I think, no
longer be doubted that before the end o f this century M ashuna
land will take a high place am ongst the gold-producing
countries o f the world. Capital, however, m ust first be put
into the country before the gold can be g ot out o f it.
I have not y e t said anything concerning the administration
o f the country, but I will conclude this chapter by saying that
I consider that it was a veritable inspiration that prompted Mr.
R hodes to ask his old friend Dr. Jam eson to take over the
arduous and difficult duties o f A dm inistrator o f Mashunaland.
XIX DR. JA M E S O N 355
Dr. Jam eson has endeared h im self to all classes o f the com
m unity by his tact and good temper, and has m anaged all the
diverse details connected with the adm inistration o f a new
country w ith a correctness o f judgm ent which am ounts to
nothing less than g en iu s— and genius o f a m ost rare and
versatile order. H e was the man for the position. N o other,
taken all round, could have been quite w hat Dr. Jam eson has
been as Adm inistrator o f Mashunaland in its early days.
CHAPTER XX
hundred and sixty miles in extent, over which a road would have
to be found and prepared in advance of the expedition. The
idea seemed to be, that when everything was ready a trum pet
would be blown, and the advance would then be made along
known roads, as had been the case from Mafeking to Macloutsie.
However, after a conference between Dr. Jameson and Colonel
Pennefather, at which I expressed my views, I got leave to at
once set about cutting the first piece of new road from Mac
loutsie camp to the Tuli, a distance of about fifty miles. Kham a
with his usual courtesy and kindness gave me twenty picked
men to open up the track, and sent with them one of his most
trusted headmen, an old friend of mine named Makamana. I
was also accompanied by Lieutenant Capper of the British
South Africa Company’s Police, whose business it was to ex
amine all the hills on the line of route with a view to the
establishment of heliograph stations between Macloutsie and
Tuli. By the 10th of June we had opened up a waggon track
to the Tuli, and the first section of the new road to Mashuna-
land lay ready, waiting for the advance of the expedition.
Before returning to Macloutsie camp I collected all the
information possible from K ham a’s Makalaka subjects living
on the lower course of the Tuli concerning the country on
ahead, and planned out the next section of the road to Matipi’s,
passing to the south of Sitoutsi’s. W ith M akamana’s assistance
I obtained what proved to be a very accurate description of
this part of the route, and from Matipi’s to Chibi’s I knew there
would be no difficulty, as the Boer hunters from Zoutpansberg
had in former years made a regular hunting road between these
two places, the line of which, as well as the fords through the
rivers, were well known to the natives, from whom I felt sure
there would be no difficulty in getting a guide. The only piece
of the route about which I had any misgivings was the section
beyond Chibi’s, where I knew there would be a sharp ascent to
the plateau. Once on the table-land I had no further fears, as
I was familiar with the whole country along the line we would
have to take.
CHAPTER XXI
T he Expedition to Mashunaland {c o n tin u e d )
K hama .
until the column had come up with us, as we were getting too
far ahead. On the receipt of this letter Dr. Jameson and I at
once saddled up and rode back to the main column, which we
found about thirty-five miles distant
On 18th July the whole column reached the Umshabetsi
early in the morning, and on the following day I again went
on ahead, this time with “ A ” troop of the pioneers, under the
command of Captain Heany, to clear the road. As the entire
column of over eighty waggons, one following the other in
single file, straggled out to a length of sometimes over two
miles, it was decided to cut two parallel roads from this point,
upon which the column moved in two divisions ; and, as the
plan was found to answer well, a double road was cut from the
Umshabetsi right up to Fort Salisbury. Our advance party,
now augmented by a contingent of K ham a’s men, who proved
of great assistance in carrying out the heavy work of cutting a
double road, now kept in touch with the column, but always
managed to open up a road faster than the column could
travel. The management of the waggons and oxen and the
daily formation of the “ laagers ” was entirely in the hands of
Messrs. Edward and George Burnett, two most energetic and
experienced colonists, and most admirably, I think, they per
formed their very arduous duties.
Steadily and uneventfully we advanced, till on 1st August
we reached the Lunti river. Up to this point I had always
had local natives to assist me in guiding the expedition— first
from Tuli to Sitoutsi’s ; from there to Matipi’s, and then on to
the Lunti, which we crossed by a ford which had been used
in former years by Boer hunters from the Northern Transvaal.
Beyond the River Lunti, except for the first few miles, as far as
Chibi’s brother's kraal, I had no natives to assist me in the
guidance of the expedition. As I knew that the broken
country which skirts the edge of the plateau began not far
beyond Chibi’s, I asked Colonel Pennefather to give me four
days to examine the country on ahead and look out a good
line for a waggon road ; and as the cattle required a rest, and
there was a lot of heavy work to be done before a practicable
ford could be made across the Lunti river, he made no
difficulty about giving me the time I required ; so on 2nd
XXI T H E P IO N E E R E X P E D IT IO N 375
Major P. W. F o rb es .
U m tasa’s just about the same time— that is, on 15th November,
a day after the arrival of Colonel d’A ndrada and Baron de
Rezende, who, with the whole of their followers, all well armed,
were inside Um tasa’s stockaded kraal. Captain Forbes had
received information from some of U m tasa’s people that
Colonel d’Andrada had given orders that if any Englishmen
were seen approaching the kraal the entrances were to be
blockaded, and that resistance was to be made. However,
Jonas, the native interpreter, who had been with Trooper
Trevor (the acting representative already referred to) from the
first, was able to introduce them into the kraal by a back
entrance, and also to show them the huts in which Colonel
d’Andrada and his officers had taken up their quarters, and
also those in which the greatest number of Gouveia’s followers
were collected ; and a couple of hours after Lieutenant Fiennes
arrived Captain Forbes suddenly entered the kraal, and with
ten men proceeded to arrest Colonel d’Andrada, the Baron de
Rezende, and Gouveia. At the same time Lieutenants Fiennes
and Biscoe, with the rest of the men, were rapidly disarming
Gouveia’s retainers. Mr. Doyle and Captain Hoste had
entered the kraal with Captain Forbes, and the former, who
is a proficient in native languages, went about warning
Um tasa’s people not to take any part in the proceedings,
which were, he told them, entirely between the Portuguese and
the English. In this work he was ably assisted by Um tasa’s
head enduna (councillor), who did his best to quiet the excited
people. Gouveia’s men were taken entirely by surprise, and
offered no resistance. Many of them delivered up their arms,
and the rest fled, and thus Colonel d’Andrada, De Rezende,
and Gouveia were arrested without bloodshed. Immediately
after the arrest Captain Forbes, with admirable judgment,
despatched Colonel d’A ndrada and Gouveia, with an escort
of ten men, under command of Lieutenant Fiennes, to Fort
Salisbury, for to have released them upon parole in the
Manica country would have been a fatal mistake, as such an
action would have been attributed by the natives to weakness,
and would infallibly have led to a dangerous rising among
Gouveia’s people in the Gorongoza province ; whilst the arrest
and deportation of the much-dreaded Gouveia by a handful
392 TRAVEL A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A CHAP.
CHAPTER X X III
Reach Fort Salisbury— Write a supplement for the Graphic — Tts fate— Report of a
journey to Motoko’s country, and the conclusion of a treaty with that chief
clasping it from each side with its massive legs, and digging its
cruel claws deep into either quarter. The horse was checked,
and the jerk threw Thomas from the saddle ; but the sharpness
of the lion’s claws, aided by the pace at which the horse was
going, made them cut through skin and flesh like so many
knives, so that the grim beast lost his hold and fell to the
ground, whilst the horse rushed madly forwards along the road.
The lion at once took up the chase again, neglecting to notice
Thomas, who ran to the nearest tree, which he climbed without
any unnecessary dawdling. Before long the lion, not having
been able to again overtake either of the horses, came back to
where he had made his first spring, and then, probably scenting
Thomas in the tree, walked up and lay down at the foot of it.
Here he remained the entire night, sometimes lying down, and
at others walking about round the tree. Thomas had no rifle
with him, but carried a revolver slung over his shoulder. He
was, however, afraid to fire at the lion with this weapon, as the
tree in which he had taken refuge was but a small one, and he
feared that the dangerous beast beneath him might, if irritated
by a wound, spring up and possibly succeed in clawing him
out of the tree.
It was broad daylight next morning when Thomas heard the
crack of a whip, and presently was rejoiced to see a waggon
train coming along the road. Then the lion got up and walked
sulkily away into the bush, and Thomas came down the tree
and told his strange story to the people with the waggons, with
whom he returned to Matipi’s. Both horses turned up early
in the night at the next post station. The flanks of the one
that had been attacked were badly lacerated by the claws of
the lion, but it eventually recovered. The horse which carried
the mail-bag seems to have left the road and dashed away into
the bush when its companion was seized by the lion, and
eventually turned up at the post station minus the mail-bag,
which had been doubtless torn off by the bushes through which
the terrified animal rushed. I have given this story in some
detail, as it is an interesting one, just as I heard it from my
friend, Mr. Jesser Coope, who was in command at Matipi’s post
station, and who started Thomas off with the mail on Christmas
night, and heard the tale of his misadventure on his return to
39» TRAVEL A N D , ADVEN TU RE I N A F R IC A CHAP.
m ine w hilst I wrote his nam e and m ade the “ x ,” as his hand
was too old and shaky to actually hold the pen. S iteo and
K alim azondo then m ade crosses as w itnesses for M otoko,
whilst Mr. A rm strong and W illiam H okogazi did the sam e on
behalf o f the Com pany, and the treaty betw een M otoko and
the British South Africa Com pany was concluded.
A s the old man was evidently fatigued with the interview,
m y party and I now shook hands with him and bade him
good-bye. On our w ay back to the w aggon we were escorted
by at least a thousand men, all in a state o f great excitem ent.
On arriving at the foot o f the rock they asked me to let them
see the horse gallop, which I did. T his apparently excited
them, and then in their turn th ey gave m e a very interesting
exhibition, som ething equivalent to a sham fight. T hey made
charges upon an im aginary enem y, brandishing spears, knives,
battle-axes, and bows and arrows. T w o men devoted them
selves entirely to m aking a shrill w histling noise with a kind
o f reed flute, a sort o f pibroch, with which, I suppose, a real
charge would be accom panied. It was a very savage scene,
and I m ust say the performers looked as if they would
thoroughly enjoy sticking an assegai into som ebody or anybody,
and I have no doubt they would. T o Mr. A rm strong and
myself, however, th ey evinced great friendship, constantly
rushing up and shouting out “ Sham ari a M otoko ” (“ Friend o f
M otoko ”).
A ltogether I consider that the signing o f the concession and
the treaty o f alliance b y M otoko is a very satisfactory business,
although it took a long tim e and the exercise o f much patience
to obtain ; for it was done in full council and in the presence
o f a large number o f his people.
In conclusion I w ill say that M otoko’s country is o f great
extent, and com prises all the territory w est o f M angwendi’s and
U m saw asha’s that lies between the R uenya and M azoe rivers,
and that the gold -field s visited by Mauch, and called by him
the K aiser W ilhelm G old-Fields, are within his dominions. T he
whole o f his country in the neighbourhood o f the Lower M azoe
and the Ruenya, none o f which has ever been visited by a white
man, will also probably prove to be auriferous. A large portion
o f M otoko’s country lies at an altitude o f about four thousand
404 T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A ch. xxm
feet above sea-level, and seems very fertile. His people are
wonderfully well supplied with all kinds of vegetable food, and
in no part of the country have I seen such fine rice as is here
grown, of very large grain and beautifully white. The Mabudja
people are entirely different in appearance, manners, and dis
position from all the other tribes inhabiting the British South
Africa Company’s territory in Mashunaland. Physically they
are a fine race, and in disposition they are undoubtedly
warlike and ferocious. From what I saw and heard I feel sure
that Motoko could muster at least five thousand fighting men,
and in a short space of time.
The language they speak is merely a dialect of the language
spoken by all the other tribes in this part of South-Eastern
Africa. Motoko’s country has been constantly raided by the
Abagaza, with whom they say they used to have periodical
encounters ; but the majority of them do not even know the
name of Lo Bengula or the Amandibili, which is not very
surprising, considering that no impi of Lo Bengula has ever
penetrated to within several days’ journey of even the western
border of Motoko’s country.
U mtali Valley.
CHAPTER XXIV
Travel from M otoko’s country to U m tali— Find the Odzi river impassable— Resolve
to set about cutting a new road to Salisbury— Freedom from sickness— The
right sort o f men— Mr. Armstrong and Mr. Coope— Reach Salisbury— Rumours
of wars— Leave again for M anica— Reach Um tali after the fight is over—
Account o f the attack on Captain H eym an’s position by the Portuguese— Start
for Um liwan’s — Arrival there— Visit the Revui river in search of hippo
potami— H orses attacked by tse-tse flies— Return to U m tali— Ox killed by
lions— N igh t adventure with five lions— Account of my various employments
during a year’s service with the British South Africa Company— Lion shot—
Elephant shot— Return to England.
Ba t h in g in t h e P ungwi R iv e r .
hills, covered with forest and dense u n d ergrow th; below lay a
valley, intersected by tw o streams, stretching up to a high
range o f hills som e three miles distant. T he w aggon track
crossed the nearest stream — a little deep ravine, with steep
banks and small pools o f water— about one hundred and fifty
yards below our camp, and here there was an open space of
ground som e two hundred yards square, but everywhere else the
country was covered with dense bush, or with grass seven or
eight feet long— an im possible country in which to h u n t
On 8th June the em pty waggons had not y et com e up from
U m liw an ’s, and I was utterly weary o f the m onotony o f the
enforced delay in a country where, ow ing to the density o f the
bush and the length o f the grass, it was im possible at that tim e
o f the year to m ove out o f the native footpaths. On this
evening w e saw for the first tim e the new moon, which soon
sank behind the range o f hills to the west. Before turning in
I looked round the camp, and saw that the oxen were all
lyin g close up round the waggon, entirely surrounding the
horses, which were fastened, as usual, to the wheels. A rm strong
lay in the afterpart o f the w aggon, I in the front. T he Kafirs
sm oked “ dacha,” and were as noisy and talkative as usual, but
at length everything was quiet.
A b ou t four o ’clock in the morning— som e two hours before
dayligh t— I was awakened suddenly b y the noise o f a stam
pede am ongst the cattle. In an instant Arm strong was out o f
the waggon and round at the horses’ heads, and I followed as
quickly as possible. T w o o f the horses were still lying down,
and the panic that had seized the oxen had evidently not
affected them, but not a single o x was to be seen near the
waggon. T he Kafirs were now throw ing fire-sticks in all
directions, and calling out “ Shumba, shum ba ! ” (lions, lions !).
E verything was, however, perfectly still. T he frightened oxen
m ust have m ade a rush, and then stood listening. My
Zulu driver now fired tw o shots into the bush above the camp,
and said he could see a lion, but as the night was absolutely
dark I do not think he could possibly have seen anything.
T h e Kafirs had by this tim e all got blazing torches o f long
grass, which lighted up our little cam p but only rendered the
surrounding darkness the more intense. Suddenly the silence
X XI V O X K IL L E D B Y L IO N S 413
was again disturbed by the sound o f the tram pling and rushing
o f the oxen, as, mad with fear, they crashed through the
underwood towards the open ground to our right, each panic-
stricken beast no doubt believing that it was a case o f “ the
devil take the hindm ost.” A nd so it was, for before they had run
one hundred yards the lions had got hold o f one (presumably
the hindm ost), and the poor brute’s agonised bellowings echoed
and re-echoed from hill to hill across the narrow valley. I
would that that distinguished naturalist, Mr. A. R. W allace,
could hear the piteous cries o f an o x being slow ly bitten to
death by lions, or o f a donkey being vivisected by hyaenas.
Such cries are terrible to listen to, and revealing, as they but
too surely do, the frenzy o f fear and agony o f a d yin g brute,
are a powerful appeal against the cold cruelty o f nature’s in
exorable laws.
M y driver and I, accom panied by som e o f the Kafirs carry
ing torches o f blazing grass, now ran down to where the o x
was bellowing', and com ing pretty close to it must have scared
off the lions, one o f which growled, though none showed them
selves within the circle o f light. I think we must have
frightened them off, as the o x broke aw ay from them and
rushed down towards the stream. H e was soon caught again,
and bellowed terribly, poor b r u te ; but the lions did their
butcher’s work without uttering a growl ; th ey were several
minutes k illing him. T he loud bellow ings at length died
away in low moans, then everything was once more still.
W hen the o x was caught the second tim e I made no further
attem pt at a rescue, as I wanted to get a shot at the lions, and
judged that the less th ey were disturbed the better m y chance
would be o f finding them at d a y lig h t; and, for another thing,
had they been driven off* the o x th ey had already maimed,
they would most certainly have followed up the herd and
killed another.
There was now nothing for it, after having made up the
fires and put double “ reims ” 1 on the horses, but to wait for
dawn. T h e lions were singularly quiet, although every now
and again we could hear them crunching the bones o f their
victim. A t length the partridges began to call, and a faint
1 Raw hide thongs, with which horses are tied to a waggon wheel or a tree at night.
414 TRAVEL AN D AD VEN TU RE I N A F R IC A CHAP.
excessively thick, and I felt sure the lions were still close
at hand, very likely w atching us. I now slipped Tiger,
encouraging him to take the spoor into the bush. But the
dog was evidently cowed and frightened, and proved him
self utterly useless, as were also the other two. A ll this tim e
we were beating the bush round about the carcase. A t this
tim e the lions were close to us, as one o f them gave a loud
growl not far in front o f m yself, to the left o f the road, and
another close to A rm strong and the driver, in the bush on the
other side o f it. T he covert was, however, too dense to allow
us to see anything, and the d og in whom I had put m y trust
would not run in and bay the lion. Once or twice he barked,
and then cam e running back to us, but on these occasions I
think he had no clear idea o f w hy he was barking. Oh for
one short hour o f R uby and Punch, and the rest o f the pack
that had formed part o f m y old hunting o u t f i t ! Then, indeed,
had I told a different tale of this m orning’s work. A s it was.
we soon had to give up all hope o f com ing to conclusions with
the lions, for after the two growls above referred to we heard
nothing more o f them ; and the density o f the covert rendered
all further pursuit useless. So, in no very good humour, we
returned to the waggon w ithout having fired a shot.
T he fire which had cleared the grass off to the left front of
the waggon had crossed the stream just above the road and
burnt an open place just round the patch o f bush in which one
o f the lions had growled at Arm strong and m y driver. On our
arrival at the waggon, which was not more than two hundred
yards from the carcase o f the ox, our Kafirs, none o f whom had
accom panied us, told us they had seen four lions break across
this piece o f open ground and enter the bush beyond. From
know ledge gained later I think there were five lions— a large
male, two large females, and two younger females, not quite
full grown ; and as the Kafirs did not seem clear as to whether
any o f the lions th ey saw were m ales or not, I think these four
animals were the females, and that the old lion must have been
by himself, and was probably the one that growled near me.
H e must then have gone round in the bush and joined the
others beyond the open ground. I now saddled up m y horse,
and rode into the bush on the track o f the lions, which I could
4i6 TRAVEL A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A CHAP.
have got its paw betw een two o f them and pulled them out
at any mom ent, and then, by pushing its head and shoulders
through, would have infallibly overturned the whole structure.
T o prevent such a consum m ation I now pushed the m uzzle
o f m y rifle between the poles, just where m y ears told me
m y w ou ld -b e interviewer was m oving them, and, pointing it
upwards, holding the stock on the ground, pulled the trigger.
Once more, and for the third tim e that night, the report o f
the rifle was answered by the m ost terrific grunting roars it is
possible to conceive, uttered, as th ey were, within six feet o f
our ears. I am sorry I had not a phonograph with me in
order to preserve these powerful expressions o f the feelings of
a wounded lion. Suddenly released in a London drawing
room, I feel sure th ey could not fail to produce a very marked
effect. W ell, the exp an din g Metford bullet, received at such
close quarters, must have given the lion a very nasty jar. I
fancy that it fell over, and was rolling on the ground when
Arm strong fired through another opening at the sound o f the
roars. W hether this second bullet hit it or not I cannot say,
but im m ediately after the shot the wounded beast, still grunting
loudly, made a rush through the bushes behind the hut to the
edge o f the bank above the stream, which was quite pre
cipitous, and then fell headlong with a loud splash right into
a shallow pool o f water. H ere it lay for som e tim e splashing
the water slightly— by m oving its tail, I fancy— and m oaning
in a w ay that made us feel very h a p p y ; for no one who
heard it could have im agined there was half an hour’s life left
in the beast. W e thought we had got three lions in about
five minutes, and felt very pleased with ourselves. T here
were two more about, I knew, but I had very little fear o f
another attack, and very slight hopes o f getting another shot,
as I imagined, after the misfortunes o f their relatives, the
remainder o f the fam ily would m ove ofif.
W e now spread our blankets and lay down— not to sleep,
but in order to keep our vigil with the greatest possible com
fort. From this tim e until about m idnight we were several
tim es disturbed b y an anim al sniffing round th e back o f our
hut. It never cam e on to the road in front o f our shooting
holes, and we could never see anything through the poles at
XXIV A N I G H T W I T H L IO N S 421
A S lumbering L ion.
lessly from the ground and looked out o f our shooting holes,
but could see nothing. It very soon becam e evident, how
ever, that there were two lions, as every now and again one—
which, I think, was the big m ale o f the party— gave a m ost
prodigious snarl at its comrade. T hese lions, it m ust be
remembered, were less than ten yards from the m uzzles o f our
rifles; y et so intense was the darkness that we could see
absolutely nothing. One m ight just as well have held on e’s
face in a basin o f ink and endeavoured to read the future o f
Mashunaland. A nd now for hours these lions lay, “ so near
and y e t so far,” tearing at the m eaty portions o f the carcase,
and crunching up the breast bones and the ends o f the ribs.
E very now and again th ey would rest from feeding and then
lay breathing with a loud blow ing noise ; then the tearing
and crunching would recommence. E very now and again
the big lion, as I guessed, would awake the echoes o f the
night with a loud grunting snarl, to which the dogs at the
w aggon always replied with angry barkings.
It would be supposed that to lie thus in the wilds o f Africa,
within ten yards o f a couple o f lions feeding noisily,-and som e
tim es snarling loudly, would be a sufficiently novel experience
to keep one awake ; yet to show how “ fam iliarity breeds con
tem pt,” I m ay mention that I twice had to wake m y young
com panion, and tell him not to snore, as the noise m ight
disturb the lions. A nd now over and over again I looked
and looked towards where the lions were feeding, until m y
eyes ached, but in vain. Several tim es I thought o f firing at
the sound. H owever, as lions feeding at a carcase are nearly
always lying down, and as in the present instance they m ight
have been on the farther side, there was only a chance of
hitting, and on ly a small chance o f m ortally wounding, one
o f them. A fter som e doubt I resolved to wait, in the hope
that they would remain until the first streak o f dawn. Being
so near, I only wanted light enough to see the lions, and could
have dispensed with the necessity o f looking at the sights o f
m y rifle. T he veriest trifle o f moon would have sufficed, or
even a decent sh o o tin g -sta r; but the darkness that fell upon
E gy p t could not have been more intense than the unfathom
able gloom o f this African night.
X XI V A N IG H T W IT H L IO N S 423
Slow ly, very slow ly, the night wore on, and still the lions
munched and crunched and the darkness held. A n d now
hyaenas com m enced to howl around, apparently answering one
another. There is som ething so weird and wild in the varied
cries o f the African laughing hyaena when m eat is about that
I have ever loved to listen to them. N o wonder this animal
is so intim ately connected with all the superstitions o f the
Kafir tribes o f South Africa. A b ou t an hour before d ay
break the lions com m enced to drag the remains o f the carcase
through the bush beyond the w aggon track, and shortly after
wards th ey suddenly left it— so suddenly indeed that it seem ed
as if som ething had startled them , as they m ade a regular rush
through the bush, tram pling loudly on the m ahobo-hobo leaves.
T o this day I am at a loss to understand w hy they retired in
such haste, as the whole night through th ey had treated the
barking o f the dogs and the talking o f the Kafirs at the
w aggon with the m ost sublim e contem pt. H owever, th ey were
gone, and all chance o f a shot at them was gone too, as the
surrounding cover was so thick as to render it alm ost im pos
sible to g et a sight o f them in the morning.
A little before the lions left the carcase, the animal that
had tried to get into our hut, and which w e thought had been
lyin g dead for som e hours, com m enced to groan again, and then,
m oaning all the time, evidently crawled out o f the stream, and
m oving slow ly through the bush at the back o f the hut, passed
close to where its com rades were m unching at the remains of
the carcase. It then cam e slow ly back towards the stream,
and then the m oaning ceased. T h ese groans and moans had
no effect on the lions at the carcase ; th ey ate aw ay the whole
time, undisturbed by the thought o f their tw o dead comrades
lying stiff and stark within a few yards o f them, or by the
piteous moans o f the rem aining member o f their fam ily which
was evidently in a d ying condition. Truly th ey possessed two
requisites o f terrestrial happiness— a good appetite and no
conscience.
A t last the day began to break, and a cold gray dawn revealed
to us that the whole valley in which we were was enveloped in a
dense mist, so dense indeed that the rosy flush in the eastern
sk y that usually heralds the approach o f light had been entirely
424 TRAVEL AN D A D V E N T U R E IN A F R IC A CHAP.
1 A s I have lately been accused of slaughtering gam e for sport, I w ill take this
opportunity of saying that d uring this journey, though I walked for days amongst
innum erable herds of w ild anim als, I only fired away twelve cartridges from the d ay
I left Salisb u ry until the date of m y return there, and that, as is m y usual practice, I
never fired a shot except for the purpose of supp lying m yself and m y party with meat.
XXIV RETURN TO C A P E TOW N 427
October m y last elephant, a splendid old bull with tusks w eigh
ing 108 lbs. the pair. On 19th October I left Beira for Cape
Town, and after a visit to the Transvaal started for England,
where I landed once more, safe and sound, on 17th Decem ber
1892.
CHAPTER XXV
Remarks concerning the relative merits of large and small bore rifles—
Some hunting reminiscences
the elephants he had lost, after firing m any shots into them
with heavy sm ooth-bore guns. On the other hand, I remember
Jan E ngelbrecht, a son o f old Michael Engelbrecht, telling m e
quite a different experience. H e happened to be at Mr.
Collison’s waggon one day without a heavy rifle, when a herd
o f elephants was sighted close at hand. Mr. Collison lent
Jan a horse and one o f his own rifles, a double 500-bore, by
H olland and H olland, the w ell-known firm o f Bond Street.
Jan E ngelbrecht o f course used heavy solid bullets, and he
killed four good elephants. In describing the incident to me
afterwards, and tellin g me how surprised he was at killing
the elephants so easily with a sm all-bore rifle, he concluded by
saying, “ Mijn m agthet, nooit zaal ik wieder en groet roer en
mijn hand vaat ” (“ B y jove, Til never take a big gun in m y
hand again ”). N ow Jan E ngelbrecht was born and brought up
in the hunting veld, and had been shooting elephants all his
life with large sm ooth-bore guns, and would never have thought
o f trying a small-bore if he had had his own old “ roer ” ; but
the one experim ent converted him. H owever, I will content
m yself by saying that to m y mind it has been clearly proved
that elephants can be killed w ithout any great difficulty with
450-bore rifles, provided long, heavy, solid bullets are used.
But to the professional elephant-hunter I say, give yourself
every chance, and take the heaviest rifle you can stand up to
for shots in dense bush, and when you cannot get a fair shot at
a vital part. A s for buffaloes, which are acknowledged by Sir
Sam uel Baker and other writers to be excessively tenacious o f
life, th ey are easily killed with a 450-bore rifle. D uring the
past two years, 1891 and 1892, som e hundreds o f buffaloes
have been killed on the Low er Pungw i river, near Beira.
Q uite nine out of every ten o f these have been killed with
sporting M artini-H enry rifles, which are o f course o f 450-bore.
Som e years ago at the U m fuli river, in Mashunaland, a
young Free State Boer named M ontgom ery, who was shooting
for hides, killed sixteen buffaloes out o f a herd with the sam e
kind o f rifle. T hese facts, I think, speak for them selves. Y ou
can kill anything that w alks this earth with a 450-bore
Metford rifle, by Gibbs o f Bristol, or with a good rifle o f
the .sam e bore by any other good maker. H aving used
X XV M E R IT S O F D IF F E R E N T R IF L E S 431
Gibbs’s Metford rifles for the last tw elve years with the
m ost com plete satisfaction to myself, I naturally swear by
Gibbs ; but I have o f course seen m any other splendid rifles
by other makers, notably by R igby, and H olland and Holland.
N aturally every one believes in the weapon that has done him
good service. M y friend Cornelis van R ooyen, who is as
good a hunter as South Africa can produce, and a right good
fellow to boot, uses nothing but a double 500-bore rifle, by
H olland and H olland, which was given him som e years
ago by his friend and com panion, the late Mr. H. C. Collison.
W ith this rifle he has shot every kind o f gam e in Africa, from
a steinbuck to an elephant, and he will not believe that the
world can produce its equal, though he acknow ledges that m y
Metford is a good little weapon in its way.
Should any o f m y readers, acting on m y advice, determine
to try a 450-bore rifle, let them be very careful about the
kind o f bullets they use. For large gam e, as I have already
said, you want a long, heavy, solid bullet, and for large
antelopes and lions the best kind o f bullet is one w eighing
about 360 grains, w ith a sm all hollow at the point, good
thick walls round the hollow part, and a heavy solid end.
Such a bullet will mushroom on striking an animal, but
will also have great penetrating power. T he small, light
E xpress bullets, with scarcely any base, a large hollow in
the point, and thin walls, are useless for anything but very
sm all animals, as, being driven at an im m ense velocity
by a heavy charge o f powder, th ey break all to pieces on
impact, and m erely inflict surface wounds on such animals as
the larger African antelopes. T hese are the projectiles which
Sir Sam uel Baker, in his m ost interesting and useful book,
W ild B ea sts a n d th e ir W a ys , condem ns in such unqualified
terms, and I am quite o f his opinion concerning them ; but the
bullets used in such a rifle as Mr. Gibbs’s 461 -Metford, taking
the No. 2 cartridge, have a very different effect. T hese 461 -
bore rifles shoot either a 570-grain bullet propelled by 80
grains o f powder, or a 360-grain exp an din g bullet with a small
hollow at the point, propelled by 100 grains o f powder.
In conclusion, I do not say that a man who happened to
get killed through failing to stop the charge of a wounded
43 2 TRAVEL AN D A D VE N T U R E IN A FR IC A CHAP.
left hand, I leant out as far as possible and awaited the onset.
When he was very near me— so close indeed as to preclude
the possibility of his being able to swerve and pass on the
other side of the tree— I pulled my body with a sudden jerk up
to and beyond the stem, and, shooting past the buffalo’s hind
quarters, ran as hard as ever I could to another tree standing
in the direction from which he had come. I knew that by
this manœuvre I should gain a good deal of ground, as, even
if my adversary had followed me, the pace at which he was
going was such that he would not have been able to turn till he
had got some way past the tree where I had given him the
slip. Had he come round after me I should have now climbed
for it ; but, as I expected, when I dodged from under his very
nose and shot past behind him he lost me entirely and ran
straight on. He did not, however, go far, but stopped and lay
down, and I killed him with another bullet. On examining
him I found that the shot I had fired at him as he was
charging had struck him in the gristle of the nose (which was,
of course, outstretched, as it always is when a buffalo charges),
and, passing through the back of his tongue, had entered his
vitals and inflicted a mortal wound from which he would soon
have died without another shot.
As with the African elephant, so with the buffalo it is
almost impossible to kill either the one or the other with a
shot in the front of the head when charging, owing to the
position in which the head is then held, though both may be
easily killed by a shot in the front of the head when standing
at rest.
In 1879, when hunting near Linyanti, on the eastern bank
of the Chobi, I took a stroll from camp one evening with
my gun carrier and wounded a buffalo bull, which I followed
through some rather open bush. I sighted him several times,
but as the bush was by no means thick, he always saw me
coming on, and galloped off before I got within shot At
length the covert grew denser, and on the edge of an open
valley became very thick indeed. Here I took my rifle and
followed the spoor myself slowly and cautiously. However,
the wounded animal went right through the bush into the open,
so I handed the rifle back to my boy, and told him to take
XXV A NARRO W E SC A P E 435
B la ck R h in o c e r o s D r in k in g .
left, one of the young bulls remaining with the big one I
wanted. Very soon these two again separated, and I was left
alone with the biggest bull.
We were now going down a gentle slope, still very thickly
covered with bush; but I knew that we should soon emerge
upon one of the open valleys between the wooded hills, and,
once there, the koodoo bull would have been mine. However,
it was not to be. Suddenly I came upon a row of open
pitfalls, old ones certainly, but still pretty deep, and some
eight or ten feet long. I nearly went into one, but just missed
doing so, and, thinking the danger past, stuck the spurs in
and pushed my pony to his greatest speed in order to get
close up to the koodoo, and have a shot at him as soon as he
got into the open. Suddenly I found myself on the edge of
another row of pitfalls, and on the very brink of one, at which
I was going obliquely and at full speed. It was impossible to
wrench the pony’s head round and pass the pitfall, as I had
done before. We were too near before I saw it, and the only
thing was to stick the spurs in and hope my horse would
jump. However, an African hunting-horse, though he will
usually jump well at timber, will seldom negotiate an open
ditch, and on this occasion my pony went full tilt right into
the pitfall and the next instant I was on the other side of it
with the saddle. The pace at which he was going had carried
him the whole length of the pitfall, the opposite end of which
he had struck with his chest with great violence and then
fallen back into it, I myself going on with the saddle oyer his
head. I could see at once that the poor brute’s back was
broken, though he was still alive.
A s soon as Jameson came up with the Kafirs we got him
out of the hole, and I at once shot him. We then cut him
open and found that the backbone was broken, one rib broken
off close up to the vertebrae and two more forced out of their
sockets— altogether a pretty good smash. I myself had hurt
my foot, which must have got in between the horse’s chest
and the side of the pitfall, and strained some of the tendons so
that I could not walk for some three weeks afterwards.
On 4th October 1880 I rode out from my camp on the
Umfuli river, Mashunaland, and crossing the Lundaza, one of
XXV ELAN D -SH O OTIN G 43 9
its tributaries, came across a herd of elands, and shot the two
bulls. I had a lot of Kafirs with me, so that I was able to
carry nearly all the meat back to camp, and bushed up the
remainder, including the necks, heads, and skins, to be fetched
on the morrow. The next day I rode back with my boys to
our cache, thinking I might possibly find a lion there; but
nothing had been touched, so, sending the Kafirs back to camp
with the skins and heads and all the meat that was left, I took a
round by myself, hoping to come across ostriches, the feathers
of which giant birds were then valuable. I had not ridden a
couple of miles after leaving my boys when I came upon a herd
of some sixty or seventy elands, with three enormous old bulls
amongst them. An eland bull is not an animal that an African
hunter likes to pass by, as the fat that can be obtained in large
quantities from one in good condition is most useful in cooking
the dry meat of the smaller antelopes. However, to have shot
one there and then would have been to have destroyed a
magnificent beast for the benefit of the vultures, which would have
devoured the carcase before I could have brought boys from
camp to cut up the meat. After a little thought, and seeing
the direction the elands took as they trotted away, I determined
to drive the biggest bull out of the herd and try to take him to
our camp on the Umfuli. With this intention I galloped up
to the herd, and was soon close behind an immense old bull.
But few people in England probably have any idea what a
magnificent animal an eland bull really is. That the bull now
in the Gardens of the Zoological Society is not equal in size to
a large wild specimen may be at once seen by comparing him with
the animal now on view in the Mammalia Gallery of the Natural
History Museum at Kensington. However, the bull about which
I was talking, in spite of his great weight and size, went off at
once into a springing gallop, which kept him in front of my horse
for half a mile or so, when he broke into a trot, and I came
alongside and took him away from the herd. He then made a
fresh spurt, but this time could not keep it up for more than two
hundred yards, and after that never broke from his trot again.
As he had headed of his own accord for my camp, I had little
difficulty in keeping him to the right course, and had only to
be careful not to press him too hard, as in that case a tired eland
440 TRAVE L AN D AD VE N T U R E IN A FR IC A CHAP.
bull will stop and refuse to go any farther. The country being
very open, I let my splendid victim trot quietly on some two
hundred yards in front of me, the foam flying in flakes from his
mouth, and besmirching his broad chest and low hanging
dewlap. We soon reached the Lundaza, the banks of which
are high and steep, so, being afraid that if he saw me near him
he would stand in the water and refuse to go any farther, I held
in to give him time to pass it, but then galloped down as hard
as I could, as there were some wooded ridges just beyond in
which I might easily have lost him if he had got too far ahead.
A s I reached the river I did not see him, and thought he had
walked down the bed of the stream, and so continued to canter
along the bank.
Thinking he might possibly have gone up stream, I turned
in the saddle to look behind me, but without checking the
horse. Not seeing the eland, I brought my head round again,
and got a fearful blow in the right eye from the point of the
overhanging branch of a dead tree under which my horse had
taken me. The blow half stunned me and knocked me right
out of the saddle on to my horse’s quarters. A t once checking
him, I regained my seat, and putting my hand up to my eye,
which was closed, found I was bleeding pretty freely. A t the
same time I felt very sick, but saw with my left eye the eland
bull trotting away about two hundred yards off on the other
side of the river, and still making straight for our camp. I at
once got my horse down the bank, crossed the stream, and was
soon once more close behind the eland. I felt very sick, but as our
camp was now not more than two miles off, and he was going
straight to it of his own accord, I determined to try to get him in.
He went steadily on till within five hundred yards, when I think he
must have winded something, as he suddenly stopped and would
not go a step farther. Feeling that I should soon faint, I dis
mounted and, looking at the eland with my left eye, raised my
rifle and sent a bullet through his lungs, and then remounting
galloped into camp, where there were several Europeans. Mr.
Tainton went out with Kafirs and got in the eland meat, and
Mr. Ronkesley and my old friend Mr. Thomas Ayres, the well-
known South African ornithologist, looked after me. I must
have had concussion of the brain, as I became half unconscious
XX V A SERIOUS ACC I D EN I 441
and vomited up everything that they gave me, even tea, so they
got frightened, and the following morning sent boys to call Dr.
Crook, who was hunting with Mr. J. S. Jameson at the distance
of a day’s journey to the north. As soon as the message
reached them they most kindly came to my assistance, though
they were having great sport with rhinoceroses, Mr. Jameson
having only the previous day shot three of these animals—
bull, cow, and half-grown calf— in one run.
Well, Dr. Crook doctored m &secundum artem , and the wound
in the corner of my eye healed up. It was, however, more
than a month before I could see properly with my right eye.
From time to time the wound opened and then healed up again,
but the Doctor could find no dead bone in it. Time went on,
and early the following year I returned to England, and one
June morning was walking down
Bond Street with Mr. Rowland
Ward, the well - known naturalist
of Piccadilly, when I began to F P W
a c s im il e o f t h e ie c e o f o o d w h ic h
L io n e s s w a t c h in g H erd o f A n t e l o p e s .
but as our scale would not weigh anything over 300 lbs.,
we found the lion was much too heavy. W e now skinned him,
leaving the head, paws, and tail in the skin ; but even then the
carcase was too heavy. We then cut off the one shoulder, and
what was left still weighed 283 lbs. ; and the shoulder, together
with the skin, with head, feet, and tail attached, weighed 100
lbs. more, giving 383 lbs. as the weight of the animal just as
he lay. This lion, though a fine massively-built animal, was
still not quite full grown, as his mane was only just commencing
to appear, and, though not in low condition, had yet not an
ounce of fat upon him. I have seen old full-grown lions very
much more bulky, and sometimes in such high condition that
their bellies were covered with a layer of fat nearly, if not quite,
XXV THE W EIGH T OF LION S 445
an inch thick, and I feel sure that such lions must have weighed
very much more than the young animal whose weight I have
recorded. In fact, I now believe that a large full-grown South
African lion, when in high condition, will weigh from 400 to
500 lbs.1 Dr. Livingstone, amongst other unfairly depreciative
remarks concerning the lion, speaks of him as “ somewhat larger
than the biggest dog.”
In the evening, finding that my best dog, Punch (a grand
son of the Punch previously mentioned, and a rare good dog
with a lion), was absent, I made inquiries about him, and heard
from one of my boys that he had been shot by accident while
engaged in baying the lions, and that he had been seen lying
under a bush close to where the first lioness was killed. A s
it was already getting dark before I found this out, I could
do nothing that evening, but at daylight the next morning,
saddling up a horse and taking the boy with me who had last
seen him, I went to look for my poor old dog. However, we
could find no traces of him whatever, although, owing to the
previous day’s heavy rain, the ground was everywhere soft and
muddy, and it was impossible to miss the spoor of anything
that had passed after the rain had ceased to fall. After look
ing in vain for some trace of the poor animal whose pluck and
devotion to duty had cost him his life, we came round to the
large thorn-tree beneath which we had skinned the lioness, and
at once saw that the carcase was gone, and on examining the
ground found that it had been dragged away by two more
lions during the night. The footprints, which were very plainly
discernible in the'soft ground, were those of a large animal,
probably an old lioness, and a half-grown cub.
After following the trail for some little distance, and find
ing that the carcase was being dragged to the wooded ridge
where we had shot the last lion, I galloped back to camp to
call my friends and get the dogs, without whose help I knew
that we should have had but little chance of killing the lions,
or even sighting them at all in the thick forest that backed the
rocky ridges. My friends did not take long to saddle up, and
we were soon back again with all the dogs and Kafirs, and at
1 S i n c e w r i t i n g t h e a b o v e I h a v e w e i g h e d a n o t h e r l a r g e l i o n , a n d f o u n d t h a t it t u r n e d
th e s c a le a t 4 0 8 lb s .
446 TRAVE L AN D AD VE N T U R E IN AFR IC A CHAP.
once took up the spoor. The carcase had been dragged right
amongst the trees on the edge of the rocky ground, and there
partially devoured, all the meat of the hind quarters having been
torn from the bones. This is the only case that has actually
come under my notice of lions feeding upon the flesh of their
own kind, but it is one that admits of no doubt whatever,
and I have heard of other instances of the same kind.
Although we had seen nothing of the lions on approaching
across the open, I felt sure that they had seen us, and had only
just moved off, as their scent was so warm that the dogs
whined with excitement as they sniffed about round the
carcase. Very soon old Ruby and her daughter Fanny got
the spoor away, and, followed by the rest of the pack, took it
up at such a pace that we had all our work to do to keep
them in sight amongst the thickly-growing trees. W e had not
far to go, however, for soon a few sharp barks, quickly followed
by the deep-toned growls of an angry lion, let us know that
our quarry was at bay, and almost immediately we sighted a
fine old lioness standing on a large block of stone amongst the
trees, with our whole pack yelping round her. Cooper, who,
despite his bad foot, had this morning joined the hunt, was the
first up, and, dismounting quickly, at once gave the beautiful
though dangerous beast a shot in the middle of the chest with
a 500-bore Winchester, which, passing through her heart,
killed her almost instantaneously, as she just gave one sweep
with her tail and came tumbling head foremost off the rock,
and never stirred from where she lay on the ground at its foot.
A s the shot was fired poor old Ruby, mad with excitement,
rushed in, and was just in time to get a severe bite in the hind
quarters, the last expiring effort of the dying lioness. This
was a very fine animal, very thick-set and heavy, and with a
very good coat. O f the half-grown cub that must have been
somewhere about we could see nothing, but as he was a young
animal we did not bother much about him. I had to have
poor Ruby carried home. She had four nasty holes through
the fleshy parts of her hind quarters, but no bones were broken,
and as I had the wounds washed out with strong carbolic
lotion, they soon healed, and the old dog was all right again in
a month’s time.
XXV D E A T H OF ME. C LAR KSO N 447
as she stood with her eyes intently fixed upon us. Seeing
that there was no time to be lost, French then fired at the
heifer, and, striking her on the point of the shoulder, brought
her bellowing to the ground. A t the report every buffalo
wheeled round with astonishing quickness, and the whole herd
dashed off, enshrouded in a dense cloud of dust.
Directly my friend fired, I put a bullet into another cow
just as she turned, but it failed to stop her. Leaving French
to administer the coup de grâce to his animal, I ran on after the
herd. A s is usual in such cases, the foremost buffaloes, not
knowing what the deuce was the matter, very soon pulled up,
compelling those behind to follow their example, and the whole
herd thus stood crowded together in a compact mass, the
rearmost animals all looking anxiously towards where I stood.
Being within fifty yards of them, I might have picked my
animal ; but as I felt sure that by following its blood-spoor I
should get the one I had already wounded, and as I could not
see a bull with a very fine pair of horns, I did not fire, but
waited until the herd again took to flight— about which they
were most expeditious. Then I went to look for the spoor of
my wounded cow. W e soon found it, and as the blood was
flowing freely, had no difficulty in following it at a good round
pace. The wounded beast soon left the herd, and, as its track
was still bespattered with its gore, I had no doubt we should
very soon overhaul it ; in point of fact, a minute or two later
we saw it walking slowly along with lowered head. Not thinking
it had much strength left, I ran towards it without any attempt
at concealment. I had reckoned without my host, however,
for the buffalo turned and saw me before I was well within shot,
and, sorely wounded though she was, after eyeing me for a
second, the blood streaming from her nostrils, dashed off again
at a gallop, as if unhurt. I might have given her a shot from
behind, but I knew she was mine and determined not to waste
cartridges unnecessarily. After trotting along for another
quarter of a mile on her spoor we saw her again, walking very
slowly, and at the same instant sighted two old buffalo bulls
standing a little to one side of her. The wounded animal did
not pay any attention to them, but held slowly and dejectedly
on her way. The old bulls must, I fancy, have smelt the blood
46 o TRAVEL AN D A D V E N T U R E IN A F R IC A CHAP.
as she passed, for, stretching out their noses, they came trotting
straight towards where we stood.
Ever since a buffalo bull once killed a favourite horse of
mine I must confess to having nourished a spite against these
old fellows, and as I knew that the meat would be most
welcome to the Makubas living on the river, I prepared to give
the two patriarchs a warm reception. When they were about
eighty yards off they halted, and one of them, turning broad
side to me, stood looking in the direction taken by the cow.
This was my opportunity, and in another instant a bullet from
my single i o-bore struck him fair in the shoulder, and brought
him to his knees. His comrade, after staring for a few
moments towards me, came running obliquely past at a heavy
lumbering gallop. I just got another cartridge in in time, and
firing when he was a little past me, caught him on the ribs
high behind the shoulder. The one first hit had recovered his
legs, and made off for a short distance, but now stood beneath
a small thorn-tree, and I saw that his hours were numbered.
A t this instant the death bellow— so well known to every
sportsman who has shot the African buffalo— of the second
bull greeted my ears, and, running towards the sound, I found
the great beast stretched upon the ground, and upon the point
of expiring. My bullet had struck him high up, about a foot
behind the shoulder, and gone through both lungs. He had
nevertheless managed to run nearly three hundred yards before
falling. Hastily cutting out his tongue and opening him, we
returned to the one first hit. He was still standing, but, just
as we neared him, he lay down and commenced to bellow.
Upon our approaching he tried to rise, but had not the strength
to do so, and we despatched him with assegais. Leaving two
of the Kafirs who were with me to cut out the tongue and
remove the intestines— in order that the meat should not go
bad during the night— I went on with the rest, and again took
up the spoor of the wounded cow, as I felt sure she had not
gone very far. Nor was I mistaken, for in less than five
minutes we came upon her lying down. She jumped up when
she saw us, but I was then close to her, and killed her with a
shot through the heart.
It was now quite late, the sun having been some time down,
XXVI F A T H E R S L A W AN D W EH L 461
so, after cutting out the tongue and stomach, as we had done
with the bulls, and trusting that the lions and hyaenas would
not smell out and devour the carcases during the night, I
hurried back to where I had left my friend. As he and his
Kafirs had already cut up his buffalo— a nice fat young cow—
and were only waiting for me to start for the river, we set off
at once, and reached our camp soon after dusk. The pot of
hippopotamus soup which we had put on the fire before
starting in the morning turned out a great success, and off it
and some fat juicy buffalo steaks we made a most excellent
supper.
Early next morning I sent one of my Kafirs to call the
Makubas from the neighbouring village, and show them where
the buffaloes lay. They turned out en masse— men, women,
and children— overjoyed at the prospect of such a feast. I
went with them, hoping I might find lions at one of the car
cases. However, we found them untouched. I gave the
Makubas the two bulls, just as they were, and they also got all
but the choicest parts of the cow, which my boys and I kept
for ourselves.
Having in the foregoing pages given an account of a few
days’ sport on the River Chobi, north of the Sunta outlet,
which will give an idea of what that part of the country was
like some fourteen years ago, let me now transport my
readers once more to the well-watered and well-wooded slopes
of North-Western Mashunaland.
Early in June 1880, in company with Collison, Jameson,
and Dr. Crook, I left Bulawayo. Our intention was to travel
steadily on to the River Umfuli (about three weeks’ journey to
the north-west) and there form a central camp, from which we
could make hunting expeditions in various directions during
the continuance of the dry season.
A t Inyati we were joined by Fathers Law and Wehl,
members of the Society of Jesus, who were on their way to
Umzila’s country to found a mission station. These gentlemen
travelled with us as far as the River Umniati, where we
separated with mutual good wishes for one another’s success,
their route lying to the south-east, whilst ours lay to the
north-east. Space will not allow me to do anything more
462 TRAVEL AN D A D VEN TU RE IN A F R IC A CHAP.
hen bird as she was returning to the nest just at sunset. She
was in very good plumage, and worth about ;£io, the feathers
of a fine cock being worth about £ 2 5 at that time. The next
day we sent some Kafirs back for the eggs, of which we
afterwards made some very good omelettes and pancakes.
After this something or other fell to our rifles almost
daily— water-bucks, koodoos, sable antelopes, tsessebes, and
zebras being the game most frequently met with. Our mode
of travelling was as follows :— A t daylight every morning we
saddled up our horses, and, after having seen the bullocks in-
spanned, and the waggons started, rode out in search of game,
returning to the waggon track in three or four hours, by which
time we usually found the waggons outspanned and breakfast
ready. In the afternoon we made a second trek with the
waggons, and took another round on horseback, outspanning
sufficiently early to allow time to form a camp and give the
bullocks an opportunity of filling themselves before they were
tied.up for the night. Collison, Jameson, and myself always
slept in an open “ scherm,” in front of the bullocks, with a
roaring wood-fire at our feet, for the nights were very cold.
On 24th June, just before reaching the River Umgezi, I had
the luck to shoot a lion. On the morning of that day Jameson
and I had ridden out early as usual, and having made a round,
were nearing the River Umgezi, where we expected to find the
waggons already outspanned, when Jameson thought he caught
a glimpse of something running through the forest in front of
us. A s we wanted meat we at once took our rifles and
cantered forwards, and almost immediately emerged upon a
narrow open glade. Seeing no sign of any game, I thought,
as we had lost so little time, that my friend had been mistaken ;
but, as he felt sure he had seen something, I proposed that we
should separate and gallop through the next patch of forest. I
had hardly entered the bush, my friend then being a couple of
hundred yards to my right, when I saw four koodoo cows
crossing obliquely in front of me, and making, it seemed, for
the opening I had just left. With a quick wrench of the
bridle I turned my horse’s head and galloped at full speed
along the edge of the bush, so as to intercept them just as
they emerged from the forest. In this I succeeded perfectly,
464 T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A CHAP.
and was just pulling in to jump off and have a shot, as the
beautiful beasts passed out into the open at a long springing
gallop, when I caught sight of an animal following hard in their
wake, and coming along at a great pace through the bushes. I
saw instantly that it was a lion, and in the same moment of time
the beast noticed me. He instantly stopped dead, glanced
towards me for just a second of time, and then, turning about,
took himself off through the bush at an astonishing rate. I
thought no more of the koodoos. All I wanted was to possess
myself of that lion’s skin. Luckily I was very well mounted,
or he would have saved his hide. The forest was not the
easiest sort of country to gallop through, the large trees
growing pretty close together, though the underwood was
luckily not very thick. The grass, too, had not yet been
burned off, and here and there grew in large thick patches
higher than the back of a lion. For some distance I only just
managed to hold my own, sometimes indeed losing sight of
the faint-hearted king of beasts for a considerable time in
places where the grass was rather thick. But when I did so I
put the spurs into my nag, and let him out as hard as he could
go through bushes and over fallen timber until I caught sight
of the lion again.
At length I began to gain upon him. He was going along
at a heavy gallop, just like an immense dog, but did not
appear to be covering the ground so fast as was really the case.
When we now came to patches of grass I was rather afraid he
might crouch and either attack me as I passed or else break
back. However, keeping a sharp look-out, I rushed my horse
through such places at full speed. Coming suddenly to a more
open part of the forest, and when I was within fifty yards of
him, the lion pulled up, and, facing round, stood with lowered
head and open.mouth, growling savagely and switching his tail
from side to side. So suddenly did he change his tactics that,
as I was galloping.hard, I could not pull up quickly enough,
but had to swerve off and ride right past him. As I did so
he stood on the same spot, but turned as I passed him, always
keeping his head towards me. When I pulled my horse in
and was about to dismount for a shot he came walking
towards me, holding his head very low between his shoulders
XXVI A C O W A R D L Y L IO N 465
his father was at feud, and who, he said, possessed large herds
of cattle. He was only too successful in his mission, and a
few months later scores of villages, whose inhabitants had for
some years been living in peace and prosperity, were burnt to
the ground, the male inhabitants and the married women
either assegaied or dispersed over the country, their large
herds of cattle and goats driven off, and their children carried
away into captivity by a large army of the cruel and blood
thirsty marauders who own allegiance to Lo Bengula. Jugu
expressed himself as very pleased at our having killed the
lion. He said he thought that it was one that had been
haunting the Umgezi river lately, and had killed several people
journeying backwards and forwards between his father's villages
and the Matabili country. These people had been dragged
off and killed at night whilst encamped on the banks of the
river.
Seeing that our Kafirs paid him great respect, Master Jugu
commenced to put on a lot of side, asking us if we did not
know that we were in the country of the mighty wizard of
Situngweesa. When I told him that I only knew of one king,
Lo Bengula, from whom we had purchased the right to hunt
through the whole country westward of the Manyami river,
and further expressed my opinion that his father was a witch
(umtagati), he waxed very wroth, and, jumping up, poured
forth a torrent of prophetic warnings in his own language.
Presently after, having cooled down, he came and begged for
beads, calico, brass wire, anything and everything in fact for
which he knew the name in the Matabili language. He got
nothing from us, but each and every one of our boys reverently
placed a piece of meat beside him on the large rock on which
he was sitting.
One of my boys, who understood the Mashuna language,
told me afterwards that Jugu, during his oration, had said that
his father would now show Lo Bengula that the country beyond
the Umniati river belonged to him, Chameluga; that the
white men whom he had sent co hunt there should have no
sport, for he would cause the elephants and all other game to
retire before them wherever they went, so that they should
starve for want of meat; and that finally, when in disgust they
X XV I R E T U R N TO C A M P O N U P P E R U M FU LI 467
the graceful head seeming almost too small for the mighty
horns by which it was surmounted. Beneath his throat and
reaching from the jaw to the chest, a long fawn-coloured beard
waved to and fro in the breeze, whilst a mane of white hair ran
all along his back almost to his quarters. As I raised my
rifle, taking a hasty though careful aim for his shoulder, a
feeling of exultation possessed me ; for I felt that he was mine.
Imagine, then, the intensity of my disgust when the hammer
descended on the cap without exploding it. The next instant
the koodoos again bolted. I hastily re-cocked the rifle, and for
the second time aimed at the bull as he was running a little to
one side of the herd, and at about a hundred and twenty yards*
distance. The cap, however, again failed to explode; so,
throwing the cartridge out of the rifle, I pushed in a fresh one,
and remounting, again galloped in pursuit. One of the two
big bulls now left the herd, and went off by himself, making in
the direction of the river, which was about two miles distant.
I looked first at his horns, and then at those of the other old
patriarch that still kept with the cows ; but, as they appeared
equally fine in both, I pursued the latter, and very soon gave
him a shot obliquely from behind, which, entering just behind
his ribs, penetrated right into his chest. He at once left his
comrades, and cantering heavily to a small patch of bush stood
with lowered head beneath a small tree. I quickly gave him
another shot in the centre of the shoulder, and then galloped
away again at right angles, in the hope of catching sight of his
companion in one of the large openings through which I knew
he would have to pass.
I crossed in front of the herd, and galloped hard for about a
mile, edging towards the river; but, seeing nothing of him,
turned and galloped back on the other tack, and, again coming
in sight of the herd, shot one of the young bulls. I then
returned to the big bull I had first killed, and, as my Kafirs
were already there before me, at once cut off his head, and
broke him up. We then bushed up the carcase of the young
bull, as my Kafirs could not carry all the meat, and returned to
camp. I was not very well pleased with my success, for I felt
sure that, had it not been for my cartridge missing fire, I should
have killed the other old bull with my first shot, and bagged
47o T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A CHAP.
both of them. As it was, the horns of the one I did get were
a beautiful pair, very prettily twisted and perfectly even. They
measured in a straight line from point to base 3 feet 5 inches,
and round the spiral turn of the horn 5 feet 3 inches. I have
shot a koodoo bull with horns nearly five inches longer than
this, in a straight line, but never one with so much twist.
The following day I again rode out, taking a pack bullock
with me to carry the meat of the koodoo whose carcase I had
bushed up the preceding day. As lions were fairly numerous
about our camp, I cherished a hope that some of these car
nivora might have smelt it out and uncovered it, in which case
there would have been a good chance of getting a shot at one,
as it was still very early. However, my cache had been
quite undisturbed ; so, leaving a couple of boys with the pack
bullock to cut up the meat and get it back to camp, I rode on
with the rest. After a time I saw a herd of tsessebe antelopes,
but did not go after them, and a little later came across an
old wart-hog, routing up the ground in search of roots, and
got two shots at him, missing both times. I certainly ought
to have hit him, and probably should have done so, but that a
perfect hurricane of wind was blowing, which made it very
difficult to hold a light rifle steadily.
Not long after this I spied a little oribi antelope lying
down in the middle of a broad open valley from which the
grass had all been burned off. About one hundred and fifty
yards from where the graceful little animal lay stood a single
thorn-tree, beside which I dismounted, the oribi having all this
time lain quite still. I tried to rest my rifle against the trunk
of the tree to steady it, but it moved so much, owing to the
strong wind swaying the branches, that I could not avail my
self of its support. When I did fire 1 missed, upon which the
pretty little antelope at once jumped up and took itself off,
but, after running for about fifty yards, again stopped and
stood looking at me. Having slipped in another cartridge, I
then fired a second shot, and this time struck it in the hind
quarters. Although the expanding bullet smashed one haunch
all to atoms, and the solid end tore right through its entrails,
the fragile-looking animal ran at least three hundred yards
before my Kafirs secured and killed it. The tenacity of life of
XXVI O S T R IC H - S H O O T IN G 47i
in the authors experience to the general Burchell’s zebras, shooting, near Golo-
hospitality of the Boers, 5 daima’s town, 1 8 3 ; plentiful north of
Boers, remarks concerning their hospi Zambesi on road to Monzi’s, 2 1 1 ;
tality and kindness, 5 , 9 ; Mr. G. near Chobi river, 4 5 0
Macall Theal’s work, History o f the Burnett, Mr., one of the gold-prospecting
Boers in South Africa, referred to, 8 ; party to the head of the Mazoe river,
Matabili attack on the, at Vechtkop 2 6 5 ; comes upon a party of lions
in 1 8 3 6 , 1 0 2 near Kansawa river, 2 7 9 ; he accom
Bonga’s stockade at Masangano, capture panies author on visit to sources of
of, by Portuguese, 3 1 6 the Mazoe, 2 9 2 ; lion and hippopo
Borius, a Transvaaler, of the pioneer tamus shooting, 2 9 9 ; on pioneer
expedition, 3 7 5 expedition to Mashunaland, 3 1 3
Borrow ,------ , overtakes author’s party Bushman assegaied by Matabili after
on way to Umtali to take part with he had shown them the way to Panda-
British against Portuguese, 4 0 7 ma-tenka, 1 0 4 ; Bushman woman and
Botletli river, crocodiles in, 1 7 ; Batau- child killed by Matabili warriors, 1 0 5
wani women and children cross the, Bushman woman, old captive, her escape
in canoes when raided by Matabili, from the Matabili, 1 1 1
1 0 1 ; Matabili trying to cross the, Bushmen (Masarwas or Amasiri) from
on water-plants, are drowned, 1 0 3 ; Khama’s country, good at finding the
scarcity of water between the, and the way, 8 8 ; murdered by Matabili raiders,
Mababi river, 4 4 9 1 0 1 ; and Makalaka, Khama’s man,
British Museum, author starts to collect fleeing from Matabili raiders, well
large animals for the, 3 received by, 1 0 4 ; origin, language
British South Africa Company (see also allied to Korana, physical charac
under Mashunaland, etc.), author teristics, weapons, etc., 1 0 6 , 1 0 7 ;
terminates his engagement with, 4 2 6 probably allied to the Niam - niam
Bruce, Lieutenant, author sent to assist dwarfs of Schweinfurth, the pigmy
him in making roads, 4 0 5 ; making races, etc., 1 0 7 ; excellent as trackers
waggon road from Manica to Umli- and assistants in the hunting veld,
wan’s, 4 0 9 1 0 9 ; their remarkable faculty for
Buck-waggon, description and arrange finding their way through forests,
ment of, 2 4 etc., n o , 1 8 6 ; children of, captured
Buffalo, in the neighbourhood of the by Matabili warriors, the escape of six
Kadzi, 5 5 ; rifles used for shooting, from the king’s courtyard, n o
4 3 0 ; narrow escapes from wounded, Butterflies, caught during travels, pre
4 3 3 , 4 3 4 ; difficult to kill with shot sented to South African Museum,
in front of head when charging, ibid. ; Cape Town, 1 6 ; several supposed
charged by one that had previously new species caught, 5 4 ; catching, at
been bitten by lion, 4 5 2 ; shooting, the Umsengaisi river, 5 5 ; catching,
near Chobi river, 4 5 9 north of Zambesi river, 2 1 0
Bukwela’s town, guides procured from, Buzi, attempt to find waggon road to
141 the coast, free from tse-tse fly, along the
Bulawayo, captive Bushman children watershed of the, and the Pungwi,
brought to the king at, their escape, 426
n o ; visit Lo Bengula at, over the
“ Sea-Cow Row,” 1 3 5 - 1 3 8 ; journey C am pbell, Lieutenant Adair, with Mr.
to, with Mr. W. Montagu Kerr, 1 3 9 ; C. Harrison and author, visits the
start from Tati for, after hunting ex Portuguese at Massi Kessi, 3 8 5 ; joins
pedition to the Mababi, 1 5 5 ; visit to author to take part with British at
Lo Bengula at, to confer with him Umtali against Portuguese, 4 0 7
about pioneer expedition, 3 6 0 ; leave, Canoe, upset by hippopotamus in the
on shooting expedition with Messrs. Zambesi, 2 5 9 ; it is recovered, but
Collison, Jameson, and Crook, 4 6 1 ivory tusk, etc. lost, 2 6 1
Bullets used in killing large game (see Cape Colony, “ Klipspringer ” antelopes
under Rifle) found in, 1 6 2
482 T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A
Cape Town, skull and skin of head of 2 9 7 ; his enforced tribute to the Portu
white rhinoceros sent to museum at, guese, 3 1 9
1 5 8 ; arrive at, from Mozambique, Chikasi, the Mashuna headman, his
after gold-prospecting expedition up friendliness, 5 2
the Mazoe river, 3 0 8 Chikasi’s hill, description of, difficulty
Capper, Lieutenant, of the British South of ascending, climate and temperature
Africa Company’s Police, examines of neighbourhood, camp near, 5 1 ;
hills between Macloutsie and Tuli for return to, after journey to Zambesi, 6 9
suitable heliograph stations, 3 6 8 Chingi-Ka river, crossing the, 9 4
Caringwi river, outspanning near junc Chipadzi, ancient stronghold of Chitiketi
tion of the, with the Ruzarwi, 9 4 near Makoni’s, said to have been built
Caroera Hill, passing the, in boat journey by, 340
up Zambesi river, 2 7 3 Chiswina, dialects of, understood by
Carrington, Colonel Sir Frederick, ap Makalaka, 3 8 6
proves of the scheme for the British Chitiketi, ruins of ancient town, near
occupation of Mashunaland, 3 1 2 Makoni’s, called, 3 4 0
Cartridges (see under Rifle) Chobi river, buffalo-hunting near the,
Cauldron, for boiling down animals in in 1 8 7 7 , a narrow escape, 4 3 2 ; leech -
order to procure perfect skeletons, tiger we antelopes near the, 4 5 0 , 4 5 3 ;
wolf boiled in, 1 8 1 character of country, 4 5 2 ; sable ante
Chabonga, on the Zambesi, arrival at, lope near the, 4 5 4
5 6 ; friendly reception by the chief, Chua, Portuguese attack on Captain
his travels, ibid. Heyman’s camp near, 4 0 8
Chaka’s wars, 3 4 5 Chukuru, the Matabili Kafir, describes
Chameleon attached to leg of owl, 2 4 9 lion met on way to Grant and Wey-
Chameluga (see also Situngweesa), and’s camp on Zweswi river, 1 2 2
treacherous murder of, and people, by Churchin, one of Lo Bengula’s men be
Lo Bengula’s warriors, his castle taken longing to village of, killed by wounded
and villages burnt, his wife Bavea, antelope, 1 9 2
H4> 1 15 Clarkson, Mr., killed by lightning, 4 4 7
“ Charley,” the horse, low condition of, Cock, Mr., finds bucket and rope at
181 bottom of old gold-mining shaft at
Charley, one of the party who accom Concession Hill, 3 3 5
pany author on his journey to the Coillard, Mr., of the French Protestant
Mashukulumbwi country, 1 9 8 ; his Mission in the Barotsi country, waggon
escape after the attack by the Mashu track to Lialui made by him, 1 9 6 ;
kulumbwi, 2 4 1 kindly received by members of his
Charter, Fort, journey to the site of, with mission at Sesheki, 2 4 9 ; his mission
Messrs. Jameson, Fountaine, and station at Sefula, kind reception by,
Cooper, 1 9 6 ; route of pioneer ex and Mrs. Coillard, 2 5 1
pedition to Fort Salisbury passes, Colenbrander, Mr. Johan, brings Lo
313 Bengula’s ultimatum to Colonel Penne-
Cherry, Mr., his visit to Mapondera’s in father in command of the pioneer
1 8 8 9 referred to, 2 9 1 expedition, 3 7 9
Chibi, the chief, author accompanies Collar-bone, author breaks, in chase after
Messrs. Rhodes, De Waal, and Jame a black rhinoceros, 4 3 6
son on diplomatic mission to, 4 2 6 Collison, Mr. H. C., met by author at
Chibi’s, road of pioneer expedition to Kimberley, 4 ; his “ boys ” left at
Mount Hampden between Matipi’s Klerksdorp engaged for journey into
and, probable difficult section of road interior, 1 3 ; lion-shooting with author,
beyond, on the plateau, 3 6 8 ; edge in 1 8 7 9 , on the Mababi plain, 1 4 4 ;
of plateau of Mashunaland near, the accident to his rifle, 1 4 7 ; return
374 to Matabililand with, in 1 8 8 5 , 1 8 4 ;
Chibonga, passing the village of the chief hunting with, in 1 8 7 9 , 4 4 9 , 4 5 1 ; in
named, 2 8 2 ; arrive at his village on 1 8 8 0 , 4 6 1 ; shoots a lioness, size of
return journey from source of Mazoe, skin, 4 6 7
IN D E X 483
Colquhoun, Mr. A. R., treaty concluded “ Diamond,” found to be a splendid
between Umtasa and, 3 8 3 shooting horse, he dies of “ dik-kop
Concession Hill, Mr. Cock finds bucket ziekte,” 4 , 1 6
and rope at bottom of ancient gold Diary, passages quoted from, concerning
mining shaft at, 3 3 5 the physical features and healthy
Coope, Mr. Jesser, in command of climate of the Mashuna highlands,
Matipi’s post station, Mashunaland, 7?
3 9 7 ; his assistance to author, 4 0 6 “ Dik-kop ziekte ” (thick head sickness),
Cooper, F., accompanies author to horse disease known as, “ Diamond”
Mashunaland in 1 8 8 7 , J95 dies of it, 4 , 1 6
Cooper, Jameson, and Fountaine, “ Din ziekte” (thin sickness), horse
Messrs., lion-hunting with, 4 4 1 - 4 4 6 disease known as, 4
Cordon, Lieutenant, reported attack on, Dishes for gold washing in Mazoe valley,
by Matabili, 2 8 8 282
Courtois, Father, kindness received from Dogs, killed and wounded by sable ante
him at Tete, 2 7 4 ; breakfasting with, lope at bay, 1 9 1
at Tete, after return from gold-pro Dombo Chena’s, on the Umkaradzi
specting expedition up the Mazoe, 3 0 4 ; river, arrival at, 2 8 6 ; natives wash for
copy of mineral concession made in alluvial gold, ibid.
his presence for Governor of Tete, 3 0 5 Dombo Hill, magnificent view from,
Crampton, Mr. George, of Massi Kessi, height of, 3 2 8 ; its form, 3 2 9
officers of British South Africa Com Donkey, killed by hyaena, 5 2 ; his import
pany kindly received by, 3 8 5 ance to travellers in Africa, his ability
Crocodile, ox caught by, in Crocodile to resist poison of tse-tse fly for some
river, 1 6 ; a large, shot near mouth time, 2 0 2
of Panyami river, 5 8 Donkeys, towed across the Zambesi near
Crocodile river, hot weather on the, 1 6 ; Wankie’s Town, 2 0 1
ox caught by crocodile in the, 1 6 ; Dorehill, Mr. George, arrives in the
crocodiles, plentiful in, 1 7 countiy with his wife and children, on
Crocodiles, very savage at Sesheki, nuis a shooting trip, 4 4 ; author visits him,
ance to missionaries there, 2 4 9 ; on 47
mud bank of Quaqua river, 2 6 8 ; on Dos Santos, his visit to South-East Africa
Lower Zambesi river, 2 7 1 three centuries ago, 3 3 0
Crook, Dr., author attended by, after Doyle, Mr. Dennis, formerly the British
wounded in face by striking against South Africa Company’s agent at Bula
dead tree, 4 4 1 ; hunting with, 4 6 1 wayo, letter expected at Palapye from,
Cruickshank, John, offers ^ 5 0 for a 3 5 8 ; his influence on the natives at
remarkable snake-stone, 1 4 Umtasa’s at the arrival of the Portu
guese force, 3 9 0
(a tributary of the Han-
D a n d i R iv e r Drought, effects of, in neighbourhood of
yani) crossed, 5 3 ; guide deserts near, Bamangwato, 1 5 , 1 9
66 Dutch, their importance as a people in
Daniel, a Hottentot, one of author’s South Africa, 9
party on his journey to the Mashuku- Dutch patois spoken by the Boers, 7
lumbwi country, 1 9 8 ; dies of fever Dutch East African trading company,
at Wankie’s Town, 2 0 1 their station at Missongwi, 3 0 7
Darwin, Mount, named after Mr. Charles Dysenteiy, Batonga dies of, near the
Darwin, 2 8 6 Zongwi river, he is supposed by his
Dasuru river, ascending the, en route to friends to be bewitched, 2 1 0
Mount Hampden, 2 9 4
Dawson, Mr. James, return to Matabili- E dw ard and George Burnett, Messrs.,
land with, in 1 8 8 5 , ride into Emh- the management of the waggons, etc.,
langen with, 1 8 4 of the pioneer expedition to Mount
Degoza Peak, 5 7 Hampden, under their charge, 3 7 4
De Lange, Friedrich, his farm, the Edwards, Mr. S. H. (“ Far Interior
snake-stone possessed by him, 1 4 S am ”), old gold-mining shaft dis-
484 T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A
covered at Tati by, 336 ; his history, other missionaries at, 1 5 7 ; ride into,
358 with Mr. James Dawson, to get letters,
“ Ee-ja-ha,” the Matabili word for young 184
soldier, 1 0 2 Engelbrecht, Jan, his experience at
Eland, fine bull shot near River Chingi- elephant-shooting with 5 0 0 -bore rifle
Ka, skin cut and destroyed by by Holland and Holland, 4 3 0
Mashunas, 9 5 ; shooting near Umfuli England, author’s return to, in 1 8 8 1 , 1 ;
and Lundaza rivers, size of bull, return to, in 1 8 8 6 , 1 9 5 ; return to, in
serious accident to author’s face, 4 3 9 , spring of 1 8 8 9 , 2 6 5 ; last arrival in,
440 42 7
Elands, an unsuccessful hunt for, 5 0 ; Englishmen, the principal explorers in
hunting, 7 5 ; shooting near Sadza’s Mashunaland, 3 2 1
villages, one now in British Museum, Entak washeki, Mashuna headman named,
measurements of, 9 1 90
Elephant, author chased by cow, 1 7 5 ; “ Escalere,” boats called, pass Mata-
calf of, generally adopted by another kania’s from Zumbo, how propelled, 6 0
cow if its own mother is killed, ibid. ;
adventure with a horse, and wounded, Mr. James, his visit with the
F a ir b a ir n ,
Garanga, the Mashuna headman, offers Graphic, the, article written for, on
to supply guides to the Portuguese on Mashunaland, 1 9 5 ; its fate, 1 9 6 -
the Zambesi, 5 4 198
Garanganzi country (Katanga), author, Grass, burnt off, leaving the country
at Mr. F. S. Arnot’s invitation, pre blackened and dreary until next rainy
pares to visit, for sport, 1 9 8 season, 8 0
Gato, mass of rock called, 9 7 Greeffe, Mr. and Mrs., hospitably enter
Gazuma, visit to cattle post at, before tained by, 1 5 6
starting for Barotsi valley, 2 4 4 ; Greener, W. W., a little double 1 2
Matabili warriors arrive at, after their smooth-bore by, an excellent weapon,
return home from their disastrous 474
raiding expedition to Lake Ngami, Grey, Major, Bechwanaland Border
105 Police at Macloutsie under, 3 5 7
“ Georos,” Mr. Westbeech called, by Gungunyan, chief of Gaza Zulus, stated
natives, 1 0 5 to have placed himself under Portu
Gibbs of Bristol, efficiency of 4 5 0 -bore guese protection, 3 1 5
rifle made by, 4 2 8 Guns set for lions, 3 5
Giraffe-shooting near Horn’s Vley, 1 5 1 ; Gunther, Dr., gives author, before he
sighting a herd of, near the Chobi leaves England, a list of what large
river, 4 5 6 animals are required for the British
Godobgay river running through the Museum, 2
Inyaguzwi hills, 3 7 6 Gutu, the chief, pays tribute to Lo
Gold, the former principal trade of Bengula, 3 8 2
Zumbo, 6 3 Gwai river, crossing the, 1 4 0
Gold, alluvial, obtained by natives from Gwelo river, shooting near the, 4 6 2
bed of Mazoe and its tributaries, 8 1 ; Gwibi river, journey to, with Messrs.
quifls of, bought of natives, 8 9 Jameson, Fountaine, and Cooper, 1 9 6 ;
Gold dust brought to Tete obtained arrival at, near Mount Hampden,
from the Mazoe river and Makanga 294
country, 2 7 5
Gold-mining, ancient, in Mashunaland H am pden, Mount, ostrich-hunting near,
and Manicaland, Arabs report gold 87 ; visit to, after discovering source
mines in interior to Portuguese on of Mazoe river, the goal of the
their arrival in South-East Africa, 3 3 5 ; British South Africa Company’s
old gold-mining shafts, etc., 3 3 6 , 3 3 7 ; expedition in 1 8 9 0 , description of,
in Mashunaland and Manicaland, in 2 9 4 ; its name, 2 9 5 ; account of the
the past and future, 3 5 2 - 3 5 4 pioneer expedition to, 3 5 6 - 3 8 2 ;
Golodaima’s town, visit to, to buy pioneer expedition to Mashunaland
maize, man-eating lion reported near, arrives safely at, 3 8 2
183 Hanyani river (see also Manyami
Gonyi, Falls of, Zambesi river, 2 5 8 river and Panyami river), determina
Gourinho, Senhor Joaquim Andre, enter tion to cross the, on way to the
tained at Zumbo by, his ivory, 6 2 ; Zambesi, 4 4 ; crossing the, 4 7 ; before
adieu to, 6 4 1 8 8 2 the “ Ultima T hule” of travel
Gourlay, Mr., finds the lost mail-bag, lers, ibid. ; author’s party on his
398 expedition from the, to the Zambesi,
Gouveia (see under Souza, Manoel ibid. ; scarcity of game in district of,
Antonio de) country in neighbourhood, devastated
Graham, Lieutenant, sent from Fort by Matabili, 4 8
Salisbury to Umtasa’s to meet Portu Harris, Captain (afterwards Sir) Corn
guese force, 3 3 8 ; sent to Massi Kessi wallis, his meeting with Umziligazi’s
with letters to Colonel P. d’Andrada, warriors after their defeat by the
389 Boers in 1 8 3 6 , 1 0 2
Grant and Weyand, visit to their hunt Harrison, Mr. Christopher, Providential
ing camp on the Zweswi river, 1 2 1 , Pass named at his suggestion, 3 7 7 ;
128 with Lieutenant A. Campbell and
486 T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A
author visits the Portuguese at Massi Horse, adventures with a stallion whilst
Kessi, 3 8 5 elephant-shooting, 1 7 3 ; stallion lamed
Harrison, Mr., of Massi Kessi, officers through treading on sharp stone whilst
of British South Africa Company elephant-hunting, 1 8 1
kindly received by, 3 8 5 Horses take fright at zebras, and go
Heany and Barrow, Messrs., 3 6 2 into fly-infested forest, 2 4 6
Heany, Captain, “ A ” troop of pioneer Hoste, Captain, “ B ” troop of the
expedition under his command, 3 7 4 pioneers under, cut the first section
Helm, Mrs., wife of the missionary, of the road beyond Tuli, 3 7 2 ; arrives
Bavea, afterwards Chameluga’s wife, at Umtasa’s at the time of the arrival
apprenticed to, 1 1 4 of the Portuguese force, 3 9 1
Henderson, Mr. and Mrs., entertained at Hottentots, Bushmen probably allied to
Mopea by, on return from Tete, 3 0 8 the, 1 0 7 ; skull found in “ kitchen
Henry, Mr. Alexander, skull of lion shot midden ” on Buffalo river, resembles
with rifle made by, sent to him at that of a, 1 0 8
Edinburgh, 3 6 Hyaena, shooting a, which had run off
Heyman, Captain, Portuguese attack on with an eland skin, 9 3 ; visits camp
his camp in Manica, 3 8 4 , 4 0 8 ; Massi at the Zweswi river, and is shot, 1 6 8 ;
Kessi captured by, 3 8 4 ; his camp at shooting a, near Golodaima’s town,
Umtali, 4 0 5 1 8 3 ; held by dogs until assegaied by
Hillier, Dr. A. P., his work, The A n Kafirs, canine teeth and part of jaw
tiquity of Man in South Africa, missing, 1 8 4 , 1 8 5
referred to, 1 0 8 Hyaenas trouble the camp, 2 5 ; shot by
Hippopotami on the Zambesi, 5 8 ; in gun set for lions, 3 5 , 4 3
Zambesi near Zumbo, 6 2 ; Matabili
superstition concerning the destruction I g n a c io d e J esu s X a v i e r , Colonel
of, 1 3 5 ; travel high up rivers for food Rusambo pays tribute to, 2 8 1 ; his ex
in rainy season, 1 6 1 ; on Lower Zam pedition to the chief Mapondera to
besi river, 2 7 1 ; shooting near Revui persuade him to accept the Portuguese
river, 4 1 1 flag, 3 1 7
Hippopotamus shot near Matakania Iguanas, on mud bank of Quaqua river,
town, 5 9 ; canoe sunk by, in Zambesi 268
river, 2 5 9 ; firing at the, 2 6 0 ; shot Impala antelopes seen in the neighbour
near junction of Inyagui river with hood of the Kadzi, two shot at the
Mazoe river, 2 9 6 ; shooting near the Umsengaisi river, 5 5 ; one shot near
junction of the Ruenya and Mazoe mouth of Panyami river, 5 8
rivers, 2 9 9 ; wounded, attacks the Impali river, a tributary of the Sabi,
carcase of one previously shot, 3 0 0 ; crossing the, Mashuna town on bank
shooting near the Chobi river, 4 5 1 of, description of natives near, tat
Hokogazi, William, the Zulu servant, tooing, 9 7
accompanies author on visit to Motoko, India, measurements of elephants in, 4 7 6
401 “ Indoda,” the Matabili word for full-
Holland and Holland, elephant and grown man, 1 0 2
other shooting with 5 0 0 -bore rifle by, Intelligence Department of pioneer
4 3 0 , 4 3 1 ; their new Paradox guns, expedition, author at head of, 3 7 1
432 “ Intembi,” many lost on raiding ex
Holub, Dr., his camp looted by the pedition to Lake Ngami, 1 0 3
Mashukulumbwi, 2 0 7 ; this event Inyachimi river, following down the,
referred to by Sikabenga’s men, 100
213 Inyagui river (a tributary of the Mazoe),
Horn Measurements of Great Game, Mr. its source, and junction with Mazoe,
Ward’s book on, 3 6 7 hippopotamus shot near, 2 9 6 ; cross
Horn’s Vley, camping at, game in neigh ing the, on journey to Motoko’s,
bourhood, 1 4 8 399
Horse sickness, two forms of, known as Inyaguzwi range, exploring opening
the “ din ziekte,” and the “ dik-kop,” 4 through the, for road for pioneer
IN D E X 487
expedition, afterwards called Provi Joao’s town (or Maramba), near junction
dential Pass, 3 7 5 of Luia and Mazoe, well from which
Inyakambiri river, crossing the, on water for the town is supplied, 2 9 7
journey to Motoko’s, 3 9 9 John, a Hottentot boy, 3 7 5
Inyama Mountains, seen from top of “ John Lee’s Farm,” arrive at place
Dombo, 3 2 8 known as, 1 5 6
Inyamashupa river, crossing the, on Johnson, Mr. Frank, author at his re
journey to Motoko’s, 4 0 0 quest conducts gold-prospecting party
Inyambari, a bare precipitous crag of to the head of the Mazoe river, 2 6 4 ;
the Umvukwi range, 5 3 ; condition of in command of the advance party of
natives in neighbourhood, ibid. pioneer expedition, 3 6 2
Inyamwenda’s people come to camp on Johnston, Consul H. H ., Makololo, near
Manyami, to sell mealies, 1 8 1 the Ruo river, informed that they were
In-yang-ombi river (see Yankombi river) under the British protection by,
Inyarugwi, Mount, seen from top of
313
Dombo, 3 2 9 Jugu, son of Mashuna chief, accredited
Inyati, meet with Fathers Law and with supernatural powers, 4 6 5 ; his
Wehl at, 4 6 1 prophetic denunciations, 4 6 6
Inya-tsu-tsu, arrival at, on Mazoe river,
gold-prospecting expedition, 2 8 0 ; prob K a b o m p o R i v e r , author proposes to hunt
ably the same as Vunge on Living in the unknown country to the north
stone’s map, ibid. of the, 244
Inyonangwa, headman of village on Kachomba river, crossing the, on way
Panyami, 6 5 to Mashukulumbwi country, buffaloes
Inyoti, arrival at, on Mazoe river, gold and impala antelopes plentiful near,
prospecting expedition, 2 8 8 ; warlike 2 0 7 ; tse-tse fly in neighbourhood,
movements of Portuguese reported at, 208
ibid. ; signing mineral concession by Kadzi river, pest of tse-tse in the neigh
chiefs at, 2 9 1 ; return to, after visit to bourhood of, 5 5 ; game in the neigh
sources of Mazoe, 2 9 5 bourhood of the, ibid.
Ivory, trade of Zumbo in, 6 3 ; that Kafir information not to be relied on,
brought to Tete, mostly obtained 411
from Angoni country, 2 7 5 Kafirs, their inferiority as a race, 1 0
Ivory tusk lost in Zambesi through canoe Kafukwi river, the hartebeest Alcela-
being sunk by hippopotamus, 2 6 1 phus lichtensteini seen near the, 7 3 ;
crossed by Dr. Livingstone at Sem-
J alla and Jeanmairet, Messrs., kindly alembui’s, 2 1 4
received by, at Sesheki, 2 4 9 Kaiser Wilhelm Gold-Fields, named by
Jameson, Cooper, and Fountaine, Mauch, in Motoko’s country, 4 0 3
Messrs., lion-hunting with, 4 4 1 - 4 4 6 Kalahari (see also Horn's Vfey)> heavy
Jameson, Dr., the Administrator of thunderstorm and rain in the, 1 5 2
Mashunaland, his suitability for the Kalangu’s, attacked by fever at, on
post, 3 5 5 ; Lo Bengula gives his con journey to Barotsi valley, 2 5 0
sent to, to have a road cut to Mash Kali, rapid of, Zambesi river, 2 5 9
unaland, 3 5 7 ; visits Lo Bengula Kalimazondo, author conducted to Mo-
instead of Mr. Rhodes, to arrange toko by, 4 0 1
about pioneer expedition, 3 6 1 Kalimazondo’s town, arrival at, on jour
Jameson, Mr. J. A., accompanies author ney to Motoko’s, 4 0 0
to Mashunaland in 1 8 8 7 , 1 9 5 ; koo Kalipi, Umziligazi’s general, his attack
doo - hunting with, near Pondoro’s, on the Boer camp at Vechtkop in
4 3 7 ; hunting with, 4 6 1 ; size of ele 1836, 102
phant shot by, near Manyami river, Kalumanuman cliff, in Lupata gorge,
475 Zambesi river, 2 7 3
Jasmine, wild, sweet perfume of, 6 4 Kandaya, arrive at his village, its poverty-
Jeanmairet and Jalla, Messrs., kindly stricken condition, entertainment by
received by, at Sesheki, 2 4 9 natives, 2 8 7
488 T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A
Kangudzi river, crossing the, on Mazoe Klabala, condition of the Bakalahari of,
river gold-prospecting expedition, 2 7 9 112
Kansawa river, arrival at, on Mazoe Klerksdorp, author starts for, 3 ; arrives
river gold-prospecting expedition, at, 1 3 ; return to, from Mashunaland
2 7 9 ; lion-shooting near, ibid. and Zambesi, natural history collec
Kanyemba, boat to cross the Zambesi to tions forwarded to Cape Town and
Zumbo to be obtained from one of the England from, start again from, for
towns of, 6 0 ; arrival at his towns, interior, 7 1 ; return to, in January
slaves building a new house for him, 1 8 8 4 , natural history specimens sent
6 1 ; entertained by, he supplies boat to Europe from, meeting with Mr. W.
and Kafirs for crossing the Zambesi to Montagu Kerr at, 1 3 9
Zumbo, 6 2 ‘ 4 Klipspringer ” antelopes, found along
Karunduga-gongoma hill, reach the, after courses of larger rivers in Northern
flight from the Mashukulumbwi, 2 2 5 Mashunaland, 1 6 2 ; found in Cape
Kasaia river, travelling through mopani Colony, ibid.
forest near the, on way to Barotsi Koodoo shot near Masheki river, 9 8 ;
country, 2 4 5 ; crossing the, ibid. remains of a bull found, that had been
Katanga (or Garanganzi country), mould killed by a lion, 1 6 5 ; a fine specimen
used in, for running copper into, shot in neighbourhood of Macloutsie
similar to the soapstone mould found river, his large horns, 3 6 4
by Mr. Bent at Zimbabwi, 3 3 6 Koodoos, seen in Panyami valley, 6 5
Kazungula, arrival at, on canoe journey “ Kopje,” description of a, 1 6 5 ; how
down Zambesi river from Lialui, formed, 3 3 0
263 Koranas, language of the Bushmen allied
Kerr, Mr. W. Montagu, meeting with to that of the, 1 0 6
him at Klerksdorp, he accompanies Koungyara, journey to, 1 4 0
author to Bulawayo to see Lo Bengula,
1 3 9 ; starts on his journey to Lake “ L ady o f t h e L a k e ” steamer seized
Nyassa, a general favourite with all, by Portuguese, 3 1 4
his death, 1 4 0 ; leather coat presented Laer, a Griqua lad, taught to help in
by him to author, 1 7 4 ; his visit to preparing skins for museum specimens,
Mapondera’s in 1 8 8 8 referred to, 2 9 1 1 3 ; his narrow escape from a wounded
Khama, the chief, visit to, to obtain lion, 3 9 ; proves useful on account of
permission to trek along the Limpopo, his knowledge of native languages,
etc., 2 0 ; his courtesy, 2 3 ; the im etc., 4 7 ; meeting with, after journey
proved condition of the Bakalahari to Zumbo, 6 9 ; has fever, 7 0 ; de
under his rule, 1 1 2 ; assistance ren spatched to Grant and Weyand’s
dered by, to pioneer expedition to camp on Zweswi river to get wheel
Mount Hampden, 3 6 8 - 3 7 0 for waggon, meets five lions on
Khama’s country, under British protec the way, 1 2 1 ; shoots a lion near
tion, though claimed by Lo Bengula, the Umfuli river, 1 2 4 ; his ad
356 venture with a lion that had seized
Khama’s man, escape of, after being cap an ox on the Umniati river, 1 2 7 ;
tured by Matabili raiders, 1 0 4 his account of his last view of the
Kimberley, author arrives at, 4 ; author’s wounded bull-elephant near the Umfuli,
interview with Mr. Cecil Rhodes at, he leads the way to its carcase,
respecting the British occupation of 186
Mashunaland, 3 1 1 ; author returns Landseer, Sir E., the position of his
from Bulawayo to, with message from lions in Trafalgar Square correct, 1 4 7
Lo Bengula to Mr. Rhodes at Cape Law and Wehl, Fathers, their ill-fated
Town, 3 6 1 journey to Umzila’s kraal, 9 7 ; travel
Kingfishers, three species of, seen, 5 4 ; ling with, on their journey to Umzila’s,
in valley of Panyami, 6 4 461
Kirk, Dr. (now Sir John), his journey Leask, Mr. Thomas, of Klerksdorp, 4 ;
down the Zambesi with Dr. Living buck-waggon, oxen, etc., bought of,
stone, referred to, 6 1 for journey into interior, 1 3
IN D E X 489
Maziwa, arrival at his village on gold Moffat, Rev. Mr., his visit to Umziligazi,
prospecting expedition, 2 8 2 ; poverty 359
of the people, difficulty with the chief “ Mondoro” or “ Lion-God,” his power
about porters, 2 8 3 ; compelled to in Motoko’s country, prayers offered
destroy trade goods, 2 8 4 to, 4 0 0
Mazoe river, visited by George Phillips, “ Monomotapa, the Emperor of,” con
4 7 ; journey from Tete to Mashuna verted to Roman Catholicism, 3 2 0
country via the, preferred, 5 7 ; prepare Montgomery, Sergeant-Major, sent with
for a journey from the Manyami to the, men from Fort Salisbury to meet Portu
after white rhinoceros and Lichten guese force at Umtasas, 3 8 8
stein’s hartebeest, 7 3 ; sources of the, Monyokwi river, crossing the, on journey
7 9 , 8 2 ; natives obtain alluvial gold to Motoko’s, 3 9 9
from bed of, 8 1 ; author conducts gold Monzi’s (village of a Batonga chief), guide
prospecting party to head of, 2 6 5 ; the hired for journey to, 2 1 0 ; game plenti
start from Mozambique, ibid. ; gold ful, and pleasant travelling on road
dust brought to Tete from, question as to, description of, author first white
to its sources, 2 7 5 ; profusion of wikl- man who has visited, since Dr. Living
flowers in the valley of the Upper, 2 9 2 ; stone, 2 1 1 ; arrive at, ibid. ; good
discovery of the source of, 2 9 2 , 2 9 5 ; time at, 2 1 2 ; guide from, reports
following down the, on return journey that Mashukulumbwi intend attack
to Tete, 2 9 6 ; navigability of the, 2 9 8 ; ing camp at Minenga’s, 2 2 2 ; decide
lions near the junction of the Ruenya, to make for, after attack by Mashuku
2 9 9 ; a fresh-water shark caught at lumbwi, 2 2 4 ; arrive at, friendly
the junction of the, with the Ruenya, reception, but compelled to leave
2 9 9 ; crocodiles in, 3 0 0 ; quills full of hurriedly, 2 3 3
alluvial gold brought from, 3 5 3 ; tribes Monzi’s sister refuses to order her people
in neighbourhood of, have a “ Lion- to assegai author, 2 4 3
God,” 4 0 0 Moore, Mr. Peter, of the African Lakes
Mesheki river, crossing the, 9 8 Company at Vicenti, kindly received
Metford rifle, used for shooting elephants by him, 2 7 0 ; his letter to Mr. Ross
and other large animals, 1 6 9 , 1 7 0 ; at Mozambique informing him that
one by Gibbs of Bristol, 4 3 1 the Portuguese had seized the steamer
Methuen, Lieutenant-General the Hon. Lady o f the Lake, 3 1 4
(now General Lord), his visit to in Mopani forests, 5 5 ; a walk through
spect pioneer expedition before start parched-up, 6 4
ing on their journey to Mashunaland, Mopea, on Quaqua river, Blantyre
367, 369 missionary party travel by boat to,
Miller, Mr., a travelling companion of 2 7 0 ; walk from Vicenti on Zambesi to,
the author, 1 0 ; meeting with, near the on journey from Tete, entertained by
Chobi river, 4 4 9 Mr. and Mrs. Henderson there, 3 0 8
Minenga, Mashukulumbwi chief (see also Moruling, large “ vley” of, 2 1
Mashukulumbwi), guided to, 2 1 5 ; Moshidi (M’siri), king of Garanganzi
arrival at his village, 2 1 6 ; form a country, author starts on a visit to his
camp, 2 1 7 ; entertained by his people, country at the invitation of Mr. F. S.
a jovial evening, ibid.; refuse his Arnot, 1 9 8
invitation to go and drink beer with Mosqui, Lewanika’s sister, arrival at her
him, Paul goes, he is questioned by town, Nalolo, 2 5 4
chief, 2 1 8 ; probable plot, ibid.; shoot Motoko, chief, near Mazoe river, Portu
ing zebra and hartebeest for, 2 1 9 ; guese at war with, 2 7 7 ; difficulty of
night attack by his people, 2 2 2 - 2 2 5 ; arranging treaty with, 3 8 6 ; letter by
flight from, alone, 2 2 5 ; reason for the author giving an account of journey
attack, 2 4 2 , 2 4 3 to, to obtain mineral concession for
Missongwi (a Dutch East African trading British South Africa Company, 3 9 8 -
company’s station), stay with Mr. Van 4 0 4 ; interview with, his great age,
Yssom at, on boat journey; down 4 0 1 , 4 0 2 ; extent of gold-fields of his
Zambesi, 3 0 7 country, 4 0 3
494 T R A V E L A N D A D V E N T U R E I N A F R IC A
from tse-tse fly along the watershed Rhodesia, the name proposed for the
of the Buzi and, 426 ; buffaloes shot whole o f the British South Africa
near Beira on the, with 450-bore Company’s territories, 327
Martini-Henry rifles, 430 Rhodesia Herald , the principal paper in
Mashunaland, 327
Q uabeet, killed by a tuskless bull Riem, the thong used in South Africa
elephant, 189 for tying up cattle, ox with a broken,
Quaqua river, boat journey up the, from 124
Mozambique, with gold - prospecting Rifles, used for killing lions and other big
party, 267-269 ; little game near the, game, 27, 32 ; used in killing lioness
birds seen on boat journey up the, 269 ; near the Umgezi river, 166 ; used in
overtaken by missionary party going killing elephants, 169, 170, 173, 18 7;
to Blantyre in the, ibid. carried by members of party on jour
Quillimani, arrive at, on gold - pro ney to the Mashukulumbwi country,
specting journey to head of Mazoe 198 ; remarks on the relative merits
river, description of the town, of different, 428-432 ; for elephant
265 shooting, 429, 430 ; for buffalo, 430 ;
for African shooting should be care
R a d i - K l a d i (brother of Khama), sent fully sighted up to 400 yards, 432 ;
by the chief with two hundred men to lion shot dead, by Cooper, with 500-
assist pioneer expedition at Tuli river, bore Winchester, 446
370 Roan antelope-shooting, 90
Rains, winter, in plateau country near Rocky, servant named, hired at Mozam
sources of Mazoe, 82 bique, 266
Ramakutzan, his account of a Makuba Rolker, Mr. (the American mining ex
Kafir being killed by a lion, 142 pert), judging from the débris at the
Ravenstein, Mr. E. G ., his map of mouths of shafts, believes that the
Eastern Equatorial Africa referred to, gold-mining industry of Mashuna
210, 2 11 , 214 land has not been long abandoned,
Rebecca, the servant hired at Mozam 336
bique, his limited knowledge of En g Rollers (Coracias spatulatus), a pair of
lish, 266 ; the coffee incident, 268 beautiful, 48
Reid, Mr. Percy, compass given by Ronkesley, Mr., attends to author after
him to replace the one lost in the serious wound to his face, 440
Mashukulumbwi country, 245 Rooyen, Cornelis van, 500-bore rifle, by
Retief, Pieter, his treacherous murder by Holland and Holland, used by him,
Dingan referred to, 8
431
Revui river, horses attacked by tse-tse Ross, M r., English Consul at Mozam
flies near, 410 bique, 266 ; pleasant evening with
Rezende, Baron de, visit of the British South him and Mrs. Ross at Mozambique,
Africa Company’s officials to, at Massi 308
Kessi, 385; the relations with Umtasa, Rowles, Mr. W ., his goats seized by
387 ; his arrest at Umtasa’s, 392 ; crocodiles, 17
he bases the claims of Portugal to “ Ruby,” dog named, wounded by a
Umtasa’s on the assumption that the sable antelope at bay, 191 ; bitten by
country formed part of Gungunyan’s lion, 446
dominions, 393 Ruenya (In-yang-om bi or Yankombi)
Rhinoceros (see White Rhinoceros and river, passing the mouth of, in boat
Black Rhinoceros) journey up Zambesi with gold-pro
Rhodes, Mr. Cecil, author’s interview specting party, sand brought down by
with, at Kimberley, 3 1 1 ; his far- the, 273 ; junction of the, with the
seeing policy regarding the imme Mazoe river, lions near the, 299 ;
diate occupation of Mashunaland fall in the, fishing a fresh-water shark,
by British, 312 ; L o Bengula sends a 304 ; its source, its upper course called
message by author to him to visit him the Imyang-ombi, seen from top of
at Bulawayo, 360 Dombo, 329
IN D E X 497
Ruins, Zimbabwi (see also Zimbabwi, expedition to Mashunaland arrives
etc.), 33° “ 342 ; ruins near Makoni’s safely at, 382 ; cutting road from the
town, 339 Odzi river to, 406 ; completing road
Rukwi kwi Hills, ride to the Sabi river between Umtali and, 426
near the, 99 Samuel, the Griqua, capable of mending
Ruo river, Colonel Serpa Pinto’s attack broken wheel of waggon, 118
on the Makololo near the, 307 Sanderson, M r., his book on the wild
Rusambo, guide secured of, on Mazoe beasts of India referred to, 477
river gold - prospecting expedition, Sanyara, visit to her town on Mazoe
280 ; arrival at his town, 281 ; pays river, kind reception, her little girls,
tribute to Portuguese, ibid.; departure 298
from, 282 ; return to, and dismiss Sarua river, wheel of waggon breaks
carriers, 285 ; start again from, with whilst crossing the, 118
fresh porters, 286 ; return to his town Sasarwa, the language of the Masarwas
after visit to Mazoe source, join re (Bushmen), easily learned by Griquas,
mainder of party there, 2 9 7 ; his 106
enforced tribute to the Portuguese, Sasuto, Sakalolo, the court language of
319 the Barotsi, a corrupted form of,
Rusapi river, masses of granite in dis 252
trict of, sources of, 328 Savakaranga stream, a night at, tse-tse
Rusungwi hill, arrive at, on journey to fly said to be here, 54
Motoko’s, 399 Sawi river, crossing the, on journey
Ruwa river, crossing the, 90 from Mount Hampden to Inyota, 295
Schlichter, D r., his historical researches
Sabi R i v e r , prepare for a journey to in connection with the Zimbabwi
the, after white rhinoceros and Lich t ruins, 331
enstein’s hartebeest, 73 ; arrival at, “ Sea-Cow R o w ,” account of the, 135-
breadth of, 96 ; journey parallel with 138
the, the crossing of, by Fathers Law and Sebakwi river, lion - hunting near the
W ehl referred to, 9 7 ; crossing the, 99; source of, with Messrs. Jameson,
five specimens of Lichtenstein’s harte Fountaine, and Cooper, 441
beest secured in neighbourhood of, in Se-bum-bum’s Mountain, camp south
1885, 190 east of, 99
Sable antelope, shot for meat, 50; shoot See-kwanka’s, a night at, scarcity of
ing a, near Umniati and Sebakwi game near, 90
rivers, it kills and wounds several Sefula, Mr. Coillard’s mission station at,
dogs when at bay, 191 ; man of kind reception, temperature at, 252
Churchin village killed by wounded, Se-fu-pi, scarcity of game near, 53
192 Sekkosi’s (or Katongo), arrive at, on
Sable antelopes, seen on way to Mazoe, canoe journey down Zambesi river,
74 ; near the Chobi river, 454 262
Sadza, villages of the petty chief named, “ Selous Syndicate,” in Cape Town,
stay at, shooting elands in neighbour letter written by author to, advocating
hood, 91 ; return to the, after hunting the immediate occupation of Mashuna
expedition in Sabi river district, 100 land, 310, 3 1 1
Sakalolo, the court language of the Semalembui’s, propose crossing the
Barotsi, 252 Kafukwi river near, where Dr.
Salisbury (or Fort Salisbury), trekking Livingstone crossed it, but dissuaded
over the ground now occupied by, with by guides, 214
Messrs. Jameson, Fountaine, and Sena, on Zambesi river, French trading
Cooper, 19 6 ; fine tract of country station opposite, 271 ; passing, on
between Umtali and, 3 2 8 ; table of boat journey down Zambesi, 307
meteorological observations made at, Senga country, Perizengi’s slave-trading
by Major P. W. Forbes, 3 4 7 ; tele and hunting expedition into the, 57
graph to, 348; sale of land, news Sepopo, natives executed for witchcraft
papers started, farming, 351 ; pioneer and thrown into the Zambesi for
498 TRAVEL AN D AD VE N T U R E IN AF R IC A
crocodiles in his time, his treatment valley, after visit to Lewanika, 254 ;
of an old beggar, 249 scenery, game near, 257
Sesheki, butterfly-hunting along the path Sinoia, discovery of the limestone caves
to, 246 ; arrival at, kind reception by of, 195
members of Mr. Coillard’s mission, Sioma, arrival at, in canoes from Lialui,
249 ; savage crocodiles at, ibid. ; 258
arrival at, on canoe journey down Sipiro, the interpreter at interview with
Zambesi from Lialui, 263 Motoko, 402
Shabanoghwi river, crossing the, on Siteo, eldest son of Motoko, 401
journey to Motoko’s, 399 Situngweesa (see also Chamehtga),
Shakunda carriers hired at Tete, 277 ; Chameluga’s villages, raided by Mata-
difficulty with, at starting from Tete, bili warriors at Lo Bengula’s orders,
2 7 8 ; desertion of, 282 ; further 116 ; the wizard of, 460
difficulties with, 284 Skull found in ‘ ‘ kitchen midden ” on
Shamedza, a Batonga headman, visit to, Buffalo river, Dr. A . P. H illier’s
extortions of, he agrees to supply remarks on, 108
guides, 205 Slaipstein, John, trouble caused with Lo
Shampondo, a Batonga headman, visit Bengula over his shooting a hippo
to his village, presents given to, 203 ; potamus, 135-138
unpleasant affair with him and his Slaves, three tied together at Perizengi’s
men, ¿bid. town, 57 ; at work building a house
Shangwi, headman of village in Panyami for Kanyemba, 61
valley, 65 Slave - dealers, countries governed by
Shankopi, a Batonga headman, welcome these (“ Capitaos M ors” ) for the Por
meeting with remnant of party at his tuguese, 325
town after the attack by the Mashu- Slave-trade, Matakania’s raiding expedi
kulumbwi, 238; kindly treated by, tion into Luisa country, 59
241 Slave-trading, Perizengi’s expedition to
Shashi and Tuli rivers, author examines Senga country, 57 ; continuance of,
the country near, to find good waggon though illegal according to Portuguese
road for pioneer expedition, 363 law, ibid.
Shepstone, Sub-Lieutenant, sent to Um Snake-stone possessed by Friedrich de
tasa’s with Lieutenant Graham to meet Lange, Mr. Cruickshank offered ^50
Portuguese force, 388 for it but was refused, its wonderful
Shippard, Sir Sidney, approves of the virtues, 14
scheme for the British occupation of Sode Gara, following the road from
Mashunaland, 312 Koungyara to, 141 ; return to, from
Shipurero, the headman, halt at villages the Mababi, 148
of, 67 ; his men break their agreement Sofala, Father W ehl’s death at, 462
to carry author when ill with fever, 68 Sosi, the chief, 344
Shiri river, passing the mouth of the, on Souza, Augusto Melitao de, the inter
boat journey up the Zambesi river with preter, engaged at Tete, 276
gold-prospecting party, 271 ; passing Souza, Manoel Antonio de (Gouveia),
the mouth of the, on boat journey chiefs compelled to submit to Portu
down Zambesi from Tete, 307 guese claims by, 3 15 ; Umtasa’s fear of,
Shoma, village of, arrival at, after the 387 ; he, with Colonel P. d’Andrada,
attack by the Mashukulumbwi, Maran- invades Umtasa’s country, 389; he is
cinyan’s men turn back at, 238 arrested and sent to Fort Salisbury, 391
Shupanga, passing Mrs. Livingstone’s Stanley, Sergeant, left in charge of
grave at, 270 waggons by Lieutenant Bruce at Umli-
Sikabenga (see Marancinyan) wan’s, 409
Sikadoro’s hill, arrive near, on journey Storm, heavy, in the Kalahari, near
to Motoko’s, 399 Horn’s Vley, 152
Sikadoro’s town, magnificent country “ Steeks,” horse liable to the, 157
between Fort Salisbury and, 398 Sungwi, near Lupata gorge, Zambesi
Sinanga, arrive at, at the end of Barotsi river, Portuguese fort at, 273
IN D E X 499
Swan, Mr. R ., his opinion of the builders Thomas, the mail-carrier, his adventure
of the Zimbabwi ruins, 331 with the lion, 397
Swart, Pieter, with Berns Niemand Thomas, M r., one of the gold-prospecting
when he was killed by crocodile, 18 party to the head of the Mazoe river,
26 5 ; the coffee incident, his past
T a b a I n s im b i (the hill of iron), hippo history, 268
potamus spoor in neighbourhood of, Thomas, Mr. David, his murder by the
161 Batongas, 207
“ Tam pans” (a ground bug), unpleasant Thomas, Mrs., accompanies her husband
night at Lialui through, 252 on shooting expedition to the interior
Tataguru river, arrive at the junction of of South Africa, 245
the, with the Mazoe river, 292 Thunderstorm, a terrific, 442, 447
Tati, arrival at, from hunting expedition Time, natives, owing to their mode of
to the Mababi, 15 4 ; inspecting an life, have very little idea of, 211
old gold-mining shaft at, 336, 337 ; Times, the, author’s letter to, on the
author rides into, en route to Bula proposed British occupation of
wayo, to see L o Bengula, 358 ; Gold- Mashunaland, the Portuguese claims
Mining Company, 359 to the country, etc., 313-325
Tchakari hill, named Mount Thackeray, Tipwi cliff, Lupata gorge, Zambesi river,
287 273
Teixeira, Mr., arrange with, at Mozam Transvaal, return to, with Messrs. Jame
bique, to provide a boat to take pro son, Fountaine, and Cooper, 19 6 ;
specting party to Lokoloko on Quaqua, compelled to return to, after attack by
266 ; he acts as interpreter at un Mashukulumbwi, 242 ; author’s visit
pleasant interview with governor of to, previous to his last return to
Tete, 304 England, 427
Temaringa, arrival at the village of, Trek, the great Boer, of 1836, 7
on Mazoe river gold-prospecting ex Trevor, M r., left in charge at Umtasa’s
pedition, he accompanies party to after the treaty between that chief and
Inyota, 288 ; he signs paper making the British South Africa Company had
mineral concessions at Inyoti, 291 been signed, 386
Temwa, granite cone of, seen from top Trimen, Mr. Rowland, curator of South
of Dombo, 328 African Museum, Cape Town, his
Teroede, Father, ill-treatment of, and extensive knowledge of natural history,
party by the Batongas, his death, 206 16; butterflies collected at Zumbo
Tete (or In-yung-wi), Chabonga four sent to, 63
days’ walk from, 57 ; arrival at, on Tsessebe antelope - shooting, 3 5 ; one
boat journey up the Zambesi river shot on way to Mazoe and Sabi, 73 ;
with gold - prospecting party, 273 ; shooting, 1 5 9 ; near Umniati river,
when founded, Europeans there, alti 161 ; plentiful near Chobi river, 450
tude of, breadth of Zambesi at, build Tse-tse fly, pest of, in the Zambesi
ings, country in neighbourhood, cattle valley, Kadzi river and neighbour
and pigs at, trade of, 274 ; Govern hood, 55 ; in Sabi river region, 99 ;
ment system of letting out land in donkeys able to resist the poison of,
neighbourhood, the governor, 275 ; for some time, 202 ; numerous near
difficulties of obtaining carriers at, the Kachomba river, 207 ; the Loanja
276 ; return to, after gold-prospecting river infested by, 2 5 0 ; cattle at
expedition up the Mazoe river, Tete brought through the fly-infested
stormy interview with the governor, district from Mashunaland, and escape
304 ; conduct of carriers reported to the, 274 ; horses attacked by the, near
Senhor Martins, 30 6; the drunken Revui river, 410
schoolmaster, ibid. ; departure from, Tukwan river, view of, from Zamamba
307 ; date of establishment of military hill, 375
post at, 320 Tukwl river, view of, from Zamamba
Theal, Mr. Macall, his work, History o f hill, 37s
the Boers in South A frica , referred to, 8 Tuli, Fort, site of, 363 ; cutting the first
500 TRAVEL AN D AD VE N T U R E IN AF R IC A
piece of new road from Macloutsie U msa - washa, country of, near head
camp to, for pioneer expedition, 368 ; waters of Mazoe, raided by Matabili
author sent from Salisbury to, to warriors, 116
inspect “ weigh b ills” of waggons on Umsengaisi river, crossing the, breadth,
the road, 426 depth of water, etc., 555 tse-tse
Tuli river, pioneer expedition arrives flies at the, ibid .; following down the,
at, 369 56 ; arrival at its junction with Zam
Tusks, weight of elephants’, shot near besi on journey from Chabonga to
the Zweswi and Umfuli rivers, 178, Zumbo, 57
179, 186, 18 9 ; cutting off dead Umshabetsi river, road for pioneer
elephants’ , 180; value of, 187 expedition reaches, elephants at,
372 ; double road cut from, to Fort
U -K e s a -K e s a (Kesi-Kesi)hill, Monzi Salisbury, 374
living near, at the time of Dr. Living Umtali, building going on at, 351 ;
stone’s visit, 2 1 1 ; survivors of party journey to the British South Africa
after the attack by the Mashukulumbwi Company’s camp at, after arranging
cut into author’s trail beyond the, 241 treaty with Motoko, 405 ; fight be
Umbayu’s kraal, 410 tween British and Portuguese near,
Umfan-ee-chee-ha, the Mashuna head 408 ; completing road between, and
man, 49 Salisbury, 426
Umfuli river, crossing the, 124 ; ele Umtali river, journey to, with Messrs.
phant-hunting near the, 1 7 2 - 1 7 9 , Jameson, Fountaine, and Cooper, 196
18 8; eland-shooting near, in 1880, Umtasa, chief of Manica, author accom
439 ; koodoo-shooting near the, 469 panies Mr. A. R. Colquhoun to inter
Umfuri river (a tributary o f the Luia), view, 313 ; treaty concluded between
crossing the, 287 Mr. A . R. Colquhoun as representative
Umgezi river, sleep at the, formerly a of the British South Africa Company
favourite resort of hippopotami, 162 ; and, 383 ; his connections with the
lion-shooting near the, 165 ; journey Portuguese, 387
to, with Messrs. Jameson, Fountaine, Umtasa’s, Gouveia and Colonel P.
and Cooper, 196 ; shooting a cowardly d’Andrada arrive at, with force of
lion near the, 464 armed men, they are arrested, and
Umkaradzi river, arrival at Dombo sent to Fort Salisbury, 391
Chena’s on the, quartz reefs on the Umtigeza, the chief, pays tribute to Lo
Upper, native gold-washing, 286 Bengula, 382
Umkwasi river (a tributary of the Umvukwi Hills, the watershed between
Hanyani), crossing the, 50 the Hanyani and Mazoe, condition of
Umliwan, journey to his town, the chief natives in neighbourhood, 53
refuses to admit Portuguese claim to Umzila, Mashunaland ravaged by his
his country, 408 ; British South Africa Zulu hordes, 97, 338
Company’s treaty with, 409; his un Umzila’s, Fathers W ehl and Law ’s
reliable information regarding tse-tse mission to, 461 ; its disastrous ter
fly, 411 ; a night’s adventure with lions mination, 462
between his town and Umtali, 416- Umziligazi, the chief of the Amandibili,
425 driven beyond the Transvaal, 8 ; date
Umniati river, red buck shot near the, of his great raid on Mashunaland,
hunt after lion near, 160 ; ford of the, 345 ; Mr. S. H. Edwards’ visit
impassable for waggons on account of with Rev. Mr. Moffat to, 359
heavy summer rains, 161 ; crossing the, Umzingwan river, road for pioneer
ibid. ; travel to, with Fathers Law and expedition reaches, 372
W ehl, 461 Ungurughwi river, crossing the, on
Umpingi river, a night at, down with journey to Motoko’s, 399
fever, 68 Ungwesi river, camp in neighbourhood
Umrodzi river, crossing the, 2 9 1; follow of Mashukulumbwi villages near, good-
ing down the, profusion of wild flowers, natured headman, warlike appearance
295 of natives, crossed by Dr. Livingstone,
IN D E X 501
wrongly laid down on Mr. Raven- Ware, Mr. Harry, meeting with, 245
stein’s map, 2 1 5 ; roan antelopes at Wart-hog seen near Umvukwi Mountains,
the, 245 53 ; chased by “ Punch,” the dog, is
“ Unkwila mondo,” native name for shot after wounding “ Punch,” and
Lichtenstein’s hartebeest {which see) sent to Cape Town Museum, flesh of
Ushamba hill, encampment at foot of, 49 a fat, good eating, 79
W ata and his people driven by Matabili
V an R o o y e n , Comelis, return to from hill near Gurumapudzi river in
Matabililand with, in 1885, 18 4; his 1868, 295
valuable dog killed by wounded Water, party suffering from want of, 66
sable antelope, 191 ; respected by the W ater-plants, Matabili trying to cross
natives in Mashunaland, 332 the Botletli river on, are drowned,
Vechtkop, Matabili attack on the Boer 103
camp of, in 1836, 102 Watson, Mr. Frank, pleasant meeting
“ Veldschoon,” repairing worn - out, with, at Horn’s Vley, 153
before starting for Zumbo, 57 Wedza, peaks of, seen from top of
Vermaak, Solomon, with Berns Niemand Dombo hill, 328
when he was killed by crocodile, 81 W ehl and Law, Fathers, their ill-fated
Vicenti, on Zambesi, African Lakes journey to Umzila’s kraal, 9 7 ; travel
Company’s station at, 270 ; arrive at, ling with, on their journey to Umzila’s,
on boat journey down Zambesi, 307 461
Victoria, building going on at, 351 ; site Weinen (the place of weeping), 7
of the township of, 378 Westbeech, George (“ G eoros” ), his
Victoria Falls, the main range of hills travels in the Hanyani river district
running from, to the Kafukwi, 210 ; referred to, 47 ; Matabili warriors
visit to the, 263 ; dark-foliaged ever visit his man “ Africa’s ” camp at
greens on the brink of, 452 Gazuma, 10 5 ; meeting with Mr.
Vultures, large number in neighbour Frank Watson at Horn’s Vley, who is
hood of elephants that had been shot, taking goods to, at the Zambesi, 15 3 ;
180 meet him at Gazuma, discussion with
Vunga hills, arrive at Inya-tsu-tsu near him on prospect of getting into the
the, 280 Barotsi valley, he shows Mr. F. Arnot’s
Vunge on Livingstone’s map, probably letter written in Garanganzi country,
the present Inya-tsu-tsu, 280 198 ; Marancinyan, a friend of,
243
W ahlberg, Professor, killed by an Weyand, Karl, and Jan Engelbrecht,
elephant, 359 white rhinoceroses killed by, 158
Wainji river, its junction with the Weyers, John, meeting with at Panda-
Umrodzi, 291 ; crossing the, on ma-tenka in 1888, 1 9 7 ; accompanies
journey from Mount Hampden to author to W ankie’s Town on his pro
Inyota, 295 posed journey to Garanganzi country,
W allace, Mr. A . R ., his theory of the 198
origin of the primitive races of men Wheel of waggon breaks whilst crossing
in Africa, 108 the Sarua river, 118
W ankie’s Town, arrival at, when en W hite rhinoceros, on the verge of extinc
deavouring to reach the Garanganzi tion, where found, 58 ; prepare for a
country, 201 ; breadth o f Zambesi journey to the Mazoe and Sabi in
near, ibid. ; character of country near, search of, 73 ; probably not to be
ib id .; return to, with survivors of obtained outside the fly countiy, 100;
party, after the flight from the shooting a pair of, referred to, speedy
Mashukulumbwi, 241 extinction of, 15 8 ; ten killed by
Ward, Mr. Rowland, his book, Horn Weyand and Engelbrecht in 1886,
Measurements o f Great Game, 367 ; and five others by natives, ibid. ; shot
referred to, 441 by Mr. Collison near the Umsengaisi
Wardell, M r., of Mr. Coillard’s Barotsi river, 472
Valley mission, 251 Wild Beasts and their Ways, Sir Samuel
502 TRAVEL AN D AD V E N T U R E IN A FR IC A
Baker’s book of this title referred to, 270 ; difficult navigation of the Lower,
431 in dry weather, 271 ; monotonous
Wildebeests, near Chobi river, 450 travelling on Lower, shooting on, list
Wildflowers, profusion of, 51 of game, ibid. ; its channel narrowed
W illoughby, Sir John, with the pioneer near the mouth of the Ruenya, on
expedition to Mashunaland, his account of the sand brought down by
energy, etc., 379 that river, 2 7 3 ; arrival at the, after
Winchester rifle (see under R ifle ) gold-prospecting expedition up the
Winton, Sir Francis de, approves of the Mazoe river, 304 ; previous extent of
scheme for the British occupation of Portuguese influence on the, 320 ; ele
Mashunaland, 312 phants now scarce south of the, 474
Witchcraft, execution of natives for, at Zambesia, one of the names proposed
Sesheki, 249 for the whole of the British South
Wood, Mr. G ., reference to him in con Africa Company’s territories, 327
nection with gold-mining in Mashuna Zebra, wounding a, near the Lundaza
land, 336 river, 168 ; shooting a, near the
Wood, piece of, driven into author’s face junction of the Mwedzia and Zongwi
whilst eland-hunting, 441 rivers, 208 ; shot for Minenga, 219
Zebras, a small herd of, seen near
F r a n c is , enterprise of the
X a v ie r ,
Umvukwi Mountains, 53 ; herds of,
zealous disciples of, in Africa, 320
seen in the neighbourhood of the
Mr. Van, stay with him at
Y ss o m , Kadzi, 55 ; herd of, seen on way to
Missongwi, 307 Mazoe river, 74 (see under BurchelFs
Yankombi river (see Ruenya river) zebra)
Zends, referred to by E l Massoudi, 332
Z a m a m b a H i l l , view of Mashunaland Zimbabwi ruins, visited by author, 326 ;
from, 375 Mr. Bent’s book on, his opinion re
Zambesi river, descending into the garding the builders, 330, 331 ; the
valley of the, from the Hanyani, 54 ; builders a highly-civilised race accord
journey along the valley of the, from ing to Mr. Swan, 331 ; author’s
Chabonga to Zumbo, hippopotami on theory concerning the, and the early
the, 58 ; crossing the, to Zumbo, de inhabitants of the district, 331, 342 ;
scription of the river here, 62 ; great relics found at, no writing, 333 ; no
heat in valley of, 66 ; author proposes remains of ancient city built of stones,
to cross, at W ankie’s Town, on endeav 334 ; origin of the name, 340; evi
our to reach Garanganzi country, 198 ; dence of Phallic worship at, 341 ;
character of country in neighbourhood place where “ Lion-God ” lives called,
of, near W ankie’s Town, 201 ; author meaning of word, 400
compelled to abandon idea of follow Zither, the, played by author to family
ing down the, to the Kafukwi, owdng of Boers, 10
to the extortions of the Batongas, 205 ; Zoldner, Oswald, his murder by the
Mr. D. Thomas murdered by the Mashukulumbwi, 207
Batongas on an island in the, 207 ; Zomba, hill named, near head waters of
recross the, on the way to Panda-ma- Inyazuri river, 329
tenka, with survivors of party, after Zongoro (or Diwa), arrive at, on journey
the attack by the Mashukulumbwi, down the Mazoe, 297
241 ; crossing the, on journey to Zongwi river, rough country in the
Barotsi valley to visit Lewanika, 245 ; neighbourhood of, 209 ; Batonga dies
journey from Lialui down the, in of dysentery near the, vegetation of
canoes supplied by Lewanika, 254- country, three days’ march from, 210
263 ; scenery of, below Sinanga, 257 ; Zoutpansberg, opinion of the Boers of,
fishing in the, 258 ; canoe upset by regarding the pioneer expedition to
hippopotamus in, 2 5 9 ; arrive, with Mashunaland, 357
gold-prospecting party, at Mazaro on Zulu migrations northwards through
the, from Lokoloko on Quaqua river, Mashunaland, the cause of the aban
269 ; description of, at this point, donment of native gold-mining, 334
IN D E X 503
Zulu raids on Mashunaland (see also at, butterfly-collecting at, ruins of old,
Matabili raids, etc.), date of com former gold-dust trade of, 63 ; depart
mencement of, 345 ure from, 64
Zumbo, journey on foot to, 43 ; Cha- Zwartland, the interpreter, a M akalaka
bonga four days’ walk from, 56 ; on subject of Khama’s, 386
the way to, from Chabonga, 57, 58 ; Zweswi river, two white hunters, Grant
boat to cross the Zambesi to, to be and Weyand, camped on the, 121,
obtained at one of the towns of Kan- 128 ; author’s narrow escape from a
yemba, 6 0 ; crossing the Zambesi to, lion, which is afterwards shot, near,
arrival at, hospitably entertained at, 129, 130, 133 ; five days’ stay at the,
the Portuguese at, ivory trade of, 62 ; large herd of elephants near, 166 ; the
tse-tse flies at, vegetables, etc., grown hysena shot at, 186
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