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Upwards of twenty years have passed since the 'Rifle and Hound in
Ceylon' was published, and I have been requested to write a preface
for a new edition. Although this long interval of time has been spent
in a more profitable manner than simple sport, nevertheless I have
added considerably to my former experience of wild animals by nine
years passed in African explorations. The great improvements that have
been made in rifles have, to a certain extent, modified the opinions
that I expressed in the 'Rifle and Hound in Ceylon.' Breech-loaders
have so entirely superseded the antiquated muzzle-loader, that the
hunter of dangerous animals is possessed of an additional safeguard.
At the same time I look back with satisfaction to the heavy charges of
powder that were used by me thirty years ago and were then regarded as
absurd, but which are now generally acknowledged by scientific gunners
as the only means of insuring the desiderata of the rifle, i.e., high
velocity, low trajectory, long range, penetration, and precision.
When I first began rifle-shooting thirty-seven years ago, not one
man in a thousand had ever handled such a weapon. Our soldiers were
then armed*(*With the exception of the Rifle Brigade) with the common
old musket, and I distinctly remember a snubbing that I received as a
youngster for suggesting, in the presence of military men, 'that the
army should throughout be supplied with rifles.' This absurd idea
proposed by a boy of seventeen who was a good shot with a weapon that
was not in general use, produced such a smile of contempt upon my
hearers, that the rebuke left a deep impression, and was never
forgotten. A life's experience in the pursuit of heavy game has
confirmed my opinion expressed in the `Rifle and Hound' in 1854--that
the best weapon for a hunter of average strength is a double rifle
weighing fifteen pounds, of No. 10 calibre. This should carry a charge
of ten drachms of No. 6 powder (coarse grain). In former days I used
six or seven drachms of the finest grained powder with the old
muzzle-loader, but it is well known that the rim of the breech-loading
cartridge is liable to burst with a heavy charge of the fine grain,
therefore No. 6 is best adapted for the rifle.
Although a diversity of calibres is a serious drawback to the
comfort of a hunter in wild countries, it is quite impossible to avoid
the difficulty, as there is no rifle that will combine the
requirements for a great variety of game. As the wild goose demands B
B shot and the snipe No. 8, in like manner the elephant requires the
heavy bullet, and the deer is contented with the small-bore.
I have found great convenience in the following equipment for
hunting every species of game in wild tropical countries.
One single-barrel rifle to carry a half-pound projectile, or a four
ounce, according to strength of hunter.
Three double-barrelled No. 10 rifles, to carry ten drachms No. 6
powder.
One double-barrelled small-bore rifle, sighted most accurately for
deer-shooting. Express to carry five or six drachms, but with hardened
solid bullet.
Two double-barrelled No. 10 smooth-bores to carry shot or ball; the
latter to be the exact size for the No. 10 rifles.
According to my experience, such a battery is irresistible.
The breech-loader has manifold advantages over the muzzle-loader in
a wild country. Cartridges should always be loaded in England, and
they should be packed in hermetically sealed tin cases within wooden
boxes, to contain each fifty, if large bores, or one hundred of the
smaller calibre.
These will be quite impervious to damp, or to the attacks of
insects. The economy of ammunition will be great, as the cartridge can
be drawn every evening after the day's work, instead of being fired
off as with the muzzle-loader, in order that the rifle may be cleaned.
The best cartridges will never miss fire. This is an invaluable
quality in the pursuit of dangerous game.
Although I advocate the express small-bore with the immense
advantage of low trajectory, I am decidedly opposed to the hollow
expanding bullet for heavy, thick-skinned game. I have so frequently
experienced disappointment by the use of the hollow bullet that I
should always adhere to the slightly hardened and solid projectile
that will preserve its original shape after striking the thick hide of
a large animal.
A hollow bullet fired from an express rifle will double up a deer,
but it will be certain to expand upon the hard skin of elephants,
rhinoceros, hippopotami, buffaloes, in which case it will lose all
power of penetration. When a hollow bullet strikes a large bone, it
absolutely disappears into minute particles of lead,--and of course it
becomes worthless.
For many years I have been supplied with firstrate No. 10 rifles by
Messrs. Reilly Co. of Oxford Street, London, which have never become
in the slightest degree deranged during the rough work of wild
hunting. Mr. Reilly was most successful in the manufacture of
explosive shells from my design; these were cast-iron coated with
lead, and their effect was terrific.
Mr. Holland of Bond Street produced a double-barrelled rifle that
carried the Snider Boxer cartridge. This was the most accurate weapon
up to 300 yards, and was altogether the best rifle that I ever used;
but although it possessed extraordinary precision, the hollow bullet
caused the frequent loss of a wounded animal. Mr. Holland is now
experimenting in the conversion of a Whitworth-barrel to a
breech-loader. If this should prove successful, I should prefer the
Whitworth projectile to any other for a sporting rifle in wild
countries, as it would combine accuracy at both long and short ranges
with extreme penetration.
The long interval that has elapsed since I was in Ceylon, has
caused a great diminution in the wild animals.
The elephants are now protected by game laws, although twenty years
ago a reward was offered by the Government for their destruction. The
'Rifle and Hound' can no longer be accepted as a guidebook to the
sports in Ceylon; the country is changed, and in many districts the
forests have been cleared, and civilization has advanced into the
domains of wild beasts. The colony has been blessed with prosperity,
and the gradual decrease of game is a natural consequence of extended
cultivation and increased population.
In the pages of this book it will be seen that I foretold the
destruction of the wild deer and other animals twenty years ago. At
that time the energetic Tamby's or Moormen were possessed of guns, and
had commenced a deadly warfare in the jungles, killing the wild
animals as a matter of business, and making a livelihood by the sale
of dried flesh, hides, and buffalo-horns. This unremitting slaughter
of the game during all seasons has been most disastrous, and at length
necessitated the establishment of laws for its protection.
As the elephants have decreased in Ceylon, so in like manner their
number must be reduced in Africa by the continual demand for ivory.
Since the 'Rifle and Hound' was written, I have had considerable
experience with the African elephant.
This is a distinct species, as may be seen by a comparison with the
Indian elephant in the Zoological Gardens of the Regent's Park.
In Africa, all elephants are provided with tusks; those of the
females are small, averaging about twenty pounds the pair. The bull's
are sometimes enormous. I have seen a pair of tusks that weighed 300
lbs., and I have met with single tusks of 160 lbs. During this year
(1874) a tusk was sold in London that weighed 188 lbs. As the horns of
deer vary in different localities, so the ivory is also larger and of
superior quality in certain districts. This is the result of food and
climate. The average of bull elephant's tusks in equatorial Africa is
about 90 lbs. or 100 lbs. the pair.
It is not my intention to write a treatise upon the African
elephant; this has been already described in the `Nile Tributaries of
Abyssinia,'*(* Published by Messrs. Macmillan and Co.) but it will be
sufficient to explain that it is by no means an easy beast to kill
when in the act of charging. From the peculiar formation of the head,
it is almost impossible to kill a bull elephant by the forehead shot;
thus the danger of hunting the African variety is enhanced tenfold.
The habits of the African elephant are very different from those of
his Indian cousins. Instead of retiring to dense jungles at sunrise,
the African will be met with in the mid-day glare far away from
forests, basking in the hot prairie grass of ten feet high, which
scarcely reaches to his withers.
Success in elephant shooting depends materially upon the character
of the ground. In good forests, where a close approach is easy, the
African species can be killed like the Indian, by one shot either
behind the ear or in the temple; but in open ground, or in high grass,
it is both uncertain and extremely dangerous to attempt a close
approach on foot. Should the animal turn upon the hunter, it is next
to impossible to take the forehead-shot with effect. It is therefore
customary in Africa, to fire at the shoulder with a very heavy rifle
at a distance of fifty or sixty yards. In Ceylon it was generally
believed that the shoulder-shot was useless; thus we have distinct
methods of shooting the two species of elephants: this is caused, not
only by the difference between the animals, but chiefly by the
contrast in the countries they inhabit. Ceylon is a jungle; thus an
elephant can be approached within a few paces, which admit of accurate
aim at the brain. In Africa the elephant is frequently upon open
ground; therefore he is shot in the larger mark (the shoulder) at a
greater distance. I have shot them successfully both in the brain and
in the shoulder, and where the character of the country admits an
approach to within ten paces, I prefer the Ceylon method of aiming
either at the temple or behind the ear.
Although the African elephant with his magnificent tusks is a
higher type than that of Ceylon, I look back to the hunting of my
younger days with unmixed pleasure. Friends with whom I enjoyed those
sports are still alive, and are true friends always, thus exemplifying
that peculiar freemasonry which unites the hearts of sportsmen.
After a life of rough experience in wild countries, I have found
some pleasure in referring to the events of my early years, and
recalling the recollection of many scenes that would have passed away
had they not been chronicled. I therefore trust that although the
brightest days of Ceylon sports may have somewhat faded by the
diminution of the game, there may be Nimrods (be they young or old)
who will still discover some interest in the `Rifle and Hound in
Ceylon.'
S. W. BAKER.
INTRODUCTION.
THE LOVE OF SPORT is a feeling inherent in most Englishmen, and
whether in the chase, or with the rod or gun, they far excel all other
nations. In fact, the definition of this feeling cannot be understood
by many foreigners. We are frequently ridiculed for fox-hunting: 'What
for all dis people, dis horses, dis many dog? dis leetle (how you call
him?) dis "fox" for to catch? ha! you eat dis creature; he vary fat
and fine?'
This is a foreigner's notion of the chase; he hunts for the pot;
and by Englishmen alone is the glorious feeling shared of true, fair,
and manly sport. The character of the nation is beautifully displayed
in all our rules for hunting, shooting, fishing, fighting, etc.; a
feeling of fair play pervades every amusement. Who would shoot a hare
in form? who would net a trout stream? who would hit a man when down?
A Frenchman would do all these things, and might be no bad fellow
after all. It would be HIS way of doing it. His notion would be to
make use of an advantage when an opportunity offered. He would think
it folly to give the hare a chance of running when he could shoot her
sitting; he would make an excellent dish of all the trout he could
snare; and as to hitting his man when down, he would think it madness
to allow him to get up again until he had put him hors de combat by
jumping on him. Their notions of sporting and ours, then, widely
differ; they take every advantage, while we give every advantage; they
delight in the certainty of killing, while our pleasure consists in
the chance of the animal escaping.
I would always encourage the love of sport in a lad; guided by its
true spirit of fair play, it is a feeling that will make him above
doing a mean thing in every station of life, and will give him real
feelings of humanity. I have had great experience in the characters of
thorough sportsmen, who are generally straightforward, honourable men,
who would scorn to take a dirty advantage of man or animal. In fact,
all real sportsmen that I have met have been tender-hearted men--who
shun cruelty to an animal, and are easily moved by a tale of distress.
With these feelings, sport is an amusement worthy of a man, and
this noble taste has been extensively developed since the
opportunities of travelling have of late years been so wonderfully
improved. The facility with which the most remote regions are now
reached, renders a tour over some portion of the globe a necessary
adjunct to a man's education; a sportsman naturally directs his path
to some land where civilisation has not yet banished the wild beast
from the soil.
Ceylon is a delightful country for the sporting tourist. In the
high road to India and China, any length of time may be spent en
passant, and the voyage by the Overland route is nothing but a trip of
a few weeks of pleasure.
This island has been always celebrated for its elephants, but the
other branches of sport are comparatively unknown to strangers. No
account has ever been written which embraces all Ceylon sports:
anecdotes of elephant-shooting fill the pages of nearly every work on
Ceylon; but the real character of the wild sports of this island has
never been described, because the writers have never been acquainted
with each separate branch of the Ceylon chase.
A residence of many years in this lovely country, where the wild
sports of the island have formed a never-failing and constant
amusement, alone confers sufficient experience to enable a person to
give a faithful picture of both shooting and hunting in Ceylon
jungles.
In describing these sports I shall give no anecdotes of others, but
I shall simply recall scenes in which I myself have shared, preferring
even a character for egotism rather than relate the statements of
hearsay, for the truth of which I could not vouch. This must be
accepted as an excuse for the unpleasant use of the first person.
There are many first-rate sportsmen in Ceylon who could furnish
anecdotes of individual risks and hairbreadth escapes (the certain
accompaniments to elephant-shooting) that would fill volumes; but
enough will be found, in the few scenes which I have selected from
whole hecatombs of slaughter, to satisfy and perhaps fatigue the most
patient reader.
One fact I wish to impress upon all--that the colouring of every
description is diminished and not exaggerated, the real scene being in
all cases a picture, of which the narration is but a feeble copy.
Wild Country-Dealings in the Marvellous-Enchanting Moments The Wild
Elephant of Ceylon--'Rogues'-Elephant Slaughter-Thick
Jungles-Character of the Country-Varieties of Game in Ceylon--'Battery
for Ceylon Sport'-The Elk or 'Samber Deer'-Deer-coursing.
It is a difficult task to describe a wild country so exactly, that
a stranger's eye shall at once be made acquainted with its scenery and
character by the description. And yet this is absolutely necessary, if
the narration of sports in foreign countries is supposed to interest
those who have never had the opportunity of enjoying them. The want of
graphic description of localities in which the events have occurred,
is the principal cause of that tediousness which generally accompanies
the steady perusal of a sporting work. You can read twenty pages with
interest, but a monotony soon pervades it, and sport then assumes an
appearance of mere slaughter.
Now, the actual killing of an animal, the death itself, is not
sport, unless the circumstances connected with it are such as to
create that peculiar feeling which can only be expressed by the word
`sport.' This feeling cannot exist in the heart of a butcher; he would
as soon slaughter a fine buck by tying him to a post and knocking him
down, as he would shoot him in his wild native haunts--the actual
moment of death, the fact of killing, is his enjoyment. To a true
sportsman the enjoyment of a sport increases in proportion to the
wildness of the country. Catch a six-pound trout in a quiet mill-pond
in a populous manufacturing neighbourhood, with well-cultivated
meadows on either side of the stream, fat cattle grazing on the rich
pasturage, and, perhaps, actually watching you as you land your fish:
it may be sport. But catch a similar fish far from the haunts of men,
in a boiling rocky torrent surrounded by heathery mountains, where the
shadow of a rod has seldom been reflected in the stream, and you cease
to think the former fish worth catching; still he is the same size,
showed the same courage, had the same perfection of condition, and yet
you cannot allow that it was sport compared with this wild stream. If
you see no difference in the excitement, you are not a sportsman; you
would as soon catch him in a washing tub, and you should buy your fish
when you require him; but never use a rod, or you would disgrace the
hickory.
This feeling of a combination of wild country with the presence of
the game itself, to form a real sport, is most keenly manifested when
we turn our attention to the rifle. This noble weapon is thrown away
in an enclosed country. The smooth-bore may and does afford delightful
sport upon our cultivated fields; but even that pleasure is doubled
when those enclosures no longer intervene, and the wide-spreading
moors and morasses of Scotland give an idea of freedom and undisturbed
nature. Who can compare grouse with partridge shooting? Still the
difference exists, not so much in the character of the bird as in the
features of the country. It is the wild aspect of the heathery moor
without a bound, except the rugged outline of the mountains upon the
sky, that gives such a charm to the grouse-shooting in Scotland, and
renders the deer-stalking such a favourite sport among the happy few
who can enjoy it.
All this proves that the simple act of killing is not sport; if it
were, the Zoological Gardens would form as fine a field to an elephant
shot as the wildest Indian jungle.
Man is a bloodthirsty animal, a beast of prey, instinctively; but
let us hope that a true sportsman is not savage, delighting in nothing
but death, but that his pursuits are qualified by a love of nature, of
noble scenery, of all the wonderful productions which the earth gives
forth in different latitudes. He should thoroughly understand the
nature and habits of every beast or bird that he looks upon as game.
This last attribute is indispensable; without it he may kill, but he
is not a sportsman.
We have, therefore, come to the conclusion that the character of a
country influences the character of the sport. The first question,
therefore, that an experienced man would ask at the recital of a
sporting anecdote would be, `What kind of country is it?' That being
clearly described to him, he follows you through every word of your
tale with a true interest, and in fact joins in imagination in the
chase.
There is one great drawback to the publication of sporting
adventures--they always appear to deal not a little in the marvellous;
and this effect is generally heightened by the use of the first person
in writing, which at all events may give an egotistical character to a
work. This, however, cannot easily be avoided, if a person is
describing his own adventures, and he labours under the disadvantage
of being criticised by readers who do not know him personally, and
may, therefore, give him credit for gross exaggeration.
It is this feeling that deters many men who have passed through
years of wild sports from publishing an account of them. The fact of
being able to laugh in your sleeve at the ignorance of a reader who
does not credit you, is but a poor compensation for being considered a
better shot with a long bow than with a rifle. Often have I pitied
Gordon Cumming when I have heard him talked of as a palpable
Munchausen, by men who never fired a rifle, or saw a wild beast,
except in a cage; and still these men form the greater proportion of
the `readers' of these works.
Men who have not seen, cannot understand the grandeur of wild
sports in a wild country. There is an indescribable feeling of
supremacy in a man who understands his game thoroughly, when he stands
upon some elevated point and gazes over the wild territory of savage
beasts. He feels himself an invader upon the solitudes of nature. The
very stillness of the scene is his delight. There is a mournful
silence in the calmness of the evening, when the tropical sun sinks
upon the horizon--a conviction that man has left this region
undisturbed to its wild tenants. No hum of distant voices, no rumbling
of busy wheels, no cries of domestic animals meet the ear. He stands
upon a wilderness, pathless and untrodden by the foot of civilisation,
where no sound is ever heard but that of the elements, when the
thunder rolls among the towering forests or the wind howls along the
plains. He gazes far, far into the distance, where the blue mountains
melt into an indefinite haze; he looks above him to the rocky
pinnacles which spring from the level plain, their swarthy cliffs
glistening from the recent shower, and patches of rich verdure
clinging to precipices a thousand feet above him. His eye stretches
along the grassy plains, taking at one full glance a survey of woods,
and rocks, and streams; and imperceptibly his mind wanders to thoughts
of home, and in one moment scenes long left behind are conjured up by
memory, and incidents are recalled which banish for a time the scene
before him. Lost for a moment in the enchanting power of solitude,
where fancy and reality combine in their most bewitching forms, he is
suddenly roused by a distant sound made doubly loud by the surrounding
silence--the shrill trumpet of an elephant. He wakes from his reverie;
the reality of the present scene is at once manifested. He stands
within a wilderness where the monster of the forest holds dominion; he
knows not what a day, not even what a moment, may bring forth; he
trusts in a protecting Power, and in the heavy rifle, and he is
shortly upon the track of the king of beasts.
The king of beasts is generally acknowledged to be the 'lion'; but
no one who has seen a wild elephant can doubt for a moment that the
title belongs to him in his own right. Lord of all created animals in
might and sagacity, the elephant roams through his native forests. He
browses upon the lofty branches, upturns young trees from sheer
malice, and from plain to forest he stalks majestically at break of
day 'monarch of all he surveys.'
A person who has never seen a wild elephant can form no idea of his
real character, either mentally or physically. The unwieldy and
sleepy-looking beast, who, penned up in his cage at a menagerie,
receives a sixpence in his trunk, and turns round with difficulty to
deposit it in a box; whose mental powers seem to be concentrated in
the idea of receiving buns tossed into a gaping mouth by children's
hands,--this very beast may have come from a warlike stock. His sire
may have been the terror of a district, a pitiless highwayman, whose
soul thirsted for blood; who, lying in wait in some thick bush, would
rush upon the unwary passer-by, and know no pleasure greater than the
act of crushing his victim to a shapeless mass beneath his feet. How
little does his tame sleepy son resemble him! Instead of browsing on
the rank vegetation of wild pasturage, he devours plum-buns; instead
of bathing his giant form in the deep rivers and lakes of his native
land, he steps into a stone-lined basin to bathe before the eyes of a
pleased multitude, the whole of whom form their opinion of elephants
in general from the broken-spirited monster which they see before
them.
I have even heard people exclaim, upon hearing anecdotes of
elephant-hunting, 'Poor things!'
Poor things, indeed! I should like to see the very person who thus
expresses his pity, going at his best pace, with a savage elephant
after him : give him a lawn to run upon if he likes, and see the
elephant gaining a foot in every yard of the chase, fire in his eye,
fury in his headlong charge; and would not the flying gentleman who
lately exclaimed 'Poor thing!' be thankful to the lucky bullet that
would save him from destruction?
There are no animals more misunderstood than elephants; they are
naturally savage, wary, and revengeful; displaying as great courage
when in their wild state as any animal known. The fact of their great
natural sagacity renders them the more dangerous as foes. Even when
tamed, there are many that are not safe for a stranger to approach,
and they are then only kept in awe by the sharp driving hook of the
mohout.
In their domesticated state I have seen them perform wonders of
sagacity and strength; but I have nothing to do with tame elephants;
there are whole books written upon the subject, although the habits of
an elephant can be described in a few words.
All wild animals in a tropical country avoid the sun. They wander
forth to feed upon the plains in the evening and during the night, and
they return to the jungle shortly after sunrise.
Elephants have the same habits. In those parts of the country where
such pasturage abounds as bamboo, lemon grass, sedges on the banks of
rivers, lakes, and swamps, elephants are sure to be found at such
seasons as are most propitious for the growth of these plants. When
the dry weather destroys this supply of food in one district, they
migrate to another part of the country.
They come forth to feed about 4 P.M., and they invariably, retire
to the thickest and most thorny jungle in the neighbourhood of their
feeding-place by 7 A.M. In these impenetrable haunts they consider
themselves secure from aggression.
The period of gestation with an elephant is supposed to be two
years, and the time occupied in attaining full growth is about sixteen
years. The whole period of life is supposed to be a hundred years, but
my own opinion would increase that period by fifty.
The height of elephants varies to a great degree, and in all cases
is very deceiving. In Ceylon, an elephant is measured at the shoulder,
and nine feet at this point is a very large animal. There is no doubt
that many elephants far exceed this, as I have shot them so large that
two tall men could lie at full length from the point of the forefoot
to the shoulder; but this is not a common size: the average height at
the shoulder would be about seven feet.*(*The males 7 ft.6 in., the
females 7 ft., at the shoulder.)
Not more than one in three hundred has tusks; they are merely
provided with short grubbers, projecting generally about three inches
from the upper jaw, and about two inches in diameter; these are called
'tushes' in Ceylon, and are of so little value that they are not worth
extracting from the head. They are useful to the elephants in hooking
on to a branch and tearing it down.
Elephants are gregarious, and the average number in a herd is about
eight, although they frequently form bodies of fifty and even eighty
in one troop. Each herd consists of a very large proportion of
females, and they are constantly met without a single bull in their
number. I have seen some small herds formed exclusively of bulls, but
this is very rare. The bull is much larger than the female, and is
generally more savage. His habits frequently induce him to prefer
solitude to a gregarious life. He then becomes doubly vicious. He
seldom strays many miles from one locality, which he haunts for many
years. He becomes what is termed a 'rogue.' He then waylays the
natives, and in fact becomes a scourge to the neighbourhood, attacking
the inoffensive without the slightest provocation, carrying
destruction into the natives' paddy-fields, and perfectly regardless
of night fires or the usual precautions for scaring wild beasts.
The daring pluck of these 'rogues' is only equalled by their
extreme cunning. Endowed with that wonderful power of scent peculiar
to elephants, he travels in the day-time DOWN the wind; thus nothing
can follow upon his track without his knowledge. He winds his enemy as
the cautious hunter advances noiselessly upon his track, and he stands
with ears thrown forward, tail erect, trunk thrown high in the air,
with its distended tip pointed to the spot from which he winds the
silent but approaching danger. Perfectly motionless does he stand,
like a statue in ebony, the very essence of attention, every nerve of
scent and hearing stretched to its cracking point; not a muscle moves,
not a sound of a rustling branch against his rough sides; he is a mute
figure of wild and fierce eagerness. Meanwhile, the wary tracker
stoops to the ground, and with a practised eye pierces the tangled
brushwood in search of his colossal feet. Still farther and farther he
silently creeps forward, when suddenly a crash bursts through the
jungle; the moment has arrived for the ambushed charge, and the
elephant is upon him.
What increases the danger is the uncertainty prevailing in all the
movements of a 'rogue'. You may perhaps see him upon a plain or in a
forest. As you advance, he retreats, or he may at once charge. Should
he retreat, you follow him; but you may shortly discover that he is
leading you to some favourite haunt of thick jungle or high grass,
from which, when you least expect it, he will suddenly burst out in
full charge upon you.
Next to a 'rogue' in ferocity, and even more persevering in the
pursuit of her victim, is a female elephant when her young one has
been killed. In such a case she will generally follow up her man until
either he or she is killed. If any young elephants are in the herd,
the mothers frequently prove awkward customers.
Elephant-shooting is doubtless the most dangerous of all sports if
the game is invariably followed up; but there is a great difference
between elephant-killing and elephant-hunting; the latter is sport,
the former is slaughter.
Many persons who have killed elephants know literally nothing about
the sport, and they may ever leave Ceylon with the idea that an
elephant is not a dangerous animal. Their elephants are killed in this
way, viz.:
The party of sportsmen, say two or three, arrive at a certain
district. The headman is sent for from the village; he arrives. The
enquiry respecting the vicinity of elephants is made; a herd is
reported to be in the neighbourhood, and trackers and watchers are
sent out to find them.
In the meantime the tent is pitched, our friends are employed in
unpacking the guns, and, after some hours have elapsed, the trackers
return: they have found the herd, and the watchers are left to observe
them.
The guns are loaded and the party starts. The trackers run quickly
on the track until they meet one of the watchers who has been sent
back upon the track by the other watchers to give the requisite
information of the movements of the herd since the trackers left. One
tracker now leads the way, and they cautiously proceed. The boughs are
heard slightly rustling as the unconscious elephants are fanning the
flies from their bodies within a hundred yards of the guns.
The jungle is open and good, interspersed with plots of rank grass;
and quietly following the head tracker, into whose hands our friends
have committed themselves, they follow like hounds under the control
of a huntsman. The tracker is a famous fellow, and he brings up his
employers in a masterly manner within ten paces of the still
unconscious elephants. He now retreats quietly behind the guns, and
the sport begins. A cloud of smoke from a regular volley, a crash
through the splintering branches as the panic-stricken herd rush from
the scene of conflict, and it is all over. X. has killed two, Y. has
killed one, and Z. knocked down one, but he got up again and got away;
total, three bagged. Our friends now return to the tent, and, after
perhaps a month of this kind of shooting, they arrive at their
original headquarters, having bagged perhaps twenty elephants. They
give their opinion upon elephant-shooting, and declare it to be
capital sport, but there is no danger in it, as the elephants
INVARIABLY RUN AWAY.
Let us imagine ourselves in the position of the half-asleep and
unsuspecting herd. We are lying down in a doze during the heat of the
day, and our senses are half benumbed by a sense of sleep. We are
beneath the shade of a large tree, and we do not dream that danger is
near us.
A frightful scream suddenly scatters our wandering senses. It is a
rogue elephant upon us! It was the scream of his trumpet that we
heard! and he is right among us. How we should bolt! How we should run
at the first start until we could get a gun! But let him continue this
pursuit, and how long would he be without a ball in his head?
It is precisely the same in attacking a herd of elephants or any
other animals unawares; they are taken by surprise, and are for the
moment panic-stricken. But let our friends X., Y., Z., who have just
bagged three elephants so easily, continue the pursuit, hunt the
remaining portion of the herd down till one by one they have nearly
all fallen to the bullet--X., Y., Z. will have had enough of it; they
will be blinded by perspiration, torn by countless thorns, as they
have rushed through the jungles determined not to lose sight of their
game, soaked to the skin as they have waded through intervening
streams, and will entirely have altered their opinion as to elephants
invariably running away, as they will very probably have seen one turn
sharp round from the retreating herd, and charge straight into them
when they least expected it. At any rate, after a hunt of this kind
they can form some opinion of the excitement of the true sport.
The first attack upon a herd by a couple of first-rate
elephant-shots frequently ends the contest in a few seconds by the
death of every elephant. I have frequently seen a small herd of five
or six elephants annihilated almost in as many seconds after a
well-planned approach in thick jungle, when they have been discovered
standing in a crowd and presenting favourable shots. In such an
instance the sport is so soon concluded that the only excitement
consists in the cautious advance to the attack through bad jungle.
As a rule, the pursuit of elephants through bad, thorny jungles
should if possible be avoided: the danger is in many cases extreme,
although the greater portion of the herd may at other times be perhaps
easily killed. There is no certainty in a shot. An elephant may be
discerned by the eye looming in an apparent mist formed by the
countless intervening twigs and branches which veil him like a screen
of network. To reach the fatal spot the ball must pass through perhaps
fifty little twigs, one of which, if struck obliquely, turns the
bullet, and there is no answering for the consequence. There are no
rules, however, without exceptions, and in some instances the
following of the game through the thickest jungle can hardly be
avoided.
The character of the country in Ceylon is generally very
unfavourable to sport of all kinds. The length of the island is about
two hundred and eighty miles, by one hundred and fifty in width; the
greater portion of this surface is covered with impenetrable jungles,
which form secure coverts for countless animals.
The centre of the island is mountainous, torrents from which, form
the sources of the numerous rivers by which Ceylon is so well watered.
The low country is flat. The soil throughout the island is generally
poor and sandy.
This being the character of the country, and vast forests rendered
impenetrable by tangled underwood forming the principal features of
the landscape, a person arriving at Ceylon for the purpose of enjoying
its wild sports would feel an inexpressible disappointment.
Instead of mounting a good horse, as he might have fondly
anticipated, and at once speeding over trackless plains till so far
from human habitations that the territories of beasts commence, he
finds himself walled in by jungle on either side of the highway. In
vain he asks for information. He finds the neighbourhood of Galle, his
first landing place, densely populated; he gets into the coach for
Colombo. Seventy miles of close population and groves of cocoa-nut
trees are passed, and he reaches the capital. This is worse and
worse--he has seen no signs of wild country during his long journey,
and Colombo appears to be the height of civilisation. He books his
place for Kandy; he knows that is in the very centre of Ceylon--there
surely must be sport there, he thinks.
The morning gun fires from the Colombo fort at 5 A.M. and the coach
starts. Miles are passed, and still the country is thickly
populated--paddy cultivation in all the flats and hollows, and even
the sides of the hills are carefully terraced out in a laborious
system of agriculture. There can be no shooting here!
Sixty miles are passed; the top of the Kaduganava Pass is reached,
eighteen hundred feet above the sea level, the road walled with jungle
on either side. From the summit of this pass our newly arrived
sportsman gazes with despair. Far as the eye can reach over a vast
extent of country, mountain and valley, hill and dale, without one
open spot, are clothed alike in one dark screen of impervious forest.
He reaches Kandy, a civilised town surrounded by hills of
jungle--that interminable jungle!--and at Kandy he may remain, or,
better still, return again to England, unless he can get some
well-known Ceylon sportsman to pilot him through the apparently
pathless forests, and in fact to 'show him sport.' This is not easily
effected. Men who understand the sport are not over fond of acting
`chaperon' to a young hand, as a novice must always detract from the
sport in some degree. In addition to this, many persons do not exactly
know themselves; and, although the idea of shooting elephants appears
very attractive at a distance, the pleasure somewhat abates when the
sportsman is forced to seek for safety in a swift pair of heels.
I shall now proceed to give a description of the various sports in
Ceylon--a task for which the constant practice of many years has
afforded ample incident.
The game of Ceylon consists of elephants, buffaloes, elk, spotted
deer, red or the paddy-field deer*(*A small species of deer found in
the island), mouse deer, hogs, bears, leopards, hares, black
partridge, red-legged partridge, pea-fowl, jungle-fowl, quail, snipe,
ducks, widgeon, teal, golden and several kinds of plover, a great
variety of pigeons, and among the class of reptiles are innumerable
snakes, etc., and the crocodile.
The acknowledged sports of Ceylon are elephant-shooting,
buffalo-shooting, deer-shooting, elk-hunting, and deer-coursing: the
two latter can only be enjoyed by a resident in the island, as of
course the sport is dependent upon a pack of fine hounds. Although the
wild boar is constantly killed, I do not reckon him among the sports
of the country, as he is never sought for; death and destruction to
the hounds generally being attendant upon his capture. The bear and
leopard also do not form separate sports; they are merely killed when
met with.
In giving an account of each kind of sport I shall explain the
habits of the animal and the features of the country wherein every
incident occurs, Ceylon scenery being so diversified that no general
description could give a correct idea of Ceylon sports.
The guns are the first consideration. After the first year of my
experience I had four rifles made to order, which have proved
themselves perfect weapons in all respects, and exactly adapted for
heavy game. They are double-barrelled, No. 10 bores, and of such power
in metal that they weigh fifteen pounds each. I consider them
perfection; but should others consider them too heavy, a pound taken
from the weight of the barrels would make a perceptible difference. I
would in all cases strongly deprecate the two grooved rifle for wild
sports, on account of the difficulty in loading quickly. A No. 10
twelve-grooved rifle will carry a conical ball of two ounces and a
half, and can be loaded as quickly as a smooth-bore. Some persons
prefer the latter to rifles for elephant-shooting, but I cannot myself
understand why a decidedly imperfect weapon should be used when the
rifle offers such superior advantages. At twenty and even thirty paces
a good smooth-bore will carry a ball with nearly the same precision as
a rifle; but in a country full of various large game there is no
certainty, when the ball is rammed down, at what object it is to be
aimed. A buffalo or deer may cross the path at a hundred yards, and
the smooth-bore is useless; on the other hand, the rifle is always
ready for whatever may appear.
My battery consists of one four-ounce rifle (a single barrel)
weighing twenty-one pounds, one long two-ounce rifle (single barrel)
weighing sixteen pounds, and four double-barrelled rifles, No. 10
weighing each fifteen pounds. Smooth-bores I count for nothing,
although I have frequently used them.
So much for guns. It may therefore be summed up that the proper
battery for Ceylon shooting would be four large-bored double-barrelled
rifles, say from No. 10 to No. 12 in size, but all to be the same
bore, so as to prevent confusion in loading. Persons may suit their
own fancy as to the weight of their guns, bearing in mind that single
barrels are very useless things.
Next to the `Rifle' in the order of description comes the 'Hound.'
The `elk' is his acknowledged game, and an account of this animal's
size and strength will prove the necessity of a superior breed of
hound.
The `elk' is a Ceylon blunder and a misnomer. The animal thus
called is a `samber deer,' well known in India as the largest of all
Asiatic deer.
A buck in his prime will stand fourteen hands high at the shoulder,
and will weigh 600 pounds, live weight. He is in colour dark brown,
with a fine mane of coarse bristly hair of six inches in length; the
rest of his body is covered with the same coarse hair of about two
inches in length. I have a pair of antlers in my possession that are
thirteen inches round the burr, and the same size beneath the first
branch, and three feet four inches in length; this, however, is a very
unusual size.
The elk has seldom more than six points to his antlers. The
low-country elk are much larger than those on the highlands; the
latter are seldom more than from twelve to thirteen hands high; and of
course their weight is proportionate, that of a buck in condition
being about 400 pounds when gralloched. I have killed them much
heavier than this on the mountains, but I have given about the average
weight.
The habits of this animal are purely nocturnal. He commences his
wanderings at sunset, and retires to the forest at break of day. He is
seldom found in greater numbers than two or three together, and is
generally alone. When brought to bay he fights to the last, and
charges man and hound indiscriminately, a choice hound killed being
often the price of victory.
The country in which he is hunted is in the mountainous districts
of Ceylon. Situated at an elevation of 6,200 feet above the sea is
Newera Ellia, the sanatorium of the island. Here I have kept a pack
and hunted elk for some years, the delightful coolness of the
temperature (seldom above 66 degrees Fahr.) rendering the sport doubly
enjoyable. The principal features of this country being a series of
wild marsh, plains, forests, torrents, mountains and precipices, a
peculiar hound is required for the sport.
A pack of thoroughbred fox-hounds would never answer. They would
pick up a cold scent and open upon it before they were within a mile
of their game. Roused from his morning nap, the buck would snuff the
breeze, and to the distant music give an attentive ear, then shake the
dew from his rough hide, and away over rocks and torrents, down the
steep mountain sides, through pathless forests; and woe then to the
pack of thoroughbreds, whose persevering notes would soon be echoed by
the rocky steeps, far, far away from any chance of return, lost in the
trackless jungles and ravines many miles from kennel, a prey to
leopards and starvation! I have proved this by experience, having
brought a pack of splendid hounds from England, only one of which
survived a few months' hunting.
The hound required for elk-hunting is a cross between the fox-hound
and blood-hound, of great size and courage, with as powerful a voice
as possible. He should be trained to this sport from a puppy, and his
natural sagacity soon teaches him not to open unless upon a hot scent,
or about two hundred yards from his game; thus the elk is not
disturbed until the hound is at full speed upon his scent, and he
seldom gets a long start. Fifteen couple of such hounds in full cry
put him at his best pace, which is always tried to the uttermost by a
couple or two of fast and pitiless lurchers who run ahead of the pack,
the object being to press him at first starting, so as to blow him at
the very commencement: this is easily effected, as he is full of food,
and it is his nature always to take off straight UP the hill when
first disturbed. When blown he strikes down hill, and makes at great
speed for the largest and deepest stream; in this he turns to bay, and
tries the mettle of the finest hounds.
The great enemy to a pack is the leopard. He pounces from the
branch of a tree upon a stray hound, and soon finishes him, unless of
great size and courage, in which case the cowardly brute is soon
beaten off. This forms another reason for the choice of large hounds.
The next sport is 'deer-coursing.' This is one of the most
delightful kinds of sport in Ceylon. The game is the axis or spotted
deer, and the open plains in many parts of the low country afford
splendid ground for both greyhound and horse.
The buck is about 250 pounds live weight, of wonderful speed and
great courage, armed with long and graceful antlers as sharp as
needles. He will suddenly turn to bay upon the hard ground, and charge
his pursuers, and is more dangerous to the greyhounds than the elk,
from his wonderful activity, and from the fact that he is coursed by
only a pair of greyhounds, instead of being hunted by a pack.
Pure greyhounds of great size and courage are best adapted for this
sport. They cannot afford to lose speed by a cross with slower hounds.
Newera Ellia - The Turn-out for Elk-Hunting - Elk-Hunting - Elk
turned to Bay - The Boar.
Where shall I begin? This is a momentous question, when, upon
glancing back upon past years, a thousand incidents jostle each other
for precedence. How shall I describe them? This, again, is easier
asked than answered. A journal is a dry description, mingling the
uninteresting with the brightest moments of sport. No, I will not
write a journal; it would be endless and boring. I shall begin with
the present as it is, and call up the past as I think proper.
Here, then, I am in my private sanctum, my rifles all arranged in
their respective stands above the chimney-piece, the stags' horns
round walls hung with horn-cases, powder-flasks and the various
weapons of the chase. Even as I write the hounds are yelling in the
kennel.
The thermometer is at 62 degrees Fahr., and it is mid-day. It never
exceeds 72 degrees in the hottest weather, and sometimes falls below
freezing point at night. The sky is spotless and the air calm. The
fragrance of mignonettes, and a hundred flowers that recall England,
fills the air. Green fields of grass and clover, neatly fenced,
surround a comfortable house and grounds. Well-fed cattle of the
choicest breeds, and English sheep, are grazing in the paddocks.
Well-made roads and gravel walks run through the estate. But a few
years past, and this was all wilderness.
Dense forest reigned where now not even the stump of a tree is
standing; the wind howled over hill and valley, the dank moss hung
from the scathed branches, the deep morass filled the hollows; but all
is changed by the hand of civilisation and industry. The dense forests
and rough plains, which still form the boundaries of the cultivated
land, only add to the beauty. The monkeys and parrots are even now
chattering among the branches, and occasionally the elephant in his
nightly wanderings trespasses upon the fields, unconscious of the
oasis within his territory of savage nature.
The still, starlight night is awakened by the harsh bark of the
elk; the lofty mountains, grey with the silvery moonlight, echo back
the sound; and the wakeful hounds answer the well-known cry by a
prolonged and savage yell.
This is 'Newera Ellia,' the sanatorium of Ceylon, the most perfect
climate of the world. It now boasts of a handsome church, a public
reading-room, a large hotel, the barracks, and about twenty private
residences.
The adjacent country, of comparatively table land, occupies an
extent of some thirty miles in length, varying in altitude from 6,200
to 7,000 feet, forming a base for the highest peaks in Ceylon, which
rise to nearly 9,000 feet.
Alternate large plains, separated by belts of forest, rapid rivers,
waterfalls, precipices, and panoramic views of boundless extent, form
the features of this country, which, combined with the sports of the
place, render a residence at Newera Ellia a life of health, luxury,
and independence.
The high road from Colombo passes over the mountains through Newera
Ellia to Badulla, from which latter place there is a bridle road,
through the best shooting districts in Ceylon, to the seaport town of
Batticaloa, and from thence to Trincomalee. The relative distances of
Newera Ellia are, from Galle, 185 miles; from Colombo, 115 miles; from
Kandy, 47 miles; from Badulla, 36 miles; from Batticaloa, 148 miles.
Were it not for the poverty of the soil, Newera Ellia would long ago
have become a place of great importance, as the climate is favourable
to the cultivation of all English produce; but an absence of lime in
the soil, and the cost of applying it artificially, prohibit the
cultivation of all grain, and restrict the produce of the land to
potatoes and other vegetables. Nevertheless, many small settlers earn
a good subsistence, although this has latterly been rendered
precarious by the appearance of the well-known potato disease.
Newera Ellia has always been a favourite place of resort during the
fashionable months, from the commencement of January to the middle of
May. At that time the rainy season commences, and visitors rapidly
disappear.
All strangers remark the scanty accommodation afforded to the
numerous visitors. To see the number of people riding and walking
round the Newera Ellia plain, it appears a marvel how they can be
housed in the few dwellings that exist. There is an endless supply of
fine timber in the forests, and powerful sawmills are already erected;
but the island is, like its soil, 'poor.' Its main staple, 'coffee,'
does not pay sufficiently to enable the proprietors of estates to
indulge in the luxury of a house at Newera Ellia. Like many
watering-places in England, it is overcrowded at one season and
deserted at another, the only permanent residents being comprised in
the commandant, the officer in command of the detachment of troops,
the government agent, the doctor, the clergyman, and our own family.
Dull enough! some persons may exclaim; and so it would be to any
but a sportsman; but the jungles teem with large game, and Newera
Ellia is in a central position, as the best sporting country is only
three days' journey, or one hundred miles, distant. Thus, at any time,
the guns may be packed up, and, with tents and baggage sent on some
days in advance, a fortnight's or a month's war may be carried on
against the elephants without much trouble.
The turn-out for elk-hunting during the fashionable season at
Newera Ellia is sometimes peculiarly exciting. The air is keen and
frosty, the plains snow-white with the crisp hoar frost, and even at
the early hour of 6 A.M. parties of ladies may be seen urging their
horses round the plain on their way to the appointed meet. Here we are
waiting with the anxious pack, perhaps blessing some of our more
sleepy friends for not turning out a little earlier. Party after party
arrives, including many of the fair sex, and the rosy tips to all
countenances attest the quality of the cold even in Ceylon.
There is something peculiarly inspiriting in the early hour of
sunrise upon these mountains--an indescribable lightness in the
atmosphere, owing to the great elevation, which takes a wonderful
effect upon the spirits. The horses and the hounds feel its influence
in an equal degree; the former, who are perhaps of sober character in
the hot climate, now champ the bit and paw the ground: their owners
hardly know them by the change.
We have frequently mustered as many as thirty horses at a meet; but
on these occasions a picked spot is chosen where the sport may be
easily witnessed by those who are unaccustomed to it. The horses may,
in these instances, be available, but as a rule they are perfectly
useless in elk-hunting, as the plains are so boggy that they would be
hock-deep every quarter of a mile. Thus no person can thoroughly enjoy
elk-hunting who is not well accustomed to it, as it is a sport
conducted entirely on foot, and the thinness of the air in this
elevated region is very trying to the lungs in hard exercise.
Thoroughly sound in wind and limb, with no superfluous flesh, must be
the man who would follow the hounds in this wild country--through
jungles, rivers, plains and deep ravines, sometimes from sunrise to
sunset without tasting food since the previous evening, with the
exception of a cup of coffee and a piece of toast before starting. It
is trying work, but it is a noble sport: no weapon but the
hunting-knife; no certainty as to the character of the game that may
be found; it may be either an elk, or a boar, or a leopard, and yet
the knife and the good hounds are all that can be trusted in.
It is a glorious sport certainly to a man who thoroughly
understands it; the voice of every hound familiar to his ear; the
particular kind of game that is found is at once known to him, long
before he is in view, by the style of the hunting. If an elk is found,
the hounds follow with a burst straight as a line, and at a killing
pace, directly up the hill, till he at length turns and bends his
headlong course for some stronghold in a deep river to bay. Listening
to the hounds till certain of their course, a thorough knowledge of
the country at once tells the huntsman of their destination, and away
he goes.
He tightens his belt by a hole, and steadily he starts at a long,
swinging trot, having made up his mind for a day of it. Over hills and
valleys, through tangled and pathless forests, but all well known to
him, steady he goes at the same pace on the level, easy through the
bogs and up the hills, extra steam down hill, and stopping for a
moment to listen for the hounds on every elevated spot. At length he
hears them! No, it was a bird. Again he fancies that he hears a
distant sound--was it the wind? No; there it is--it is old Smut's
voice--he is at bay! Yoick to him! he shouts till his lungs are
well-nigh cracked, and through thorns and jungles, bogs and ravines,
he rushes towards the welcome sound. Thick-tangled bushes armed with a
thousand hooked thorns suddenly arrest his course; it is the dense
fringe of underwood that borders every forest; the open plain is
within a few yards of him. The hounds in a mad chorus are at bay, and
the woods ring again with the cheering sound. Nothing can stop him
now--thorns, or clothes, or flesh must go--something must give way as
he bursts through them and stands upon the plain.
There they are in that deep pool formed by the river as it sweeps
round the rock. A buck! a noble fellow! Now he charges at the hounds,
and strikes the foremost beneath the water with his fore-feet; up they
come again to the surface--they hear their master's well-known
shout--they look round and see his welcome figure on the steep bank.
Another moment, a tremendous splash, and he is among his hounds, and
all are swimming towards their noble game. At them he comes with a
fierce rush. Avoid him as you best can, ye hunters, man and hounds!
Down the river the buck now swims, sometimes galloping over the
shallows, sometimes wading shoulder-deep, sometimes swimming through
the deep pools. Now he dashes down the fierce rapids and leaps the
opposing rocks, between which, the torrent rushes at a frightful pace.
The hounds are after him; the roaring of the water joins in their wild
chorus; the loud holloa of the huntsman is heard above every sound as
he cheers the pack on. He runs along the bank of the river, and again
the enraged buck turns to bay. He has this time taken a strong
position: he stands in a swift rapid about two feet deep; his thin
legs cleave the stream as it rushes past, and every hound is swept
away as he attempts to stem the current. He is a perfect picture: his
nostrils are distended, his mane is bristled up, his eyes flash, and
he adds his loud bark of defiance to the din around him. The hounds
cannot touch him. Now for the huntsman's part; he calls the stanchest
seizers to his side, gives them a cheer on, and steps into the
torrent, knife in hand. Quick as lightning the buck springs to the
attack; but he has exposed himself, and at that moment the tall
lurchers are upon his ears; the huntsman leaps upon one side and
plunges the knife behind his shoulder. A tremendous struggle takes
place--the whole pack is upon him; still his dying efforts almost free
him from their hold: a mass of spray envelopes the whole scene.
Suddenly he falls--he dies--it is all over. The hounds are called off,
and are carefully examined for wounds.
The huntsman is now perhaps some miles from home, he, therefore,
cuts a long pole, and tying a large bunch of grass to one end, he
sticks the other end into the ground close to the river's edge where
the elk is lying. This marks the spot. He calls his hounds together
and returns homeward, and afterwards sends men to cut the buck up and
bring the flesh. Elk venison is very good, but is at all times more
like beef than English venison.
The foregoing may be considered a general description of
elk-hunting, although the incidents of the sport necessarily vary
considerably.
The boar is our dangerous adversary, and he is easily known by the
character of the run. The hounds seldom open with such a burst upon
the scent as they do with an elk. The run is much slower; he runs down
this ravine and up that, never going straight away, and he generally
comes to bay after a run of ten minutes' duration.
A boar always chooses the very thickest part of the jungle as his
position for a bay, and from this he makes continual rushes at the
hounds.
The huntsman approaches the scene of the combat, breaking his way
with difficulty through the tangled jungle, until within about twenty
yards of the bay. He now cheers the hounds on to the attack, and if
they are worthy of their name, they instantly rush in to the boar
regardless of wounds. The huntsman is aware of the seizure by the
grunting of the boar and the tremendous confusion in the thick jungle;
he immediately rushes to the assistance of the pack, knife in hand.
A scene of real warfare meets his view--gaping wounds upon his best
hounds, the boar rushing through the jungle covered with dogs, and he
himself becomes the immediate object of his fury when observed.
No time is to be lost. Keeping behind the boar if possible, he
rushes to the bloody conflict, and drives the hunting-knife between
the shoulders in the endeavour to divide the spine. Should he happily
effect this, the boar falls stone dead; but if not, he repeats the
thrust, keeping a good look-out for the animal's tusks.
If the dogs were of not sufficient courage to rush in and seize the
boar when halloaed on, no man could approach him in a thick jungle
with only a hunting-knife, as he would in all probability have his
inside ripped out at the first charge. The animal is wonderfully
active and ferocious, and of immense power, constantly weighing 4 cwt.
The end of nearly every good seizer is being killed by a boar. The
better the dog the more likely he is to be killed, as he will be the
first to lead the attack, and in thick jungle he has no chance of
escaping from a wound.
Minneria Lake--Brush with a Bull--An Awkward Vis-a-vis--A Bright
Thought--Bull Buffalo Receives his Small Change--What is Man?--Long
Shot with the Four-ounce--Charged by a Herd of Buffaloes--the
Four-ounce does Service--The 'Lola'--A Woman Killed by a
Crocodile--Crocodile at Bolgodde Lake--A Monster Crocodile--Death of a
Crocodile.
THE foregoing description may serve as an introduction to the hill
sports of Ceylon. One animal, however, yet remains to be described,
who surpasses all others in dogged ferocity when once aroused. This is
the 'buffalo.'
The haunts of this animal are in the hottest parts of Ceylon. In
the neighbourhood of lakes, swamps, and extensive plains, the buffalo
exists in large herds; wallowing in the soft mire, and passing
two-thirds of his time in the water itself, he may be almost termed
amphibious.
He is about the size of a large ox, of immense bone and strength,
very active, and his hide is almost free from hair, giving a
disgusting appearance to his India-rubber-like skin. He carries his
head in a peculiar manner, the horns thrown back, and his nose
projecting on a level with his forehead, thus securing himself from a
front shot in a fatal part. This renders him a dangerous enemy, as he
will receive any number of balls from a small gun in the throat and
chest without evincing the least symptom of distress. The shoulder is
the acknowledged point to aim at, but from his disposition to face the
guns this is a difficult shot to obtain. Should he succeed in catching
his antagonist, his fury knows no bounds, and he gores his victim to
death, trampling and kneeling upon him till he is satisfied that life
is extinct.
This sport would not be very dangerous in the forests, where the
buffalo could be easily stalked, and where escape would also be
rendered less difficult in case of accident; but as he is generally
met with upon the open plains, free from a single tree, he must be
killed when once brought to bay, or he will soon exhibit his
qualifications for mischief. There is a degree of uncertainty in their
character which much increases the danger of the pursuit. A buffalo
may retreat at first sight with every symptom of cowardice, and thus
induce a too eager pursuit, when he will suddenly become the
assailant. I cannot explain their character better than by describing
the, first wild buffaloes that I ever saw.
I had not been long in Ceylon, but having arrived in the island for
the sake of its wild sports, I had not been idle, and I had already
made a considerable bag of large game. Like most novices, however, I
was guilty of one great fault. I despised the game, and gave no heed
to the many tales of danger and hair-breadth escapes which attended
the pursuit of wild animals. This carelessness on my part arose from
my first debut having been extremely lucky; most shots had told well,
and the animal had been killed with such apparent ease that I had
learnt to place an implicit reliance in the rifle. The real fact was
that I was like many others; I had slaughtered a number of animals
without understanding their habits, and I was perfectly ignorant of
the sport. This is now many years ago, and it was then my first visit
to the island. Some places that were good spots for shooting in those
days have since that time been much disturbed, and are now no longer
attractive to my eyes. One of these places is Minneria Lake.
I was on a shooting trip accompanied by my brother, whom I will
designate as B. We had passed a toilsome day in pushing and dragging
our ponies for twenty miles along a narrow path through thick jungle,
which half-a-dozen natives in advance were opening before us with
bill-hooks. This had at one time been a good path, but was then
overgrown. It is now an acknowledged bridle road.
At 4 P.M., and eighty miles from Kandy, we emerged from the jungle,
and the view of Minneria Lake burst upon us, fully repaying us for our
day's march. It was a lovely afternoon. The waters of the lake; which
is twenty miles in circumference, were burnished by the setting sun.
The surrounding plains were as green as an English meadow, and
beautiful forest trees bordered the extreme boundaries of the plains
like giant warders of the adjoining jungle. Long promontories densely
wooded stretched far into the waters of the lake, forming sheltered
nooks and bays teeming with wild fowl. The deer browsed in herds on
the wide extent of plain, or lay beneath the shade of the spreading
branches. Every feature of lovely scenery was here presented. In some
spots groves of trees grew to the very water's edge; in others the
wide plains, free from a single stem or bush, stretched for miles
along the edge of the lake; thickly wooded hills bordered the extreme
end of its waters, and distant blue mountains mingled their dim
summits with the clouds.
It was a lovely scene which we enjoyed in silence, while our ponies
feasted upon the rich grass.
The village of Minneria was three miles farther on, and our
coolies, servants, and baggage were all far behind us. We had,
therefore, no rifles or guns at hand, except a couple of shot-guns,
which were carried by our horsekeepers : for these we had a few balls.
For about half an hour we waited in the impatient expectation of
the arrival of our servants with the rifles. The afternoon was wearing
away, and they did not appear. We could wait no longer, but determined
to take a stroll and examine the country. We therefore left our horses
and proceeded.
The grass was most verdant, about the height of a field fit for the
scythe in England, but not so thick. From this the snipe arose at
every twenty or thirty paces, although, the ground was perfectly dry.
Crossing a large meadow, and skirting the banks of the lake, from
which the ducks and teal rose in large flocks, we entered a long neck
of jungle which stretched far into the lake. This was not above two
hundred paces in width, and we soon emerged upon an extensive plain
bordered by fine forest, the waters of the lake stretching far away
upon our left, like a sheet of gold. A few large rocks rose above the
surface near the shore; these were covered with various kinds of wild
fowl. The principal tenants of the plain were wild buffaloes.
A herd of about a hundred were lying in a swampy hollow about a
quarter of a mile from us: Several single bulls were dotted about the
green surface of the level plain, and on the opposite shores of the
lake were many dark patches undistinguishable in the distance; these
were in reality herds of buffaloes. There was not a sound in the wide
expanse before us, except the harsh cry of the water-fowl that our
presence had already disturbed--not a breath of air moved the leaves
of the trees which shaded us--and the whole scene was that of
undisturbed nature. The sun had now sunk low upon the horizon, and the
air was comparatively cool. The multitude of buffaloes enchanted us,
and with our two light double-barrels, we advanced to the attack of
the herd before us.
We had not left the obscurity of the forest many seconds before we
were observed. The herd started up from their muddy bed and gazed at
us with astonishment. It was a fair open plain of some thousand acres,
bounded by the forest which we had just quitted on the one side, and
by the lake on the other; thus there was no cover for our advance, and
all we could do was to push on.
As we approached the herd they ranged up in a compact body,
presenting a very regular line in front. From this line seven large
bulls stepped forth, and from their vicious appearance seemed disposed
to show fight. In the meantime we were running up, and were soon
within thirty paces of them. At this distance the main body of the
herd suddenly wheeled round and thundered across the plain in full
retreat. One of the bulls at the same moment charged straight at us,
but when within twenty paces of the guns he turned to one side, and
instantly received two balls in the shoulder, B. and I having fired at
the same moment. As luck would have it, his blade-bone was thus
broken, and he fell upon his knees, but recovering himself in an
instant, he retreated on three legs to the water.
We now received assistance from an unexpected quarter. One of the
large bulls, his companions, charged after him with great fury, and
soon overtaking the wounded beast, he struck him full in the side,
throwing him over with a great shock on the muddy border of the lake.
Here the wounded animal lay unable to rise, and his conqueror
commenced a slow retreat across the plain.
Leaving B. to extinguish the wounded buffalo, I gave chase to the
retreating bull. At an easy canter he would gain a hundred paces and
then, turning, he would face me; throwing his nose up, and turning his
head to one side with a short grunt, he would advance quickly for a
few paces, and then again retreat as I continued to approach.
In this manner he led me a chase of about a mile along the banks of
the lake, but he appeared determined not to bring the fight to an
issue at close quarters. Cursing his cowardice, I fired a long shot at
him, and reloading my last spare ball I continued the chase, led on by
ignorance and excitement.
The lake in one part stretched in a narrow creek into the plain,
and the bull now directed his course into the angle formed by this
turn. I thought that I lead him in a corner, and, redoubling my
exertions, I gained upon him considerably. He retreated slowly to the
very edge of the creek, and I had gained so fast upon him that I was
not thirty paces distant, when he plunged into the water and commenced
swimming across the creek. This was not more than sixty yards in
breadth, and I knew that I could now bring him to action.
Running round the borders of the creek as fast as I could, I
arrived at the opposite side on his intended landing-place just as his
black form reared from the deep water and gained the shallows, into
which I had waded knee-deep to meet him. I now experienced that
pleasure as he stood sullenly eyeing me within fifteen paces. Poor
stupid fellow! I would willingly, in my ignorance, have betted ten to
one upon the shot, so certain was I of his death in another instant.
I took a quick but steady aim at his chest, at the point of
connection with the throat. The smoke of the barrel passed to one
side;--there he stood--he had not flinched; he literally had not moved
a muscle. The only change that had taken place was in his eye; this,
which had hitherto been merely sullen, was now beaming with fury; but
his form was as motionless as a statue. A stream of blood poured from
a wound within an inch of the spot at which I had aimed; had it not
been for this fact, I should not have believed him struck.
Annoyed at the failure of the shot, I tried him with the left-hand
barrel at the same hole. The report of the gun echoed over the lake,
but there he stood as though he bore a charmed life;--an increased
flow of blood from the wound and additional lustre in his eye were the
only signs of his being struck.
I was unloaded, and had not a single ball remaining. It was now his
turn. I dared not turn to retreat, as I knew he would immediately
charge, and we stared each other out of countenance.
With a short grunt he suddenly sprang forward, but fortunately, as
I did not move, he halted; he had, however, decreased his distance,
and we now gazed at each other within ten paces. I began to think
buffalo-shooting somewhat dangerous, and I would have given something
to have been a mile away, but ten times as much to have had my
four-ounce rifle in my hand. Oh, how I longed for that rifle in this
moment of suspense! Unloaded, without the power of defence, with the
absolute certainty of a charge from an overpowering brute, my hand
instinctively found the handle of my hunting-knife, a useless weapon
against such a foe.
Knowing that B. was not aware of my situation at the distance which
separated us (about a mile), without taking my eyes from the figure
before me, I raised my hand to my mouth and gave a long and loud
whistle; this was a signal that I knew would be soon answered if
heard.
With a stealthy step and another short grunt, the bull again
advanced a couple of paces towards me. He seemed aware of my
helplessness, and he was the picture of rage and fury, pawing the
water and stamping violently with his forefeet.
This was very pleasant! I gave myself up for lost, but putting as
fierce an expression into my features as I could possibly assume, I
stared hopelessly at my maddened antagonist.
Suddenly a bright thought flashed through my mind. Without taking
my eyes off the animal before me, I put a double charge of powder down
the right-hand barrel, and tearing off a piece of my shirt, I took all
the money from my pouch, three shillings in sixpenny pieces, and two
anna pieces, which I luckily had with me in this small coin for paying
coolies. Quickly making them into a rouleau with the piece of rag, I
rammed them down the barrel, and they were hardly well home before the
bull again sprang forward. So quick was it that I had no time to
replace the ramrod, and I threw it in the water, bringing my gun on
full cock in the same instant. However, he again halted, being now
within about seven paces from me, and we again gazed fixedly at each
other, but with altered feelings on my part. I had faced him
hopelessly with an empty gun for more than a quarter of an hour, which
seemed a century. I now had a charge in my gun, which I knew if
reserved till he was within a foot of the muzzle would certainly floor
him, and I awaited his onset with comparative carelessness, still
keeping my eyes opposed to his gaze.
At this time I heard a splashing in the water behind me,
accompanied by the hard breathing of something evidently distressed.
The next moment I heard B.'s voice. He could hardly speak for want of
breath, having run the whole way to my rescue, but I could understand
that he had only one barrel loaded, and no bullets left. I dared not
turn my face from the buffalo, but I cautioned B. to reserve his fire
till the bull should be close into me, and then to aim at the head.
The words were hardly uttered, when, with the concentrated rage of
the last twenty minutes, he rushed straight at me! It was the work of
an instant. B. fired without effect. The horns were lowered, their
points were on either side of me, and the muzzle of the gun barely
touched his forehead when I pulled the trigger, and three shillings'
worth of small change rattled into his hard head. Down he went, and
rolled over with the suddenly checked momentum of his charge. Away
went B. and I as fast as our heels would carry us, through the water
and over the plain, knowing that he was not dead but only stunned.
There was a large fallen tree about half a mile from us, whose
whitened branches, rising high above the ground, offered a tempting
asylum. To this we directed our flying steps, and, after a run of a
hundred yards, we turned and looked behind us. He had regained his
feet and was following us slowly. We now experienced the difference of
feeling between hunting and being hunted, and fine sport we must have
afforded him.
On he came, but fortunately so stunned by the collision with her
Majesty's features upon the coin which he had dared to oppose that he
could only reel forward at a slow canter. By degrees even this pace
slackened, and he fell. We were only too glad to be able to reduce our
speed likewise, but we had no sooner stopped to breathe, than he was
again up and after us. At length, however, we gained the tree, and we
beheld him with satisfaction stretched powerless upon the ground, but
not dead, within two hundred yards of us.
We retreated under cover of the forest to the spot at which we had
left the horses, fortunately meeting no opposition from wild animals,
and we shortly arrived at the village at which we took up our
quarters, vowing vengeance on the following morning for the defeat
that we had sustained.
A man is a poor defenceless wretch if left to defend himself
against wild animals with the simple natural weapons of arms, legs,
and teeth. A tom-cat would almost be a match for him. He has legs
which will neither serve him for pursuit or escape if he is forced to
trust only in his speed. He has strength of limb which is useless
without some artificial weapon. He is an animal who, without the power
of reason, could not even exist in a wild state; his brain alone gives
him the strength to support his title of lord of the creation.
Nevertheless, a lord of the creation does not appear in much
majesty when running for his life from an infuriated buffalo;--the
assumed title sits uneasily upon him when, with scarcely a breath left
in his body, he struggles along till he is ready to drop with fatigue,
expecting to be overtaken at every step. We must certainly have
exhibited poor specimens of the boasted sway of man over the brute
creation could a stranger have witnessed our flight on this occasion.
The next morning we were up at daybreak, and we returned to the
battlefield of the previous evening in the full expectation of seeing
our wounded antagonist lying dead where we had left him. In this we
were disappointed--he was gone, and we never saw him again.
I now had my long two-ounce and my four-ounce rifles with me, and I
was fully prepared for a deep revenge for the disgrace of yesterday.
The morning was clear but cloudy; a heavy thunderstorm during the
night had cooled the air, and the whole plain was glistening with
bright drops; the peacocks were shrieking from the tree-tops and
spreading their gaudy plumage to the cool breeze; and the whole face
of nature seemed refreshed. We felt the same invigorating spirit, and
we took a long survey of the many herds of buffaloes upon the plain
before we could determine which we should first attack.
A large single bull, who had been lying in a swampy hollow
unobserved by us, suddenly sprang up at about three hundred yards'
distance, and slowly cantered off. I tried the long two-ounce rifle at
him, but, taking too great an elevation, I fired over him. The report,
however, had the effect of turning him, and, instead of retreating, he
wheeled round and attempted to pass between the guns and the banks of
the lake. We were about three hundred yards from the water's edge, and
he was soon passing us at full gallop at right angles, about midway or
a hundred and fifty yards distant.
I had twelve drachms of powder in the four-ounce rifle, and I took
a flying shot at his shoulder. No visible effect was produced, and the
ball ricochetted completely across the broad surface of the lake
(which was no more than a mile wide at this part) in continuous
splashes. The gun-bearers said I had fired behind him, but I had
distinctly heard the peculiar 'fut' which a ball makes upon striking
an animal, and although the passage of the ball across the lake
appeared remarkable, nevertheless I felt positive that it had first
passed through some portion of the animal.
Away the bull sped over the plain at unabated speed for about two
hundred paces, when he suddenly turned and charged toward the guns. On
he came for about a hundred yards, but evidently slackening his speed
at every stride. At length he stopped altogether. His mouth was wide
open, and I could now distinguish a mass of bloody foam upon his lips
and nostrils--the ball had in reality passed through his lungs, and,
making its exit from the opposite shoulder, it had even then flown
across the lake. This was the proof of the effect of the twelve
drachms of powder.
Having reloaded, I now advanced towards him, and soon arrived
within fifty paces. He was the facsimile of the bull that had chased
us on the previous day--the same picture of fury and determination;
and, crouching low, he advanced a few paces, keeping his eyes fixed
upon us as though we were already his own.
A short cough, accompanied by a rush of blood from his mouth,
seemed to cause him great uneasiness, and he halted.
Again we advanced till within twenty paces of him. I would not
fire, as I saw that he already had enough, and I wished to see how
long he could support a wound through the lungs, as my safety in
buffalo-shooting might in future depend upon this knowledge.
The fury of his spirit seemed to war with death, and, although
reeling with weakness and suffocation, he again attempted to come on.
It was his last effort; his eyes rolled convulsively, he gave a short
grunt of impotent rage, and the next moment he fell upon his back with
his heels in the air; he was stone dead, and game to the last moment.
I had thus commenced a revenge for the insult of yesterday; I had
proved the wonderful power of the four-ounce rifle--a weapon destined
to make great havoc amongst the heavy game of Ceylon.
Upon turning from the carcass before us, we observed to our
surprise that a large herd of buffaloes, that were at a great distance
when we had commenced the attack upon the bull, had now approached to
within a few hundred yards, and were standing in a dense mass,
attentively watching us. Without any delay we advanced towards them,
and, upon arriving within about a hundred paces, we observed that the
herd was headed by two large bulls, one of which was the largest that
I had ever seen. The whole herd was bellowing and pawing the ground.
They had winded the blood of the dead bull and appeared perfectly
maddened.
We continued to advance, and we were within about ninety paces of
them when suddenly the whole herd of about two hundred buffaloes,
headed by the two bulls before noticed, dashed straight towards us at
full gallop. So simultaneous was the onset that it resembled a sudden
charge of cavalry, and the ground vibrated beneath their heavy hoofs.
Their tails were thrown high above their backs, and the mad and
overpowering phalanx of heads and horns came rushing forward as though
to sweep us at once from the face of the earth.
There was not an instant to be lost; already but a short space
intervened between us and apparently certain destruction. Our
gun-bearers were almost in the act of flight; but catching hold of the
man who carried the long two-ounce rifle, and keeping him by my side,
I awaited the irresistible onset with the four-ounce.
The largest of the bulls was some yards in advance, closely
followed by his companion, and the herd in a compact mass came
thundering down at their heels. Only fifty yards separated us; we
literally felt among them, and already experienced a sense of being
over-run. I did not look at the herd, but I kept my eye upon the big
bull leader. On they flew, and were within thirty paces of us, when I
took a steady shot with the four-ounce, and the leading bull plunged
head-foremost in the turf, turning a complete summersault. Snatching
the two-ounce from the petrified gun-bearer, I hadjust time for a shot
as the second bull was within fifteen paces, and at the flash of the
rifle his horns ploughed up the turf, and he lay almost at our feet.
That lucky shot turned the whole herd. When certain destruction
threatened us, they suddenly wheeled to their left when within twenty
paces of the guns, and left us astonished victors of the field. We
poured an ineffectual volley into the retreating herd from the light
guns as they galloped off in full retreat, and reloaded as quickly as
possible, as the two bulls, although floored, were still alive. They
were, however, completely powerless, and a double-barrelled gun gave
each the "coup-de-grace" by a ball in the forehead. Both rifle shots
had struck at the point of junction of the throat and chest, and the
four-ounce ball had passed out of the hind-quarter. Our friend of
yesterday, although hit in precisely the same spot, had laughed at the
light guns.
Although I have since killed about two hundred wild buffaloes I
have never witnessed another charge by a herd. This was an
extraordinary occurrence, and fortunately stands alone in
buffalo-shooting. Were it not for the two heavy rifles our career
might have terminated in an unpleasant manner. As I before mentioned,
this part of the country was seldom or never disturbed at the time of
which I write, and the buffaloes were immensely numerous and
particularly savage, nearly always turning to bay and showing good
sport when attacked.
Having cut out the tongues from the two bulls, we turned homeward
to breakfast. Skirting along the edge of the lake, which abounded with
small creeks, occasioning us many circuits, we came suddenly upon a
single bull, who, springing from his lair of mud and high grass,
plunged into a creek, and, swimming across, exposed himself to a dead
shot as he landed on the opposite bank about a hundred paces from us.
The four-ounce struck him in the hind-quarters and broke the hip
joint, and, continuing its course along his body, it pierced his lungs
and lodged in the skin of the throat. The bull immediately fell, but
regaining his feet he took to the water, and swam to a small island of
high grass about thirty yards from the shore. Upon gaining this he
turned and faced us, but in a few seconds he fell unable to rise, and
received a merciful shot in the head, which despatched him.
We were just leaving the border of the lake on our way to the
village, when two cow buffaloes sprang up from one of the numerous
inlets and retreated at full gallop towards the jungle, offering a
splendid side shot at about a hundred paces. The leading cow plunged
head-foremost into the grass as the four-ounce struck her through both
shoulders. She was a fine young cow, and we cut some steaks from her
in case we should find a scarcity of provisions at Minneria and,
quitting the shores of the lake, we started for breakfast.
It was only 8 A.M. when we arrived. I had bagged five buffaloes,
four of which were fine bulls. Our revenge was complete, and I had
proved that the four-ounce was perfectly irresistible if held straight
with the heavy charge of twelve drachms of powder. Since that time I
have frequently used sixteen drachms (one ounce) of powder to the
charge, but the recoil is then very severe, although the effect upon
an animal with a four-ounce steel-tipped conical ball is tremendous.
On our return to the village of Minneria we found a famous
breakfast, for which a bath in the neighbouring brook increased an
appetite already sharpened by the morning exercise. The buffalo steaks
were coarse and bad, as tough as leather, and certainly should never
be eaten if better food can be obtained. The tongues are very rich,
but require salting.
In those days Minneria was not spoiled by visitors, and supplies
were accordingly at a cheap rate--large fowls at one penny each, milk
at any price that you chose to give for it. This is now much changed,
and the only thing that is still ridiculously cheap is fish.
Give a man sixpence to catch you as many as he can in the morning,
and he forthwith starts on his piscatorial errand with a large basket,
cone shaped, of two feet diameter at the bottom and about eight inches
at the top. This basket is open at both ends, and is about two feet in
length.
The fish that is most sought after is the 'lola.' He is a ravenous
fellow, in appearance between a trout and a carp, having the habits of
the former, but the clumsy shoulders of the latter. He averages about
three pounds, although he is often caught of nine or ten pounds
weight. Delighting in the shallows, he lies among the weeds at the
bottom, to which he always retreats when disturbed. Aware of his
habits, the fisherman walks knee-deep in the water, and at every step
he plunges the broad end of the basket quickly to the bottom. He
immediately feels the fish strike against the sides, and putting his
hand down through the aperture in the top of the basket he captures
him, and deposits him in a basket slung on his back.
These 'lola' are delicious eating, being very like an eel in
flavour, and I have known one man catch forty in a morning with no
other apparatus than this basket.
Minneria Lake, like all others in Ceylon, swarms with crocodiles of
a very large size. Early in the morning and late in the evening they
may be seen lying upon the banks like logs of trees. I have frequently
remarked that a buffalo, shot within a few yards of the lake, has
invariably disappeared during the night, leaving an undoubted track
where he has been dragged to the water by the crocodiles. These brutes
frequently attack the natives when fishing or bathing, but I have
never heard of their pursuing any person upon dry land.
I remember an accident having occurred at Madampi, on the west
coast of Ceylon, about seven years ago, the day before I passed
through the village. A number of women were employed in cutting rushes
for mat-making, and were about mid-deep in the water. The horny tail
of a large crocodile was suddenly seen above the water among the group
of women, and in another instant one of them was seized by the thigh
and dragged towards the deeper part of the stream. In vain the
terrified creature shrieked for assistance; the horror-stricken group
had rushed to the shore, and a crowd of spectators on the bank offered
no aid beyond their cries. It was some distance before the water
deepened, and the unfortunate woman was dragged for many yards,
sometimes beneath the water, sometimes above the surface, rending the
air with her screams, until at length the deep water hid her from
their view. She was never again seen.
Some of these reptiles grow to a very large size, attaining the
length of twenty feet, and eight feet in girth, but the common size is
fourteen feet. They move slowly upon land, but are wonderfully fast
and active in the water. They usually lie in wait for their prey under
some hollow bank in a deep pool, and when the unsuspecting deer or
even buffalo stoops his head to drink, he is suddenly seized by the
nose and dragged beneath the water. Here he is speedily drowned and
consumed at leisure.
The two lower and front teeth of a crocodile project through the
upper jaw, and their white points attract immediate notice as they
protrude through the brown scales on the upper lip. When the mouth is
closed, the jaws are thus absolutely locked together.
It is a common opinion that the scales on the back of a crocodile
will turn a ball; this is a vulgar error. The scales are very tough
and hard, but a ball from a common fowling-piece will pass right
through the body. I have even seen a hunting-knife driven at one blow
deep into the hardest part of the back; and this was a crocodile of a
large size, about fourteen feet long, that I shot at a place called
Bolgodde, twenty-two miles from Colombo.
A man had been setting nets for fish, and was in the act of
swimming to the shore, when he was seized and drowned by a crocodile.
The next morning two buffaloes were dragged into the water close to
the spot, and it was supposed that these murders were committed by the
same crocodile. I was at Colombo at the time, and, hearing of the
accident, I rode off to Bolgodde to try my hand at catching him.
Bolgodde is a very large lake of many miles in circumference,
abounding with crocodiles, widgeon, teal, and ducks.
On arrival that evening, the moodeliar (headman) pointed out the
spot where the man had been destroyed, and where the buffaloes had
been dragged in by the crocodile. One buffalo had been entirely
devoured, but the other had merely lost his head, and his carcass was
floating in a horrible state of decomposition near the bank. It was
nearly dark, so I engaged a small canoe to be in readiness by break of
day.
Just as the light streaked the horizon I stepped into the canoe.
This required some caution, as it was the smallest thing that can be
conceived to support two persons. It consisted of the hollow trunk of
a tree, six feet in length and about one foot in diameter. A small
outrigger prevented it from upsetting, but it was not an inch from the
surface of the water when I took my narrow seat, and the native in the
stern paddled carefully towards the carcass of the buffalo.
Upon approaching within a hundred yards of the floating carcass, I
counted five forms within a few yards of the flesh. These objects were
not above nine inches square, and appeared like detached pieces of
rough bark. I knew them to be the foreheads of different crocodiles,
and presently one moved towards the half-consumed buffalo. His long
head and shoulders projected from the water as he attempted to fix his
fore-claws into the putrid flesh; this, however, rolled over towards
him, and prevented him from getting a hold; but the gaping jaws
nevertheless made a wide breach in the buffalo's flank. I was now
within thirty yards of them, and, being observed, they all dived
immediately to the bottom.
The carcass was lying within a few yards of the bank, where the
water was extremely deep and clear. Several large trees grew close to
the edge and formed a good hiding-place; I therefore landed, and,
sending the canoe to a distance, I watched the water.
I had not been five minutes in this position before I saw in the
water at my feet, in a deep hole close to the bank, the immense form
of a crocodile as he was slowly rising from his hiding-place to the
surface. He appeared to be about eighteen feet long, and he projected
his horny head from the surface, bubbled, and then floated with only
his forehead and large eyes above the water. He was a horrible-looking
monster, and from his size I hoped he was the villain that had
committed the late depredations. He was within three yards of me; and,
although I stood upon the bank, his great round eyes gazed at me
without a symptom of fear. The next moment I put a two-ounce ball
exactly between them, and killed him stone dead. He gave a convulsive
slap with his tail, which made the water foam,, and, turning upon his
back, he gradually sank, till at length I could only distinguish the
long line of his white belly twenty feet below me.
Not having any apparatus for bringing him to the surface, I again
took to the canoe, as a light breeze that had sprung up was gradually
moving the carcass of the buffalo away. This I slowly followed, until
it at length rested in a wide belt of rushes which grew upon the
shallows near the shore. I pushed the canoe into the rushes within
four yards of the carcass, keeping to windward to avoid the sickening
smell.
I had not been long in this position before the body suddenly
rolled over as though attacked by something underneath the water, and
the next moment the tall reeds brushed against the sides of the canoe,
being violently agitated in a long line, evidently by a crocodile at
the bottom.
The native in the stern grew as pale as a black can turn with
fright, and instantly began to paddle the canoe away. This, however, I
soon replaced in its former position, and then took his paddle away to
prevent further accidents. There sat the captain of the fragile vessel
in the most abject state of terror. We were close to the shore, and
the water was not more than three feet deep, and yet he dared not jump
out of the canoe, as the rushes were again brushing against its sides,
being moved by the hidden beast at the bottom. There was no help for
him, so, after vainly imploring me to shove the canoe into deep water,
he at length sat still.
In a few minutes the body of the buffalo again moved, and the head
and shoulders of a crocodile appeared above water and took a bite of
some pounds of flesh. I could not get a shot at the head from his
peculiar position, but I put a ball through his shoulders, and
immediately shoved the canoe astern. Had I not done this, we should
most likely have been upset, as the wounded brute began to lash out
with his tail in all directions, till he at length retired to the
bottom among the rushes. Here I could easily track him, as he slowly
moved along, by the movement of the reeds. Giving the native the
paddle, I now by threats induced him to keep the canoe over the very
spot where the rushes were moving, and we slowly followed on the
track, while I kept watch in the bow of the canoe with a rifle.
Suddenly the movement in the rushes ceased, and the canoe stopped
accordingly. I leaned slightly over the side to look into the water,
when up came a large air-bubble, and directly afterwards an apparition
in the shape of some fifteen pounds of putrid flesh. The stench was
frightful, but I knew my friend must be very bad down below to
disgorge so sweet a morsel. I therefore took the paddle and poked for
him; the water being shallow, I felt him immediately. Again the rushes
moved; I felt the paddle twist as his scaly back glided under it, and
a pair of gaping jaws appeared above the water, wide open and within
two feet of the canoe. The next moment his head appeared, and the
two-ounce ball shattered his brain. He sank to the bottom, the rushes
moved slightly and were then still.
I now put the canoe ashore, and cutting a strong stick, with a
crook at one end, I again put out to the spot and dragged for him. He
was quite dead; and catching him under the fore-leg, I soon brought
him gently to the surface of the water. I now made fast a line to his
fore-leg, and we towed him slowly to the village, the canoe being
level with the water's edge.
His weight in the water was a mere trifle, but on arrival at the
village on the banks of the lake, the villagers turned out with great
glee, and fastened ropes to different parts of his body to drag him
out. This operation employed about twenty men. The beast was about
fourteen feet long; and he was no sooner on shore than the natives cut
him to pieces with axes, and threw the sections into the lake to be
devoured by his own species. This was a savage kind of revenge, which
appeared to afford them great satisfaction.
Taking a large canoe, I paddled along the shores of the lake with a
shot-gun, and made a good bag of ducks and teal, and returned to
breakfast. The fatness and flavour of the wild ducks in Ceylon are
quite equal to the best in England.
Equipment for a Hunting Trip--In Chase of a Herd of Buffaloes--
Hard Work--Close Quarters--Six Feet from the Muzzle--A Black with a
Devil.
There is one thing necessary to the enjoyment of sport in Ceylon,
and without which no amount of game can afford thorough pleasure; this
is personal comfort. Unlike a temperate climate, where mere attendance
becomes a luxury, the pursuit of game in a tropical country is
attended with immense fatigue and exhaustion. The intense heat of the
sun, the dense and suffocating exhalations from swampy districts, the
constant and irritating attacks from insects, all form drawbacks to
sport that can only be lessened by excellent servants and by the most
perfect arrangements for shelter and supplies. I have tried all
methods of travelling, and I generally manage to combine good sport
with every comfort and convenience.
A good tent, perfectly waterproof, and of so light a construction
as to travel with only two bearers, is absolutely indispensable. My
tent is on the principle of an umbrella, fifteen feet in diameter, and
will house three persons comfortably. A circular table fits in two
halves round the tent-pole; three folding chairs have ample space;
three beds can be arranged round the tent walls; the boxes of clothes,
etc., stow under the beds; and a dressing-table and gun-rack complete
the furniture.
Next in importance to the tent is a good canteen. Mine is made of
japanned block tin, and contains in close-fitting compartments an
entire dinner and breakfast service for three persons, including
everything that can be required in an ordinary establishment. This is
slung upon a bamboo, carried by two coolies.
Clothes must always be packed in tin boxes, or the whole case will
most likely be devoured by white ants.
Cooking utensils must be carried in abundance, together with a
lantern, axe, bill-hook, tinder-box, matches, candles, oil, tea,
coffee, sugar, biscuits, wine, brandy, sauces, etc., a few hams, some
tins of preserved meats and soups, and a few bottles of curacea, a
glass of which, in the early dawn, after a cup of hot coffee and a
biscuit, is a fine preparation for a day's work.
I once tried the rough system of travelling, and started off with
nothing but my guns, clothes, a box of biscuits, and a few bottles of
brandy--no bed, no pillow, no tent nor chairs or table, but, as my
distressed servant said, 'no nothing.' This was many years ago, when
the excitement of wild sports was sufficient to laugh at discomfort. I
literally depended upon my gun for food, and my cooking utensils
consisted of one saucepan and a gridiron, a 'stew' and a 'fry' being
all that I looked forward to in the way of gourmandism. Sleeping on
the bare ground in native huts, dining cross-legged upon mother earth,
with a large leaf as a substitute for a plate, a cocoa-nut shell for a
glass, my hunting-knife comprising all my cutlery, I thus passed
through a large district of wild country, accompanied by B., and I
never had more exciting sport.
It was on this occasion that I had a memorable hunt in the
neighbourhood of Narlande, within thirty miles of Kandy. It was our
first day's stage, and, upon our arrival, at about 2 P.M., we left our
guns at the post-holder's hut, while we proceeded to the river to
bathe.
We were hardly dressed before a native came running to tell us that
several elephants were devouring his crop of korrakan--a grain
something like clover-seed, upon which the people in this part almost
entirely subsist.
Without a moment's delay we sent for the guns. The post-holder was
a good tracker, and a few minutes of sharp walking through a path
bordered on either side by dense thorny bush brought us to a chena
jungle ground, or cultivated field. The different watch-houses erected
in the large trees were full of people, who were shrieking and yelling
at the top of their voices, having just succeeded in scaring the
elephants into the jungle.
The whole of the country in this neighbourhood has, in successive
ages, been cleared and cultivated: the forest has been felled. The
poverty of the soil yields only one crop, and the lately cleared field
is again restored to nature. Dense thorny jungle immediately springs
up, which a man cannot penetrate without being torn to pieces by the
briars. This is called chena jungle, and is always the favourite
resort of elephants and all wild animals, the impervious character of
the bush forming a secure retreat.
From these haunts the elephants commit nocturnal descents upon the
crops of the natives. The korrakan is a sweet grass, growing about two
feet high, and so partial are the elephants to this food that they
will invade the isolated field even during the daytime. Driven out by
shouts and by shots fired by the natives from their secure
watch-houses, they will retreat to their cover, but in a few minutes
they reappear from another part of the jungle and again commence their
depredations.
The havoc committed by a large herd of elephants can well be
imagined.
In this instance there were only three elephants--a large bull,
with a mother and her young one, or what we call a 'poonchy.' On
entering the korrakan field we distinctly heard them breaking the
boughs at no great distance. We waited for some time to see if they
would return to the field; but they apparently were aware of some
impending danger, as they did not move from their strong position.
This was a cunning family of elephants, as they had retreated 'down
wind,' and the jungle being so thick that we could with difficulty
follow even upon their track, made it very doubtful whether we should
kill them.
We cautiously entered. It was one mass of thorns, and we were
shortly compelled to crawl upon our hands and knees. This was arduous
work, as we had great difficulty in carrying the guns so as to avoid
the slightest noise. I was leading the way, and could distinctly hear
the rustling of the leaves as the elephants moved their ears. We were
now within a few feet of them, but not an inch of their bodies could
be seen, so effectually were they hidden by the thick jungle. Suddenly
we heard the prolonged wh-r-r, wh-r-r-r-r-r, as one of the elephants
winded us: the shrill trumpet sounded in another direction, and the
crash through the jungle took place which nothing but an elephant can
produce. In such dense jungle, where the elephants are invisible, this
crash is most exciting if close at hand, as in the present instance.
It is at the first burst impossible to tell whether the elephant is
coming at you or rushing away. In either case it is extremely
dangerous, as these chena jungles are almost devoid of trees; thus
there is no cover of sufficient strength to protect a man should he
attempt to jump on one side, and he may even be run over by accident.
A few moments assured us of their retreat, and we instantly
followed upon their track, running at full speed along the lane which
they had crushed in their headlong flight. This was no easy matter;
the jungle itself was certainly broken down, but innumerable hooked
thorns, hanging from rope-like creepers, which had been torn down by
the rush of the elephants, caught us upon every side. In a few minutes
our clothes were in rags, and we were bleeding from countless
scratches, but we continued the chase as fast as we could run upon the
track. The prickly cactus which abounds in these jungles, and grows to
the height of twenty feet, in some places checked us for a few
moments, being crushed into a heap by the horny-footed beasts before
us. These obstacles overcome, we again pushed on at a rapid pace,
occasionally listening for a sound of the retreating game.
We now observed that the herd had separated; the bull had gone off
in one direction, and the female with her half-grown poonchy in
another. Following the latter, we again pushed on at a quick run, as
the elephants had evidently gone off at a great pace and were far in
advance. For about half an hour we had continued the pursuit at the
same speed, when we suddenly heard the warning wh-r-r-r-r as the
elephants winded us at a distance of 200 yards, and the crash
instantly following this sound told us too plainly that the game was
fearfully on the alert, and gave us little hopes of overtaking them,
as they were travelling directly down wind.
Speed was our only chance, and again we rushed forward in hot
pursuit through the tangled briars, which yielded to our weight,
although we were almost stripped of clothes. Another half hour passed,
and we had heard no further signs of the game. We stopped to breathe,
and we listened attentively for the slightest sound. A sudden crash in
the jungle at a great distance assured us that we were once more
discovered. The chase seemed hopeless; the heat was most oppressive;
and we had been running for the last hour at a killing pace through a
most distressing country. Once more, however, we started off,
determined to keep up the pursuit as long as daylight would permit. It
was now 5 P.M., and we had one hour left before darkness would set in.
The wind had entirely ceased, leaving a perfect calm; the air was
thick and heavy, and the heat was thus rendered doubly fatiguing. We
noticed, however, that the track of the elephants had doubled back
instead of continuing in the direct line that we had followed so long.
This gave us hope, as the elephants no longer had the advantage of the
wind, and we pushed on as fast as we could go.
It was about half an hour before dusk, and our patience and hopes
were alike exhausted, when we suddenly once more heard the wh-r-r-r of
the elephants winding us within a hundred yards. It was our last
chance, and with redoubled speed we rushed after them.
Suddenly we broke from the high jungle in which we had been for the
last two hours, and found ourselves in a chena jungle of two years'
growth, about five feet high, but so thick and thorny that it
resembled one vast blackthorn hedge, through which no man could move
except in the track of the retreating elephants.
To my delight, on entering this low jungle, I saw the female at
about forty yards' distance, making off at a great pace. I had a light
double-barrelled gun in my hand, and, in the hopes of checking her
pace, I fired a flying shot at her ear. She had been hunted so long
that she was well inclined to fight, and she immediately slackened her
speed so much that in a few instants I was at her tail, so close that
I could have slapped her. Still she ploughed her way through the thick
thorns, and not being able to pass her owing to the barrier of jungle,
I could only follow close at her heels and take my chance of a shot.
At length, losing all patience, I fired my remaining barrel under her
tail, giving it an upward direction in the hope of disabling her
spine.
A cloud of smoke hung over me for a second, and, throwing my empty
gun on one side, I put my hand behind me for a spare rifle. I felt the
welcome barrel pushed into my hand at the same moment that I saw the
infuriated head of the elephant with ears cocked charging through the
smoke! It was the work of an instant. I had just time to cock the
two-ounce rifle and take a steady aim. The next moment we were in a
cloud of smoke, but as I fired, I felt certain of her. The smoke
cleared from the thick bushes, and she lay dead at SIX FEET from the
spot where I stood. The ball was in the centre of her forehead, and
B., who had fired over my shoulder so instantaneously with me that I
was not aware of it, had placed his ball within three inches of mine.
Had she been missed, I should have fired my last shot.
This had been a glorious hunt; many miles had been gone over, but
by great luck, when the wind dropped and the elephant altered her
course, she had been making a circuit for the very field of korrakan
at which we had first found her. We were thus not more than three
miles from our resting-place, and the trackers who know every inch of
the country, soon brought us to the main road.
The poonchy and the bull elephant, having both separated from the
female, escaped.
One great cause of danger in shooting in thick jungles is the
obscurity occasioned by the smoke of the first barrel; this cannot
escape from the surrounding bushes for some time, and effectually
prevents a certain aim with the remaining barrel. In wet weather this
is much increased.
For my own part I dislike shooting in thick jungles, and I very
seldom do so. It is extremely dangerous, and is like shooting in the
dark; you never see the game until you can almost touch it, and the
labour and pain of following up elephants through thorny jungle is
beyond description.
On our return to the post-holder's hut we dined and prepared for
sleep. It was a calm night, and not a sound disturbed the stillness of
the air. The tired coolies and servants were fast asleep, the lamp
burnt dimly, being scantily fed with oil, and we were in the act of
lying down to rest when a frightful scream made us spring to our feet.
There was something so unearthly in the yell that we could hardly
believe it human. The next moment a figure bounded into the little
room that we occupied. It was a black, stark naked. His tongue, half
bitten through, protruded from his mouth; his bloodshot eyes, with a
ghastly stare, were straining from their sockets, and he stood gazing
at us with his arms extended wide apart. Another horrible scream burst
from him, and he fell flat upon his back.
The post-holder and a whole crowd of awakened coolies now
assembled, and they all at once declared that the man had a devil. The
fact is, he had a fit of epilepsy, and his convulsions were terrible.
Without moving a limb he flapped here and there like a salmon when
just landed. I had nothing with me that would relieve him, and I
therefore left him to the hands of the post-holder, who prided himself
upon his skill in exorcising devils. All his incantations produced no
effect, and the unfortunate patient suddenly sprang to his feet and
rushed madly into the thorny jungle. In this we heard him crashing
through like a wild beast, and I do not know to this day whether he
was ever heard of afterwards.
The Cingalese have a thorough belief in the presence of devils; one
sect are actually `devil-WORSHIPPERS,' but the greater portion of the
natives are Bhuddists. Among this nation the missionaries make very
slow progress. There is no character to work upon in the Cingalese:
they are faithless, cunning, treacherous, and abject cowards;
superstitious in the extreme, and yet unbelieving in any one God. A
converted Bhuddist will address his prayers to our God if he thinks he
can obtain any temporal benefit by so doing, but, if not, he would be
just as likely to pray to Bhudda or to the devil.
I once saw a sample of heathen conversion in Ceylon that was enough
to dishearten a missionary.
A Roman Catholic chapel had been erected in a wild part of the
country by some zealous missionary, who prided himself upon the number
of his converts. He left his chapel during a few weeks' absence in
some other district, during which time his converts paid their
devotion to the Christian altar. They had made a few little additions
to the ornaments of the altar, which must have astonished the priest
on his return.
There was an image of our Saviour and the **Virgin:** that was all
according to custom. But there were also 'three images of Bhudda,' a
coloured plaster-of-Paris image of the Queen and Prince Albert upon
the altar, and a very questionable penny print in vivid colours
hanging over the altar, entitled the 'Stolen Kiss.' So much for the
conversion of the heathen in Ceylon. The attempt should only be made
in the schools, where the children may be brought up as Christians,
but the idea of converting the grown-up heathen is a fallacy.
The Four-ounce again--Tidings of a Rogue--Approaching a Tank Rogue
--An Exciting Moment--Ruins of Pollanarua--Ancient Ruins--Rogues at
Doolana--B. Charged by a Rogue--Planning an Attack--A Check--Narrow
Escape--Rogue-stalking--A Bad Rogue--Dangers of Elephant-shooting--The
Rhatamahatmeya's Tale.
A broken nipple in my long two-ounce rifle took me to Trincomalee,
about seventy miles out of my proposed route. Here I had it punched
out and replaced with a new one, which I fortunately had with me. No
one who has not experienced the loss can imagine the disgust
occasioned by an accident to a favourite rifle in a wild country. A
spare nipple and mainspring for each barrel and lock should always be
taken on a shooting trip.
In passing by Kandelly, on my return from Trincomalee, I paid a
second visit to the lake. This is very similar to that of Minneria;
but the shooting at that time was destroyed from the same cause which
has since ruined Minneria--'too many guns.' The buffaloes were not
worthy of the name; I could not make one show fight, nor could I even
get within three hundred yards of them. I returned from the plain with
disgust; but just as I was quitting the shores of the lake I noticed
three buffaloes in the shallows about knee-deep in the water, nearly
half a mile from me. They did not look bigger than dogs, the distance
was so great.
There is nothing like a sheet of water for trying a rifle; the
splash of the ball shows with such distinctness the accuracy or the
defect in the shooting. It was necessary that I should fire my guns
off in order to clean them that evening: I therefore tried their power
at this immense distance.
The long two-ounce fell short, but in a good line. I took a rest
upon a man's shoulder with the four-ounce rifle, and, putting up the
last sight, I aimed at the leading buffalo, who was walking through
the water parallel with us. I aimed at the outline of the throat, to
allow for his pace at this great distance. The recoil of the rifle cut
the man's ear open, as there were sixteen drachms of powder in this
charge.
We watched the smooth surface of the water as the invisible
messenger whistled over the lake. Certainly three seconds elapsed
before we saw the slightest effect. At the expiration of that time the
buffalo fell suddenly in a sitting position, and there he remained
fixed, many seconds after, a dull sound returned to our ears; it was
the 'fut' of the ball, which had positively struck him at this immense
range. What the distance was I cannot say; it may have been 600 yards,
or 800, or more. It was shallow water the whole way: we therefore
mounted our horses and rode up to him. Upon reaching him, I gave him a
settling ball in the head, and we examined him. The heavy ball had
passed completely through his hips, crushing both joints, and, of
course, rendering him powerless at once.
The shore appeared full half a mile from us on our return, and I
could hardly credit my own eyes, the distance was so immense, and yet
the ball had passed clean through the animal's body.
It was of course a chance shot, and, even with this acknowledgment,
it must appear rather like the 'marvellous' to a stranger;--this is my
misfortune, not my fault. I certainly never made such a shot before or
since; it was a sheer lucky hit, say at 600 yards; and the wonderful
power of the rifle was thus displayed in the ball perforating the
large body of the buffalo at this range. This shot was made with a
round ball, not a cone. The round belted ball for this heavy
two-grooved rifle weighs three ounces. The conical ball weighs a
little more than four ounces.
While describing the long shots performed by this particular rifle,
I cannot help recounting a curious chance with a large rogue elephant
in Topari tank. This tank or lake is, like most others in Ceylon, the
result of vast labour in past ages. Valleys were closed in by immense
dams of solid masonry, which, checking the course of the rivers,
formed lakes of many miles in extent. These were used as reservoirs
for the water required for the irrigation of rice lands. The
population who effected these extensive works have long since passed
away; their fate is involved in mystery. The records of their ancient
cities still exist, but we have no account of their destruction. The
ruins of one of these cities, Pollanarua, are within half a mile of
the village of Topari, and the waters of the adjacent lake are still
confined by a dam of two miles in length, composed of solid masonry.
When the lake is full, it is about eight miles in circumference.
I had only just arrived at the village, and my horse-keeper had
taken the horse to drink at the lake, when he suddenly came running
back to say that a rogue elephant was bathing himself on the opposite
shore, at about two miles' distance.
I immediately took my guns and went after him. My path lay along
the top of the great dam, which formed a causeway covered with jungle.
This causeway was about sixty feet in breadth and two miles in length;
the lake washed its base about twenty feet below the summit. The
opposite shore was a fine plain, bordered by open forest, and the lake
spread into the grassy surface in wide and irregular bays.
I continued my course along the causeway at a fast walk, and on
arriving at the extremity of the lake, I noticed that the ancient dam
continued for a much greater distance. This, together with the great
height of the masonry from the level of the water, proved that the
dimensions of the tank had formerly been of much greater extent.
Descending by the rugged stones which formed the dam wall I reached
the plain, and, keeping close to the water's edge, I rounded a large
neck of land covered with trees, which projected for some distance
into the lake. I knew, by the position of the elephant, when I first
saw him, that he was not far beyond this promontory, and I carefully
advanced through the open forest, hoping that I might meet him there
on his exit from his bath. In this I was mistaken, for on passing
through this little belt of trees I saw the elephant still in the
lake, belly-deep, about 300 paces from me. He was full 120 yards from
the shore, and I was puzzled how to act. He was an immense brute,
being a fine specimen of a tank 'rogue.' This class are generally the
worst description of rogue elephants, who seldom move far from the
lakes, but infest the shores for many years. Being quite alone, with
the exception of two worthless gun-bearers, the plan of attack
required some consideration.
The belt of trees in which I stood was the nearest piece of cover
to the elephant, the main jungle being about a quarter of a mile from
the shore of the lake. In the event of a retreat being necessary, this
cover would therefore be my point. There was a large tamarind-tree
growing alone upon the plain about a hundred and fifty paces from the
water's edge, exactly in a line with the position of the elephant. The
mud plastered to a great height upon the stem showed this to be his
favourite rubbing-post after bathing.
Having determined upon my plan of attack, I took the guns from the
gun-bearers and sent the men up the tree, as I knew they would run
away in the event of danger, and would most probably take the guns
with them in their flight. Having thus secured the arms, I placed the
long two-ounce against a large and conspicuous tree that grew upon the
extreme edge of the forest, and I cautiously advanced over the open
plain with my two remaining guns, one of which I deposited against the
stem of the single tamarind-tree. I had thus two points for a
defensive retreat, should it be necessary.
I had experienced considerable difficulty in attaining my position
at the tamarind-tree without being observed by the elephant;
fortunately, I had both the wind and the sun favourable, the latter
shining from my back full into the lake.
The elephant was standing with his back to the shore exactly in a
line with me, and he was swinging his great head from side to side,
and flapping his ears in the enjoyment of his bath. I left the tree
with my four-ounce rile, and, keeping in a direct line for his
hind-quarters, I walked towards him. The grass was soft and short; I
could therefore approach without the slightest noise: the only danger
of being discovered was in the chance that I might be seen as he swung
his head continually on either side. This I avoided by altering my
course as I saw his head in the act of coming round, and I soon stood
on the edge of the lake exactly behind him, at about 120 yards. He was
a noble-looking fellow, every inch a rogue, his head almost white with
numerous flesh-coloured spots. These give a savage and disgusting
appearance to an elephant, and altogether he looked a formidable
opponent. I had intended to shout on arriving at my present position,
and then to wait for the front shot as he charged; but on looking back
to the tamarind-tree and my proposed course for retreat, the distance
appeared so great, rendered still more difficult by a gradual ascent,
that I felt it would be impossible to escape if my chance lay in
running. I hardly knew what to do; I had evidently caught a 'Tartar.'
His head was perpetually swinging to and fro, and I was of course
accordingly altering my position to avoid his eye. At one of these
half turns he flapped his right ear just as his head came round, and I
observed a perfectly white mark, the size of a saucer, behind the ear,
in the exact spot for a fatal shot. I at once determined to try it,
even at this distance; at all events, if it failed, and he should
charge, I had a fair start, and by getting the spare gun from the
tamarind-tree I could make a defence at the cover.
His attention was completely absorbed in a luxurious repast upon a
bed of the succulent lotus. He tore up bunches of the broad leaves and
snaky stalks, and, washing them carefully with his trunk, he crushed
the juicy stems, stuffing the tangled mass into his mouth as a savage
would eat maccaroni. Round swung his head once more, the ear flapped,
the mark was exposed, but the ear again concealed it just as I had
raised the rifle. This happened several times, but I waited patiently
for a good chance, being prepared for a run the moment after firing.
Once more his head swung towards me: the sun shone full upon him,
and I raised the rifle to be ready for him if he gave me the chance.
His ear flapped forward just as his head was at a proper angle for a
shot. The mark shone brightly along the sights of the rifle as I took
a steady aim; the answer to the report of the gun was--a dull splash!
He had sunk upon his knees stone dead. I could hardly believe my
eyes. The sight of so large an animal being killed at such a distance
by one shot had an extraordinary effect. I heard a heathenish scream
of joy behind me, and upon turning round I perceived the now
courageous gun-bearers running towards me at their best pace. They
were two of the Topari villagers, and had been perfectly aghast at the
idea of one person, with only a single-barrelled rifle, attacking a
tank rogue in the open plain. The sequel had turned their fear into
astonishment. They now had the laugh at me, however, as they swam
fearlessly up to the dead elephant to cut off his tail, which I would
not have done for any reward, for fear of crocodiles, which abound in
the tank. The ball had struck the white mark exactly in the centre,
which pleased these natives exceedingly, and they returned in safety
with the tail.
I have frequently tried these long shots since, but I never
succeeded again except once, and that was not satisfactory, as the
elephant did not die upon the spot, but was found by the natives on
the following day.
On my return to the village I took a shot-gun and strolled along
the banks of the lake. The snipe were innumerable, and I killed them
till my head ached with the constant recoil of the gun in addition to
the heat. I also killed several couple of ducks and teal in addition
to twenty-eight couple of snipe. This was the Paradise for sport at
the time of which I write. It had never been disturbed: but it has
since shared the fate of many other places.
The open forest in the vicinity of the lake abounded with deer.
Grassy glades beneath the shady trees give a park-like appearance to
the scene, and afford a delightful resort for the deer.
In strolling through these shady glades you suddenly arrive among
the ruins of ancient Pollanarua. The palaces are crumbled into
shapeless mounds of bricks. Massive pillars, formed of a single stone,
twelve feet high, stand in upright rows throughout the jungle here and
there over an extent of some miles. The buildings which they once
supported have long since fallen, and the pillars now stand like
tombstones over vanished magnificence. Some buildings are still
standing; among these are two dagobas, huge monuments of bricks,
formerly covered with white cement, and elaborately decorated with
different devices. These are shaped like an egg that has been cut
nearly in half, and then placed upon its base; but the cement has
perished, and they are mounds of jungle and rank grass which has
overgrown them, although the large dagoba is upwards of a hundred feet
high.
A curious temple, formed on the imperishable principle of
excavating in the solid rock, is in perfect preservation, and is still
used by the natives as a place of worship: this is presided over by a
priest. Three large images of Bhudda, carved out of solid rock, occupy
the positions in which he is always represented; that in the recumbent
posture is fifty-six feet long, cut from one stone.
I was strolling through these ruins when I suddenly saw a spotted
doe feeding among the upright pillars before mentioned. I was within
twenty yards of her before she was aware of my vicinity, and I bagged
her by a shot with a double-barrelled gun. At the report of the gun a
herd of about thirty deer, which were concealed amongst the ruins,
rushed close by me, and I bagged another doe with the remaining
barrel.
The whole of this country must at one time have been densely
populated; perhaps this very density may have produced pestilence,
which swept away the inhabitants. The city has been in ruins for about
600 years, and was founded about 300 years B.C. Some idea of the
former extent of the Ceylon antiquities may be formed from the present
size of the ruins. Those of Anarajapoora are sixteen miles square,
comprising a surface of 256 square miles. Those of Pollanarua are much
smaller, but they are nevertheless of great extent.
The inhabitants of the present village of Topari are a poor squalid
race; and if they are descended in a direct line from the ancient
occupants of the city, they are as much degenerated in character and
habits as the city itself is ruined in architecture. Few countries can
be more thinly populated than Ceylon, and yet we have these numerous
proofs of a powerful nation having once existed. Wherever these lakes
or tanks exist in the present day, a populous country once flourished.
In all countries which are subject to months of drought, a supply of
water is the first consideration, or cultivation must cease. This was
the object in forming the tanks, which are especially numerous
throughout the Tambancadua district. These tank countries afford a
great diversity of sport, as they all abound with wild fowl, and snipe
in their season (from November to May). During the time of drought
they are always the resort of every kind of wild animal, which are
forced to the neighbourhood for a supply of water.
The next tank to Topari is that of Doolana; this is eight miles
from the former, and is about the same extent. In this district there
are no less than eight of these large lakes. Their attractions to
rogue elephants having been explained, it may be readily understood
that these gentry abound throughout the district. I shall, therefore,
select a few incidents that have happened to me in these localities,
which will afford excellent illustrations of the habits of `rogues.'
Having arrived at Doolana, on the 5th April, 1847, with good
Moormen trackers, who were elephant-catchers by profession, I started
for a day's sport, in company with my brother B. This particular
portion of the district is inhabited entirely by Moormen. They are a
fine race of people, far superior to the Cingalese. They are supposed
to be descended from Arabian origin, and they hold the Mohammedan
religion. The Rhatamahatmeya, or head man of the district, resides at
Doolana, and he had received us in a most hospitable manner. We
therefore started direct from his house.
Passing through a belt of low thick jungle, exactly in front of the
village, we entered upon the plain which formed the border of the
tank. This lake is about three miles in length, but is not more than a
mile in width in its widest part, and in some places is very much
less. The opposite side of the tank is fine open forest, which grows
to the water's edge, and is in some parts flooded during the wet
season. At this time the soil was deep and muddy.
This was not a place visited by sportsmen at that period; and upon
arriving at the margin of the lake, an exciting view presented itself.
Scattered over the extent of the lake were `thirteen rogue elephants;'
one was not a quarter of a mile from us; another was so far off he
could hardly be distinguished; another was close to the opposite
jungle; and they were, in fact, all single elephants. There was an
exception to this, however, in one pair, who stood in the very centre
of the tank, side by side; they were as black as ebony, and although
in view with many brother rogues, they appeared giants even among
giants. The Moormen immediately informed us that they were a notorious
pair, who always associated together, and were the dread of the
neighbourhood. There were many tales of their ferocity and daring,
which at the time we gave little heed to.
Crossing the tank in a large canoe, we arrived in the open forest
upon the opposite shore. It was a mass of elephant tracks; which sank
deep in the soft earth. They were all so fresh and confused that
tracking was very difficult. However, we at length fixed upon the
tracks of a pair of elephants, and followed them up. This was a work
of considerable time, but the distant cracking of a bough at length
attracted us to their position, and we shortly came up with them, just
as they had winded us and were moving off. I fired an ineffectual shot
at the temple of one, which separated him from the other, after whom
we started in chase at full speed. Full speed soon ended in a
stand-still in such ground; it was deep, stiff clay, in which we sank
over our ankles at every step, and varied our struggles by
occasionally flying sprawling over the slippery roots of the trees.
The elephants ran clean away from us, and the elephant-catchers,
who knew nothing of the rules for carrying spare guns, entering into
the excitement of the chase, and free from the impediments of shoes,
ran lightly along the muddy ground, and were soon out of sight as well
as the elephants. Still we struggled on, when, presently we heard a
shout and then a shot; then another shout; then the trumpet of an
elephant. Shot after shot then followed with a chorus of shouts; they
were actually firing all our spare guns!
In a few moments we were up with them. In a beautifully open piece
of forest, upon good hard ground, these fellows were having a regular
battle with the rogue. He was charging them with the greatest fury,
but he no sooner selected one man for his object than these active
fellows diverted his rage by firing into his hind-quarters and yelling
at him. At this he would immediately turn and charge another man, when
he would again be assailed as before. When we arrived he immediately
selected B., and came straight at him, but offered a beautiful shot in
doing so, and B. dropped him dead.
The firing had disturbed a herd of elephants from the forest, and
they had swum the large river in the neighbourhood, which was at that
time so swollen that we could not cross it. We, therefore, struck off
to the edge of the forest, where the waters of the lake washed the
roots of the trees, and from this point we had a fine view of the
greater portion.
All the rogues that we had at first counted had retired to their
several entrances in the forest, except the pair of desperadoes
already mentioned--they knew no fear, and had not heeded the shots
fired. They were tempting baits, and we determined to get them if
possible. These two elephants were standing belly-deep in the water,
about a quarter of a mile from the shore; and the question was, `How
were we to get near them?' Having observed that the other rogues had
retreated to the forest at the noise of the firing, it struck me that
we might by some ruse induce these two champions to follow their
example, and, by meeting them on their entrance, we might bring them
to action.
Not far upon our left, a long shallow bank, covered with reeds,
stretched into the tank. By wading knee-deep along this shoal, a man
might approach to within 200 paces of the elephants and would be
nearly abreast of them. I, therefore, gave a man a gun, and instructed
him to advance to the extreme end of the shallows, taking care to
conceal himself in the rushes, and when at the nearest point he was to
fire at the elephants. This, I hoped, would drive them to the jungle,
where we should endeavour to meet them.
The Moorman entrusted upon this mission was a plucky fellow, and he
started off, taking a double gun and a few charges of powder and ball.
The elephant-catchers were delighted with the idea, and we patiently
awaited the result. About a quarter of an hour passed away, when we
suddenly saw a puff of white smoke spring from the green rushes at the
point of the sandbank. A few moments after, we heard the report of the
gun, and we saw the ball splash in the water close to the elephants.
They immediately cocked their ears, and, throwing their trunks high in
the air, they endeavoured to wind the enemy; but they did not move,
and they shortly again commenced feeding upon the water-lilies.
Another shot from the same place once more disturbed them, and, while
they winded the unseen enemy, two more shots in quick succession from
the old quarter decided their opinion, and they stalked proudly
through the water towards the shore.
Our satisfaction was great, but the delight of the
elephant-catchers knew no bounds. Away they, started along the shores
of the lake, hopping from root to root, skipping through the mud,
which was more than a foot deep, their light forms hardly sinking in
the tough surface. A nine-stone man certainly has an advantage over
one of twelve in this ground; added to this, I was carrying the long
two-ounce rifle of sixteen pounds, which, with ammunition, made up
about thirteen and a half stone, in deep stiff clay. I was literally
half-way up the calf of my leg in mud at every step, while these
light, naked fellows tripped like snipe over the sodden ground. Vainly
I called upon them to go easily; their moment of excitement was at its
full pitch, and they were soon out of sight among the trees and
underwood, taking all the spare guns, except the four-ounce rifle,
which, weighing twenty-one pounds, effectually prevented the bearer
from leaving us behind,
What added materially to the annoyance of losing the spare guns was
the thoughtless character of the advance. I felt sure that these
fellows would outrun the position of the elephants, which, if they had
continued in a direct route, should have entered the jungle within 300
yards of our first station.
We had slipped, and plunged, and struggled over this distance, when
we suddenly were checked in our advance. We had entered a small plot
of deep mud and rank grass, surrounded upon all sides by dense rattan
jungle. This stuff is one woven mass of hooked thorns: long tendrils,
armed in the same manner, although not thicker than a whip-cord, wind
themselves round the parent canes and form a jungle which even
elephants dislike to enter. To man, these jungles are perfectly
impervious.
Half-way to our knees in mud, we stood in this small open space of
about thirty feet by twenty. Around us was an opaque screen of
impenetrable jungle; the lake lay about fifty yards upon our left,
behind the thick rattan. The gun-bearers were gone ahead somewhere,
and were far in advance. We were at a stand-still. Leaning upon my
long rifle, I stood within four feet of the wall of jungle which
divided us from the lake. I said to B., 'The trackers are all wrong,
and have gone too far. I am convinced that the elephants must have
entered somewhere near this place.'
Little did I think that at that very moment they were within a few
feet of us. B. was standing behind me on the opposite side of the
small open, or about seven yards from the jungle.
I suddenly heard a deep guttural sound in the thick rattan within
four feet of me; in the same instant the whole tangled fabric bent
forward, and bursting asunder, showed the furious head of an elephant
with uplifted trunk in full charge upon me!
I had barely time to cock my rifle, and the barrel almost touched
him as I fired. I knew it was in vain, as his trunk was raised. B.
fired his right-hand barrel at the same moment without effect from the
same cause. I jumped on one side and attempted to spring through the
deep mud: it was of no use, the long grass entangled my feet, and in
another instant I lay sprawling in the enraged elephant's path within
a foot of him. In that moment of suspense I expected to hear the crack
of my own bones as his massive foot would be upon me. It was an atom
of time. I heard the crack of a gun; it was B.'s last barrel. I felt a
spongy weight strike my heel, and, turning quickly heels over head, I
rolled a few paces and regained my feet. That last shot had floored
him just as he was upon me; the end of his trunk had fallen upon my
heel. Still he was not dead, but he struck at me with his trunk as I
passed round his head to give him a finisher with the four-ounce
rifle, which I had snatched from our solitary gun-bearer.
My back was touching the jungle from which the rogue had just
charged, and I was almost in the act of firing through the temple of
the still struggling elephant, when I heard a tremendous crash in the
jungle behind me similar to the first, and the savage scream of an
elephant. I saw the ponderous foreleg cleave its way through the
jungle directly upon me. I threw my whole weight back against the
thick rattans to avoid him, and the next moment his foot was planted
within an inch of mine. His lofty head was passing over me in full
charge at B., who was unloaded, when, holding the four-ounce rifle
perpendicularly, I fired exactly under his throat. I thought he would
fall and crush me, but this shot was the only chance, as B. was
perfectly helpless.
A dense cloud of smoke from the heavy charge of powder for the
moment obscured everything. I had jumped out of the way the instant
after firing. The elephant did not fall, but he had his death blow the
ball had severed his jugular, and the blood poured from the wound. He
stopped, but collecting his stunned energies he still blundered
forward towards B. He, however, avoided him by running to one side,
and the wounded brute staggered on through the jungle. We now loaded
the guns; the first rogue was quite dead, and we followed in pursuit
of rogue number two. We heard distant shots, and upon arriving at the
spot we found the gun-bearers. They had heard the wounded elephant
crushing through the jungle, and they had given him a volley just as
he was crossing the river over which the herd had escaped in the
morning. They described the elephant as perfectly helpless from his
wound, and they imagined that he had fallen in the thick bushes on the
opposite bank of the river. As I before mentioned, we could not cross
the river on account of the torrent, but in a few days it subsided,
and the elephant was found lying dead in the spot where they supposed
he had fallen.
Thus happily ended the destruction of this notable pair; they had
proved themselves all that we had heard of them, and by their cunning
dodge of hiding in the thick jungle they had nearly made sure of us.
We had killed three rogues that morning, and we returned to our
quarters well satisfied.
Since that period I have somewhat thinned the number of rogues in
this neighbourhood. I had a careful and almost certain plan of
shooting them. Quite alone, with the exception of two faithful
gun-bearers, I used to wait at the edge of the jungle at their feeding
time, and watch their exit from the forest. The most cautious stalking
then generally enabled me to get a fatal shot before my presence was
discovered. This is the proper way to succeed with rogue elephants,
although of course it is attended with considerable danger. I was once
very nearly caught near this spot, where the elephants are always
particularly savage. The lake was then much diminished in size by dry
weather, and the water had retired for about a hundred yards from the
edge of the forest, leaving a deep bed of mud covered with slime and
decayed vegetable matter. This slime had hardened in the sun and
formed a cake over the soft mud beneath. Upon this treacherous surface
a man could walk with great care. Should the thin covering break
through, he would be immediately waist-deep in the soft mud. To plod
through this was the elephant's delight. Smearing a thick coat of the
black mud over their whole bodies, they formed a defensive armour
against the attacks of mosquitoes, which are the greatest torments
that an elephant has to contend with.
I was watching the edge of the forest one afternoon at about four
o'clock, when I noticed the massive form of one of these tank rogues
stalk majestically from the jungle and proceed through the deep mud
towards the lake. I had the wind, and I commenced stalking him.
Advancing with my two gun-bearers in single file, I crept carefully
from tree to tree along the edge of the forest for about a quarter of
a mile, until I arrived at the very spot at which he had made his exit
from the jungle.
I was now within eighty yards of him as he stood with his head
towards the lake and his hind-quarters exactly facing me. His deep
tracks in the mud were about five feet apart, so great was his stride
and length of limb, and, although the soft bog was at least three and
a half feet deep, his belly was full two feet above the surface. He
was a fine fellow, and, with intense caution, I advanced towards him
over the trembling surface of baked slime. His tracks had nearly
filled with water, and looked like little wells. The bog waved as I
walked carefully over it, and I stopped once or twice, hesitating
whether I should continue; I feared the crusty surface would not
support me, as the nearer I approached the water's edge the weaker the
coating of slime became, not having been exposed for so long a time to
the sun as that at a greater distance.
He was making so much noise in splashing the mud over his body that
I had a fine chance for getting up to him. I could not withstand the
temptation, and I crept up as fast as I could.
I got within eight paces of him unperceived; the mud that he threw
over his back spattered round me as it fell. I was carrying a light
double-barrelled gun, but I now reached back my hand to exchange it
for my four-ounce rifle. Little did I expect the sudden effect
produced by the additional weight of the heavy weapon. The treacherous
surface suddenly gave way, and in an instant I was waist deep in mud.
The noise that I had made in falling had at once aroused the elephant,
and, true to his character of a rogue, he immediately advanced with a
shrill trumpet towards me. His ears were cocked, and his tail was well
up; but instead of charging, as rogues generally do, with his head
thrown rather back and held high, which renders a front shot very
uncertain, he rather lowered his head, and splashed towards me through
the mud, apparently despising my diminutive appearance.
I thought it was all up with me this time; I was immovable in my
bed of mud, and, instead of the clean brown barrel that I could
usually trust to in an extremity, I raised a mass of mud to my
shoulder, which encased my rifle like a flannel bag. I fully expected
it to miss fire; no sights were visible, and I had to guess the aim
with the advancing elephant within five yards of me. Hopelessly I
pulled the slippery trigger. The rifle did not even hang fire, and the
rogue fell into the deep bed of mud stone dead. If the rifle had
missed fire I must have been killed, as escape would have been
impossible. It was with great difficulty that I was extricated from my
muddy position by the joint exertions of myself and gun-bearers.
Elephants, buffaloes, and hogs are equally fond of wallowing in the
mud. A buffalo will gallop through a swamp, hock deep, in which a
horse would be utterly powerless, even without a rider. Elephants can
also make wonderful progress through deep mud, the formation of the
hind legs with knees instead of hocks giving them an increased
facility for moving through heavy ground.
The great risk in attacking rogue elephants consists in the
impracticability of quick movements upon such ground as they generally
frequent. The speed and activity of a man, although considerable upon
a smooth surface, is as nothing upon rough, stumpy grass wilds, where
even walking is laborious. What is comparatively level to an
elephant's foot is as a ploughed field to that of a man. This renders
escape from pursuit next to impossible, unless some welcome tree
should be near, round which the hunter could dodge, and even then he
stands but a poor chance, unless assistance is at hand. I have never
seen anyone who could run at full speed in rough ground without
falling, if pursued. Large stones, tufts of rank grass, holes, fallen
boughs, gullies, are all impediments to rapid locomotion when the
pursued is forced to be constantly looking back to watch the progress
of his foe, and to be the judge of his own race.
There is a great art in running away. It requires the perfection of
coolness and presence of mind, without which a man is most likely to
run into the very danger that he is trying to avoid. This was the
cause of Major Haddock's death in Ceylon some years ago. He had
attacked a 'rogue,' and, being immediately charged, he failed to stop
him, although he gave him both barrels. Being forced to run, he went
off at full speed, and turning quickly round a tree, he hoped the
elephant would pass him. Unfortunately, he did not look behind him
before he turned, and the elephant passed round the opposite side of
the tree, and, of course, met him face to face. He was instantly
trampled to death.
Mr. Wallet was also killed by a rogue elephant; this animal was
shot a few days afterwards, in a spirited contest, by Captain Galway
and Ensign Scroggs, both of whom were very nearly caught in the
encounter. A gentleman of the name of Keane was added to the list of
victims a few years ago. He had fired without effect, and was almost
immediately over- taken by the elephant and crushed to death. The most
extraordinary tale that I have ever heard of rogue elephants in Ceylon
was told me by the Rhatamahatmeya of Doolana, who was present at the
scene when a lad. I do not profess to credit it entirely; but I will
give it in his own words, and, to avoid the onus of an improbable
story, I will entitle it the 'Rhatamahatmeya's Tale.' In justice to
him, I must acknowledge that his account was corroborated by all the
old men of the village.
THE RHATAMAHATMEYA'S TALE.
'There was a notorious rogue elephant at Doolana about thirty years
ago, whose ferocity was so extreme that he took complete possession of
a certain part of the country adjoining the lake. He had killed eight
or nine persons, and his whole object in existence appeared to be the
waylaying and destruction of the natives. He was of enormous size, and
was well known by a peculiar flesh-coloured forehead.
`In those days there were no fire-arms in this part of the country;
therefore there was no protection for either life or property from
this monster, who would invade the paddy-fields at night, and actually
pull down the watch-houses, regardless of the blazing fires which are
lighted on the hearth of sand on the summit; these he used to scatter
about and extinguish. He had killed several natives in this manner,
involving them in the common ruin with their watch-houses. The terror
created by this elephant was so extreme that the natives deserted the
neighbourhood that he infested.
`At length many months passed away without his being either seen or
heard of; the people began to hope that he had died from the effect of
poisoned arrows, which had frequently been shot at him from the
watch-houses in high trees; and, by degrees, the terror of his name
had lost its power, and he ceased to be thought of.
`It was in the cool of the evening, about an hour before sunset,
that about twenty of the women from the village were upon the grassy
borders of the lake, engaged in sorting and tying into bundles the
rushes which they had been gathering during the day for making mats.
They were on the point of starting homeward with their loads, when the
sudden trumpet of an elephant was heard, and to their horror they saw
the well-known rogue, with the unmistakable mark upon his forehead,
coming down in full charge upon them. The ground was perfectly open;
there were no trees for some hundred yards, except the jungle from
which he was advancing at a frightful speed. An indiscriminate flight
of course took place, and a race of terror commenced. In a few seconds
the monster was among them, and, seizing a young girl in his trunk, he
held her high in the air, and halted, as though uncertain how to
dispose of his helpless victim. The girl, meanwhile, was vainly
shrieking for assistance, and the petrified troop of women, having
gained the shelter of some jungle, gazed panic-stricken upon the
impending fate of their companion.
`To their horror the elephant slowly lowered her in his trunk till
near the ground, when he gradually again raised her, and, bringing her
head into his mouth, a report was heard like the crack of a whip--it
was the sudden crushing of her skull. Tearing the head off by the
neck, he devoured it; and, placing his forefoot upon the body, he tore
the arms and legs from their sockets with his trunk, and devoured
every portion of her.
`The women rushed to the village with the news of this unnatural
carnage.
`Doolana and the neighbourhood has always been famous for its
elephant-hunters, and the husband of this unfortunate girl was one of
the most active in their pursuit. The animals are caught in this
country and sold to the Arabs, for the use of the Indian Government.
`The news of this bloody deed flew from village to village; war to
the knife was declared against the perpetrator, and preparations were
accordingly made.
`Since the murder of this girl he had taken up his abode in a small
isolated jungle adjoining, surrounded by a small open plain of fine
soft grass, upon a level sandy soil.
`A few days after this act, a hundred men assembled at Doolana,
determined upon his destruction. They were all picked
elephant-hunters--Moormen; active and sinewy fellows, accustomed to
danger from their childhood. Some were armed with axes, sharpened to
the keenest edge, some with long spears, and others with regular
elephant ropes, formed of the thongs of raw deer's hide, beautifully
twisted. Each division of men had a separate duty allotted.
`They marched towards the small jungle in which the rogue was known
to be; but he anticipated their wishes, and before they were within a
hundred paces of his lair, he charged furiously out. The conflict
began in good earnest. The spearmen were in advance, and the axemen
were divided into two parties, one on either flank, with an equal
number of ropemen. The instant that he charged the whole body of men
ran forward at full speed to meet him; still he continued his furious
onset, undismayed by the yells of a hundred men. The spearmen halted
when within twenty yards, then turned and fled; this had been agreed
upon beforehand. The elephant passed the two flanks of axemen in
pursuit of the flying enemy; the axemen immediately closed in behind
him, led by the husband of the murdered girl. By a well-directed blow
upon the hind leg, full of revenge, this active fellow divided the
sinew in the first joint above the foot.* (*Since this was written I
have seen the African elephant disabled by one blow of a sharp sword
as described in the "Nile Tributaries of Abyssinia.") That instant the
elephant fell upon his knees, but recovered himself directly, and
endeavoured to turn upon his pursuers; a dozen axes flashed in the
sunbeams, as the strokes were aimed at the other hind leg. It was the
work of an instant: the massive limb bent powerless under him, and he
fell in a sitting posture, utterly helpless, but roaring with mad and
impotent fury. The ropemen now threw nooses over his trunk and head;
his struggles, although tremendous, were in vain; fifty men, hanging
their weight upon several ropes attached to his trunk, rendered that
dreaded weapon powerless. The sharp lances were repeatedly driven into
his side, and several of the boldest hunters climbing up the steep
ascent of his back, an axe was seen to fall swiftly and repeatedly
upon his spine, on the nape of his tough neck. The giant form suddenly
sank; the spine was divided, and the avenging blow was dealt by the
husband of his late victim. The destroyer was no more. The victory was
gained without the loss of a man.'
The natives said that this elephant was mad; if so it may account
in some measure for the unheard-of occurrence of an elephant devouring
flesh. Both elephants and buffaloes attack man from malice alone,
without the slightest idea of making a meal of him. This portion of
the headman's story I cannot possibly believe, although he swears to
it. The elephant may, perhaps, have cracked her head and torn his
victim to pieces in the manner described, but the actual 'eating' is
incredible.
Character of the Veddahs--Description of the Veddahs--A Monampitya
Rogue--Attacking the Rogue--Breathless Excitement--Death of a Large
Rogue--Utility of the Four-ounce--A Curious Shot--Fury of a Bull
Buffalo--Character of the Wild Buffalo--Buffalo-shooting at Minneria
Lake--Charge in High Reeds--Close of a Good Day's Sport--Last Day at
Minneria--A Large Snake--An Unpleasant Bedfellow.
Doolana is upon the very verge of the most northern point of the
Veddah country, the whole of which wild district is the finest part of
Ceylon for sport. Even to this day few Europeans have hunted these
secluded wilds. The wandering Veddah, with his bow and arrows, is
occasionally seen roaming through his wilderness in search of deer,
but the report of a native's gun is never heard; the game is therefore
comparatively undisturbed. I have visited every portion of this fine
sporting country, and since I have acquired the thorough knowledge of
its attractions, I have made up my mind never to shoot anywhere but
there. The country is more open than in most parts of Ceylon, and the
perfect wildness of the whole district is an additional charm.
The dimensions of the Veddah country are about eighty miles from
north to south, by forty in width. A fine mountain, known as the
'Gunner's Coin,' is an unmistakable landmark upon the northern
boundary. From this point a person may ride for forty miles without
seeing a sign of a habitation; the whole country is perfectly
uncivilised, and its scanty occupants, the 'Veddahs,' wander about
like animals, without either home, laws, or religion.
I have frequently read absurd descriptions of their manners and
customs, which must evidently have been gathered from hearsay, and not
from a knowledge of the people. It is a commonly believed report that
the Veddahs 'live in the trees,' and a stranger immediately confuses
them with rooks and monkeys. Whoever first saw Veddah huts in the
trees would have discovered, upon enquiry, that they were temporary
watch-houses, from which they guard a little plot of korrakan from the
attacks of elephants and other wild beasts. Far from LIVING in the
trees, they live nowhere; they wander over the face of their beautiful
country, and migrate to different parts at different seasons, with the
game which they are always pursuing. The seasons in Ceylon vary in an
extraordinary manner, considering the small size of the island. The
wet season in one district is the dry season in another, and vice
versa. Wherever the dry weather prevails, the pasturage is dried up;
the brooks and pools are mere sandy gullies and pits. The Veddah
watches at some solitary hole which still contains a little water, and
to this the deer and every species of Ceylon game resort. Here his
broad-headed arrow finds a supply. He dries the meat in long strips in
the sun, and cleaning out some hollow tree, he packs away his savoury
mass of sun-cooked flesh, and fills up the reservoir with wild honey;
he then stops up the aperture with clay.
The last drop of water evaporates, the deer leave the country and
migrate into other parts where mountains attract the rain and the
pasturage is abundant. The Veddah burns the parched grass wherever he
passes, and the country is soon a blackened surface--not a blade of
pasture remains; but the act of burning ensures a sweet supply shortly
after the rains commence, to which the game and the Veddahs will then
return. In the meantime he follows the game to other districts, living
in caves where they happen to abound, or making a temporary but with
grass and sticks.
Every deer-path, every rock, every peculiar feature in the country,
every pool of water, is known to these hunting Veddahs; they are
consequently the best assistants in the world in elephant-hunting.
They will run at top speed over hard ground upon an elephant's track
which is barely discernible even to the practised eye of a white man.
Fortunately, the number of these people is very trifling or the game
would be scarce.
They hunt like the leopard; noiselessly stalking till within ten
paces of their game, they let the broad arrow fly. At this distance
who could miss? Should the game be simply wounded, it is quite enough;
they never lose him, but hunt him up, like hounds upon a blood track.
Nevertheless, they are very bad shots with the bow and arrow, and
they never can improve while they restrict their practice to such
short ranges.
I have often tried them at a mark at sixty yards, and, although a
very bad hand with a bow myself, I have invariably beaten them with
their own weapons. These bows are six feet long, made of a light
supple wood, and the strings are made of the fibrous bark of a tree
greased and twisted. The arrows are three feet long, formed of the
same wood as the bows. The blades are themselves seven inches of this
length, and are flat, like the blade of a dinner-knife brought to a
point. Three short feathers from the peacock's wing are roughly lashed
to the other end of the arrow.
The Veddah in person is extremely ugly; short, but sinewy, his long
uncombed locks fall to his waist, looking more like a horse's tail
than human hair. He despises money, but is thankful for a knife, a
hatchet, or a gaudy-coloured cloth, or brass pot for cooking.
The women are horribly ugly and are almost entirely naked. They
have no matrimonial regulations, and the children are squalid and
miserable. Still these people are perfectly happy, and would prefer
their present wandering life to the most luxurious restraint. Speaking
a language of their own, with habits akin to those of wild animals,
they keep entirely apart from the Cingalese. They barter deer-horns
and bees'-wax with the travelling Moormen pedlers in exchange for
their trifling requirements. If they have food, they eat it; if they
have none, they go without until by some chance they procure it. In
the meantime they chew the bark of various trees, and search for
berries, while they wend their way for many miles to some remembered
store of deer's flesh and honey, laid by in a hollow tree.
The first time that I ever saw a Veddah was in the north of the
country. A rogue elephant was bathing in a little pool of deep mud and
water near the tank of Monampitya, about six miles from the 'Gunner's
Coin.' This Veddah had killed a wild pig, and was smoking the flesh
within a few yards of the spot, when he suddenly heard the elephant
splashing in the water. My tent was pitched within a mile of the
place, and he accordingly brought me the intelligence.
Upon arrival at the pool I found the elephant so deep in the mud
that he could barely move. His hind-quarters were towards me; and the
pool not being more than thirty yards in diameter, and surrounded by
impenetrable rattan jungle on all sides but one small opening, in
which I stood, I was obliged to clap my hands to attract his
attention. This had the desired effect; he turned slowly round, and I
shot him immediately. This was one of the Monampitya tank rogues, but
in his muddy position he had no chance.
The largest elephant that I have ever seen was in this
neighbourhood. I had arrived one afternoon at about five o'clock in a
fine plain, about twelve miles from Monampitya, where the presence of
a beautiful lake and high grass promised an abundance of game. It was
a most secluded spot, and my tent and coolies being well up with my
horse, I fixed upon a shady nook for the tent, and I strolled out to
look for the tracks while it was being pitched.
A long promontory stretched some hundred yards into the lake,
exactly opposite the spot I had fixed upon for the encampment, and,
knowing that elephants when bathing generally land upon the nearest
shore, I walked out towards the point of this projecting neck of land.
The weather was very dry, and the ground was a mass of little
pitfalls, about two feet deep, which had been made by the feet of the
elephants in the wet weather, when this spot was soft mud and
evidently the favourite resort of the heavy game. The ground was now
baked by the sun as hard as though it were frozen, and the numerous
deep ruts made walking very difficult. Several large trees and a few
bushes grew upon the surface, but for the most part it was covered by
a short though luxuriant grass. One large tree grew within fifty yards
of the extreme point of the promontory, and another of the same kind
grew at an equal distance from it, but nearer to the main land. Upon
both these trees was a coat of thick mud not many hours old. The bark
was rubbed completely away, and this appeared to have been used for
years as a favourite rubbing-post by some immense elephant. The mud
reached full twelve feet up the trunk of the tree, and there were old
marks far above this which had been scored by his tusks. There was no
doubt that one of these tank rogues of extraordinary size had
frequented this spot for years, and still continued to do so, the mud
upon the tree being still soft, as though it had been left there that
morning. I already coveted him, and having my telescope with me, I
took a minute survey of the opposite shore, which was about half a
mile distant and was lined with fine open forest to the water's edge.
Nothing was visible. I examined the other side of the lake with the
same want of success. Although it was such a quiet spot, with
beautiful grass and water, there was not a single head of game to be
seen. Again I scrutinised the opposite shore. The glass was no sooner
raised to my eye than I started at the unexpected apparition. There
was no mistaking him; he had appeared as
though by magic--an elephant of the most extraordinary size that I
have ever seen. He was not still for an instant, but was stalking
quickly up and down the edge of the lake as though in great agitation.
This restlessness is one of the chief characteristics of a bad rogue.
I watched him for a few minutes, until he at length took to the water,
and after blowing several streams over his shoulders, he advanced to
the middle of the tank, where he commenced feeding upon the lotus
leaves and sedges.
It was a calm afternoon, and not a breath of air was stirring; and
fearing lest the noise of the coolies, who were arranging the
encampment, should disturb him, I hastened back. I soon restored
quiet, and ordering the horses to be led into the jungle lest he
should discover them, I made the people conceal themselves; and taking
my two Moormen gun-bearers, who were trusty fellows that I had
frequently shot with, I crept cautiously back to my former position,
and took my station behind the large tree farthest from the point
which commanded the favourite rubbing-post and within fifty yards of
it. From this place I attentively watched his movements. He was
wandering about in the water, alternately feeding and bathing, and
there was a peculiar devilry in his movements that marked him as a
rogue of the first class. He at length made up his mind to cross the
tank, and he advanced at quick strides through the water straight for
the point upon which I hoped to meet him.
This was an exciting moment. I had no companion, but depended upon
my own gun, and the rutty nature of the ground precluded any quick
movements. The watching of the game is the intense excitement of
elephant-shooting--a feeling which only lasts until the animal is
within shot, when it suddenly vanishes and gives place to perfect
calmness. At this time I could distinctly hear the beating of my own
heart, and my two gun-bearers, who did not know what fear was, were
literally trembling with excitement.
He was certainly a king of beasts, and proudly he advanced towards
the point. Suddenly he disappeared; nothing could be seen but his
trunk above the water as he waded through the deep channel for a few
yards, and then reared his majestic form dripping from the lake. He
stood upon the `point.' I never saw so grand an animal; it seemed as
though no single ball could kill him, and although his head and
carcass were enormous, still his length of leg appeared
disproportionately great. With quick, springy paces he advanced
directly for his favourite tree and began his process of rubbing,
perfectly unaware of the hidden foes so near him.
Having finished his rubbing, he tore up several bunches of grass,
but without eating them he threw them pettishly over his back, and
tossed some from side to side. I was in momentary dread lest a horse
should neigh and disturb him, as they were within 200 paces of where
he stood. Everything was, however, quiet in that direction, where the
hiding coolies were watching the impending event with breathless
interest.
Having amused himself for some moments by kicking up the turf and
dirt and throwing the sand over his back, he took it into his head to
visit the main shore, and for this purpose he strode quickly in the
direction of the encampment. I moved round the tree to secrete myself
as he advanced. He was soon exactly at right angles with me as he was
passing the tree, when he suddenly stopped: his whole demeanour
changed in an instant; his ears cocked, his eyes gleamed, his tail on
end and his trunk raised high in the air, he turned the distended tip
towards the tree from behind which I was watching him. He was
perfectly motionless and silent in this attitude for some moments. He
was thirty yards from me, as I supposed at the time, and I reserved my
fire, having the four-ounce rifle ready. Suddenly, with his trunk
still raised, his long legs swung forward towards me. There was no
time to lose; I was discovered, and a front shot would be useless with
his trunk in that position. Just as his head was in the act of turning
towards me I took a steady shot at his temple. He sank gently upon his
knees, and never afterwards moved a muscle! His eyes were open, and so
bright that I pushed my finger in them to assure myself that life was
perfectly extinct. He was exactly thirty-two paces from the rifle, and
the ball had passed in at one temple and out at the other. His height
may be imagined from this rough method of measuring. A gun-bearer
climbed upon his back as the elephant lay upon all-fours, and holding
a long stick across his spine at right angles, I could just touch it
with the points of my fingers by reaching to my utmost height. Thus,
as he lay, his back was seven feet two inches, perpendicular height,
from the ground. This would make his height when erect about twelve
feet on the spine-an enormous height for an elephant, as twelve feet
on the top of the back is about equal to eleven feet six inches at the
shoulder. If I had not fortunately killed this elephant at the first
shot, I should have had enough to do to take care of myself, as he was
one of the most vicious-looking brutes that I ever saw, and he was in
the very act of charging when I shot him.
With these elephants the four-ounce rifle is an invaluable weapon;
even if the animal is not struck in the mortal spot, the force of the
blow upon the head is so great that it will generally bring him upon
his knees, or at least stop him. It has failed once or twice in this,
but not often; and upon those occasions I had loaded with the conical
ball. This, although it will penetrate much farther through a thick
substance than a round ball, is not so effective in elephant-shooting
as the latter. The reason is plain enough. No shot in the head will
kill an elephant dead unless it passes through the brain; an ounce
ball will effect this as well as a six-pound shot; but there are many
cases where the brain cannot be touched, by a peculiar method of
carrying the head and trunk in charging, etc.; a power is then
required that by the concussion will knock him down, or turn him; this
power is greater in the round ball than in the conical, as a larger
surface is suddenly struck. The effect is similar to a man being run
through the arm with a rapier or thrust at with a poker--the rapier
will pass through him almost without his knowledge, but the poker will
knock him down. Thus the pointed conical ball will, perhaps, pass
through an elephant's forehead and penetrate as far as his shoulders,
but it will produce no immediate effect. For buffalo-shooting the
conical ball is preferable, as with the heavy charge of powder that I
use it will pass completely through him from end to end. A four-ounce
ball, raking an animal from stem to stern, must settle him at once.
This is a desirable thing to accomplish with wild buffaloes, as they
may, frequently prove awkward customers, even after receiving several
mortal wounds from light guns.
The four-ounce conical ball should be an excellent weapon for
African shooting, where the usual shot at an elephant is at the
shoulder. This shot would never answer in Ceylon; the country is not
sufficiently open to watch the effects produced upon the animal, and
although he may have a mortal wound, he carries it away with him and
is not bagged. I have frequently tried this shot; and, although I have
seen the elephants go away with ears and trunk drooping, still I have
never bagged more than one by any but the head shot. This fellow was a
small `tusker,' who formed one of a herd in thick thorny jungle. There
were several rocks in this low jungle which overtopped the highest
bushes; and having taken my station upon one of these, I got a
downward shot between the shoulders at the tusker, and dropped him
immediately as the herd passed beneath. The jungle was so thick that I
could not see his head, or, of course, I should have chosen the usual
shot. This shot was not a fair criterion for the shoulder, as I
happened to be in a position that enabled me to fire down upon him,
and the ball most likely passed completely through him.
I remember a curious and unexpected shot that I once made with the
four-ounce rifle, which illustrates its immense power. I was shooting
at Minneria, and was returning to the tent in the afternoon, having
had a great day's sport with buffaloes, when I saw a large herd in the
distance, ranged up together, and gazing intently at some object near
them. Being on horseback I rode up to them, carrying my heavy rifle;
and, upon a near approach I discovered two large bulls fighting
furiously. This combat was exciting the attention of the herd, who
retreated upon my approach. The two bulls were so engaged in their
duel that they did not notice me until I was within fifty yards of
them. First one, then the other, was borne to the ground, when
presently their horns became locked together, as though arm in arm.
The more they tugged to separate themselves, the tighter they held
together, and at length they ranged side by side, Taking a shot at the
shoulder of the nearest bull, they both fell suddenly to the ground.
The fall unlocked their horns, and one bull recovering his legs,
retreated at a slow pace and dead lame. The nearest bull was killed,
and mounting my horse I galloped after the wounded buffalo. The chase
did not last long. Upon arriving within fifty yards of his flank, I
noticed the blood streaming from his mouth, and he presently rolled
over and died. The ball, having passed through his antagonist, had
entered his shoulder, and, smashing the shoulder-blade, had passed
through the body, lodging in the tough hide upon his opposite side,
from which I extracted it by simply cutting the skin which covered it.
I have frequently seen the bull buffaloes fight each other with
great fury. Upon these occasions they are generally the most
dangerous, all their natural ferocity being increased by the heat of
the combat. I was once in pursuit of an elephant which led me across
the plain at Minneria, when I suddenly observed a large bull buffalo
making towards me, as though to cut me off in the very direction in
which I was advancing. Upon his near approach I noticed numerous
bloody cuts and scratches upon his neck and shoulders, which were
evidently only just made by the horns of some bull with whom he had
been fighting. Not wishing to fire, lest I should alarm the elephant,
I endeavoured to avoid him, but this was no easy task. He advanced to
within fifty paces of me, and, ploughing up the ground with his horns,
and roaring, he seemed determined to make an attack. However, I
managed to pass him at length, being determined to pay him off on my
return, if he were still in the same spot.
On arriving near the position of the elephant, I saw at once that
it was impossible to get him: he was standing in a deep morass of
great extent, backed by thick jungles, and I could not approach nearer
than 150 paces. After trying several ruses to induce him to quit his
mud-bath and come on, I found it was of no use; he was not disposed to
be a fighter, as he saw my strong position upon some open rising
ground among some large trees. I therefore took a rest upon the branch
of a tree, and gave him a shot from the four-ounce rifle through the
shoulder. This sent him to the thick jungle with ears and trunk
drooping, but produced no other effect. I therefore returned towards
the tent, fully expecting to meet my old enemy, the bull, whom I had
left master of the field. In this I was not disappointed; he was
standing within a few yards of the same spot, and, upon seeing me, he
immediately advanced, having a very poor opinion of an enemy who had
retreated from him an hour previous.
Instead of charging at a rapid pace he trotted slowly up, and I
gave him the four-ounce when within fifty yards. This knocked him
over; but, to my astonishment, he recovered himself instantly and
galloped towards me. Again he stopped within twenty yards of me, and
it was fortunate for me that he did; for a servant who was carrying my
long two-ounce rifle had, in his excitement, cocked it and actually
set the hair-trigger. This he managed to touch as he handed it to me,
and it exploded close to my head. I had only a light double-gun
loaded, and the buffalo was evidently prepared to charge in a few
seconds.
To my great satisfaction I saw the bloody foam gathering upon his
lips, and I knew that he was struck through the lungs; but,
nevertheless, the distance was so short between us that he could reach
me in two or three bounds. Keeping my Moorman with the light gun close
to me in readiness, I began to load my two big rifles. In the mean
time the bull was advancing step by step with an expression of
determined malice, and my Cingalese servant, in an abject state of
fright, was imploring me to run--simply as an excuse for his own
flight. `Buffalo's coming, sar! Master, run plenty, quick! Buffalo's
coming, sar! Master, get big tree!' I could not turn to silence the
fellow, but I caught him a fine backward kick upon the shins with my
heel, which stopped him, and in a few seconds I was loaded and the
four-ounce was in my hand. The bull, at this time, was not fifteen
yards from me; but, just as I was going to fire, I saw him reel to one
side; and in another moment he rolled upon his back, a dead buffalo,
although I had not fired after my first shot. The ball, having entered
his chest, was sticking in the skin of his haunch, having passed
through his lungs. His wonderful pluck had kept him upon his legs
until life was extinct.
I am almost tired of recounting so many instances of the courage of
these beasts. When I look back to those scenes, so many ghosts of
victims rise up before me that, were I to relate one-half their
histories, it would fill a volume. The object in describing these
encounters is to show the style of animal that the buffalo is in his
natural state. I could relate a hundred instances where they have died
like curs, and have afforded no more sport than tame cows; but I
merely enumerate those scenes worth relating that I have witnessed.
This will show that the character of a wild buffalo can never be
depended upon; and if the pursuit is followed up as a sport by itself,
the nature of the animal cannot be judged by the individual behaviour
of any particular beast. Some will fight and some will fly, and no one
can tell which will take place; it is at the option of the beast.
Caution and good shooting, combined with heavy rifles, are necessary.
Without heavy metal the sport would be superlatively dangerous if
regularly followed up. Many persons kill a wild buffalo every now and
then; but I have never met with a single sportsman in Ceylon who has
devoted himself to the pursuit as a separate sport. Unless this is
done the real character of buffaloes in general must remain unknown.
It may, however, be considered as a rule with few exceptions that the
buffaloes seldom commence the attack unless pursued. Their instinct at
once tells them whether the man advancing towards them over the plain
comes as an enemy. They may then attack; but if unmolested they will
generally retreat, and, like all men of true courage, they will never
seek a quarrel, and never give in when it is forced upon them. Many
descriptions of my encounters with these animals may appear to
militate against this theory, but they are the exceptions that I have
met with; the fierce look of defiance and the quick tossing of the
head may appear to portend a charge, but the animals are generally
satisfied with this demonstration, and retreat.
Attack the single bulls and follow them up, and they will soon show
their real character. Heavy rifles then make a good sport of what
would otherwise be a chance of ten to one against the man. It must be
remembered that the attack is generally upon an extensive plain,
without a single sheltering tree; escape by speed is therefore
impossible, and even a horse must be a good one or a buffalo will
catch him.
Without wading through the many scenes of carnage that I have
witnessed in this branch of sport, I will sum up the account of
buffalo-shooting by a decription of one day's work at Minneria.
The tent was pitched in a secluded spot beneath some shady trees,
through which no ray of sun could penetrate; the open forest
surrounded it on all sides, but through the vistas of dark stems the
beautiful green plain and glassy lake could be seen stretching into an
undefined distance. The blue hills, apparently springing from the
bosom of the lake, lined the horizon, and the shadowy forms of the
Kandian mountains mingled indistinctly with the distant clouds. From
this spot, with a good telescope, I could watch the greater part of
the plain, which was at this time enlivened by the numerous herds of
wild buffaloes scattered over the surface. A large bull was standing
alone about half a mile from the tent, and I thought him a fine beast
to begin with.
I started with two well-known and trusty gun-bearers. This bull
apparently did not wish to fight, and when at nearly 400 yards'
distance he turned and galloped off. I put up all the sights of the
long two- ounce rifle, and for an instant he dropped to the shot at
this distance, but recovering immediately he turned round, and,
although upon only three legs, he charged towards me. At this distance
I should have had ample time to reload before he could have come near
me, so I took a quiet shot at him. with my four-ounce rifle. A second
passed, and he pitched upon his head and lay upon the ground,
struggling in vain to rise. This was an immensely long shot to produce
so immediate an effect so reloading quickly I stepped the distance. I
measured 352 paces, and I then stood within ten yards of him, as he
still lay upon the ground, endeavouring vainly to rush at me. A ball
in his head settled him. The first shot had broken his hind leg--and
the shot with the big rifle had hit him on the nose, and, tearing away
the upper jaw, it had passed along his neck and escaped from behind
his shoulder. This was a great chance to hit him so exactly at such a
range. His skull is now in England, exhibiting the terrific effect of
the heavy ball.
I had made up my mind for a long day's work, and I therefore
mounted my horse and rode over the plain. The buffaloes were very
wild, as I had been shooting here for some days, and there were no
less than forty-two carcasses scattered about the plain in different
directions. I fired several ineffectual shots at immense ranges; at
length I even fired at random into a large herd, which seemed
determined to take to the jungle. After they had galloped for a
quarter of a mile, a cow dropped to the rear and presently fell. Upon
riding up to her I found her in the last gasp; the random shot had
struck her behind the shoulder, and I finished her by a ball in the
head. One of the bulls from this herd had separated from the troop,
and had taken to the lake; he had waded out for about 400 yards, and
was standing shoulder-deep. This was a fine target; a black spot upon
the bright surface of the lake, although there was not more than
eighteen inches of his body above the water. I rode to the very edge
of the lake, and then dismounting I took a rest upon my saddle. My
horse, being well accustomed to this work, stood like a statue, but
the ball dapped in the water just beyond the mark. The buffalo did not
move an inch until the third shot. This hit him, and he swam still
farther off; but he soon got his footing, and again gave a fair mark
as before. I missed him again, having fired a little over him. The
fifth shot brought luck and sank him. I do not know where he was hit,
as of course I could not get to him; but most likely it was in the
spine, as so small a portion of his body was above water.
I passed nearly the whole day in practising at long ranges; but
with no very satisfactory effect; several buffaloes badly wounded had
reached the jungle, and my shoulder was so sore from the recoil of the
heavy rifle during several days' shooting with the large charge of
powder, that I was obliged to reduce the charge to six drachms and
give up the long shots.
It was late in the afternoon, and the heat of the day had been
intense. I was very hungry, not having breakfasted, and I made up my
mind to return to the tent, which was now some eight miles distant. I
was riding over the plain on my way home, when I saw a fine bull
spring from a swampy hollow and gallop off. Putting spurs to my horse,
I was soon after him, carrying the four-ounce rifle; and, upon seeing
himself pursued, he took shelter in a low but dry hollow, which was a
mass of lofty bulrush and coarse tangled grass, rising about ten feet
high in an impervious mass. This had been a pool in the wet weather,
but was now dried up, and was nothing but a bed of sedges and high
rushes. I could see nothing of the bull, although I knew he was in it.
The hollow was in the centre of a wide plain, so I knew that the
buffalo could not have passed out without my seeing him, and my
gun-bearers having come up, I made them pelt the rushes with dried
clods of earth. It was of no use: he would not break cover; so I
determined to ride in and hunt him up. The grass was so thick and
entangled with the rushes that my horse could with difficulty force
his way through it; and when within the dense mass of vegetation it
towered high above my head, and was so thick that I could not see a
yard to my right or left. I beat about to no purpose for about twenty
minutes, and I was on the point of giving it up, when I suddenly saw
the tall reeds bow down just before me. I heard the rush of an animal
as he burst through, and I just saw the broad black nose, quickly
followed by the head and horns, as the buffalo charged into me. The
horse reared to his full height as the horns almost touched his chest,
and I fired as well as I was able. In another instant I was rolling on
the ground, with my horse upon me, in a cloud of smoke and confusion.
In a most unsportsmanlike manner (as persons may exclaim who were
not there) I hid behind my horse, as he regained his legs. All was
still--the snorting of the frightened horse was all that I could hear.
I expected to have seen the infuriated buffalo among us. I peeped over
the horse's back, and, to my delight and surprise, I saw the carcass
of the bull lying within three feet of him. His head was pierced by
the ball exactly between the horns, and death had been instantaneous.
The horse, having reared to his full height, had entangled his hind
legs in the grass, and he had fallen backwards without being touched
by the buffalo, although the horns were close into him.
I was rather pleased at being so well out of this scrape, and I
made up my mind never again to follow buffaloes into high grass.
Turning towards the position of the tent, I rode homewards. The plain
appeared deserted, and I rode for three or four miles along the shores
of the lake without seeing a head of game. At length, when within
about three miles of the encampment, I saw a small herd of five
buffaloes and three half-grown calves standing upon a narrow point of
muddy ground which projected for some distance into the lake.
I immediately rode towards them, and upon approaching to within
sixty yards, I found they consisted of three cows, two bulls, and
three calves. I had advanced towards them upon the neck of land upon
which they stood; there was, therefore, no retreat for them unless
they took to the water. They perceived this themselves, but they
preferred the bolder plan of charging through all opposition and then
reaching the main land. After a few preliminary grunts and tosses of
the head, one of the bulls charged straight at me at full gallop; he
was not followed by his companions, who were still irresolute; and,
when within forty yards, he sprang high in the air, and pitching upon
his horns, he floundered upon his back as the rifle-ball passed
through his neck and broke his spine. I immediately commenced
reloading, but the ball was only half-way down the barrel when the
remaining bull, undismayed by the fate of his companion, rushed on at
full speed. Snatching the long two-ounce rifle from a gun-bearer, I
made a lucky shot. The ball must have passed through his heart, as he
fell stone dead.
The three cows remained passive spectators of the death of their
mates, although I was convinced by their expression that they would
eventually show fight. I was soon reloaded, and not wishing to act
simply on the defensive, and thus run the risk of a simultaneous
onset, I fired at the throat of the most vicious of the party. The
two-ounce ball produced no other effect than an immediate charge. She
bounded towards me, and, although bleeding at the mouth, the distance
was so short that she would have been into me had I not stopped her
with the four-ounce rifle, which brought her to the ground when within
fifteen paces; here she lay disabled, but not dead, and again I
reloaded as fast as possible.
The two remaining cows appeared to have taken a lesson from the
fate of their comrades; and showing no disposition to charge, I
advanced towards them to within twenty yards. One of the cows now
commended tearing the muddy ground with her horns, and thus offered a
certain shot, which I accordingly took, and dropped her dead with a
ball in the nape of the neck. This was too much for the remaining
buffalo; she turned to plunge into the lake, but the four-ounce
through her shoulder brought her down before she could reach the
water, into which the three calves had sprung, and were swimming for
the main shore. I hit the last calf in the head with a
double-barrelled gun, and he immediately sank; and I missed another
calf with the left-hand barrel; therefore two escaped. I sent a man
into the water to find the dead calf, which he soon did, and hauled it
to the shore; and having reloaded, I proceeded to examine the hits on
the dead buffaloes. It was fortunate that I had reloaded; for I had no
sooner approached to within three or four yards of the cow that I had
left dying, when she suddenly sprang to her feet, and would have
charged, had I not killed her by a ball in the head from a light
double-barrel that I was then carrying. These animals had shown as
good sport as I had ever witnessed in buffalo-shooting, but the two
heavy rifles were fearful odds against them, and they were added to
the list of the slain. It was now late in the evening, and I had had a
long day's work in the broiling sun. I had bagged ten buffaloes,
including the calf, and having cut a fillet from the latter, I took a
gun, loaded with shot, from my horse-keeper, and gave up
ball-shooting, having turned my attention to a large flock of teal,
which I had disturbed in attacking the buffaloes. This flock I had
marked down in a small stream which flowed into the lake. A cautious
approach upon my hands and knees, through the grass, brought me
undiscovered to the bank of the stream, where, in a small bay, it
emptied itself into the lake, and a flock of about eighty teal were
swimming among the water-lilies within twenty yards of me. I fired one
barrel on the water, and the other in the air as they rose, killing
five and wounding a sixth, which escaped by continual diving. On my
way home I killed a few snipe, till at length the cessation of
daylight put an end to all shooting.
The moon was full and shone over the lake with great brilliancy;
the air was cool and refreshing after the great heat of the day; and
the chirp of the snipe and whistling sound of the wild fowl on the
lake were the only noises that disturbed the wild scene around. The
tent fires were blazing brightly in the forest at about a mile
distant; and giving my gun to the horse-keeper, I mounted and rode
towards the spot.
I was within half a mile of the tent, and had just turned round an
angle made by the forest, when I suddenly saw the grey forms of
several elephants, who had just emerged from the forest, and were
feeding in the high grass within a hundred yards of me. I counted
seven, six of which were close to the edge of the jungle, but the
seventh was a large bull elephant, who had advanced by himself about
sixty yards into the plain. I thought I could cut this fellow off,
and, taking my big rifle, I dismounted and crept cautiously towards
him. He winded me before I had gone many paces, gave a shrill trumpet
of alarm, and started off for the jungle; the rest of the herd
vanished like magic, while I ran after the bull elephant at my best
speed. He was too quick for me, and I could not gain upon him, so,
halting suddenly, I took a steady shot at his ear with the four-ounce
at about seventy yards. Down he went to the shot, but I heard him roar
as he lay upon ,the ground, and I knew he would be up again in a
moment. In the same instant, as I dropped my empty rifle, a
double-barrelled gun was pushed into my hand, and I ran up to him,
just in time to catch him as he was half risen. Feeling sure of him, I
ran up within two yards of his head and fired into his forehead. To my
amazement he jumped quickly up, and with a loud trumpet he rushed
towards the jungle. I could just keep close alongside him, as the
grass was short and the ground level, and being determined to get him,
I ran close to his shoulder, and, taking a steady shot behind the ear,
I fired my remaining barrel. Judge of my surprise!--it only increased
his speed, and in another moment he reached the jungle: he was gone.
He seemed to bear a charmed life. I had taken two shots within a few
feet of him that I would have staked my life upon. I looked at my gun.
Ye gods! I had been firing SNIPE SHOT at him. It was my rascally
horse-keeper, who had actually handed me the shot-gun, which I had
received as the double-barrelled ball-gun that I knew was carried by a
gun-bearer. How I did thrash him! If the elephant had charged instead
of making off I should have been caught to a certainty.
This day's shooting was the last day of good sport that I ever had
at Minneria. It was in June, 1847. The next morning I moved my
encampment and started homewards. To my surprise I saw a rogue
elephant drinking in the lake, within a quarter of a mile of me; but
the Fates were against his capture. I stalked him as well as I could,
but he winded me, and came on in full charge with his trunk up. The
heavy rifle fortunately turned but did not kill him, and he escaped in
thorny jungle, through which I did not choose to follow.
On my way to the main road from Trincomalee to Kandy I walked on
through the jungle path, about a mile ahead of my followers, to look
out for game. Upon arriving at the open country in the neighbourhood
of Cowdellai, I got a shot at a deer at a killing distance. She was
not twenty yards off, and was looking at me as if spellbound. This
provided me with venison for a couple of days. The rapid decomposition
of all things in a tropical climate renders a continued supply of
animal food very precarious, if the produce of the rifle is alone to
be depended upon. Venison killed on one day would be uneatable on the
day following, unless it were half-dressed shortly after it was
killed; thus the size of the animal in no way contributes to the
continuation of the supply of food, as the meat will not keep. Even
snipe killed on one morning are putrid the next evening; the quantity
of game required for the subsistence of one person is consequently
very large.
After killing the deer I stalked a fine peacock, who gave me an
hour's work before I could get near him. These birds are very wary and
difficult to approach; but I at length got him into a large bush,
surrounded by open ground. A stone thrown into this dislodged him, and
he gave me a splendid flying shot at about thirty yards. I bagged him
with the two-ounce rifle, but the large ball damaged him terribly.
There are few better birds than a Ceylon peafowl, if kept for two days
and then washed in vinegar: they combine the flavour of the turkey and
the pheasant.
I was obliged to carry the bird myself, as my two gun-bearers were
staggering under the weight of the deer, and the spare guns were
carried by my tracker. We were proceeding slowly along, when the
tracker, who was in advance, suddenly sprang back and pointed to some
object in the path. It was certainly enough to startle any man. An
enormous serpent lay coiled in the path. His head was about the size
of a very small cocoa-nut, divided lengthways, and this was raised
about eighteen inches above the coil. His eyes were fixed upon us, and
his forked tongue played in and out of his mouth with a continued
hiss. Aiming at his head, I fired at him with a double-barrelled gun,
within four paces, and blew his head to pieces. He appeared stone
dead; but upon pulling him by the tail, to stretch him out at full
length, he wreathed himself in convulsive coils, and lashing himself
out in full length, he mowed down the high grass in all directions.
This obliged me to stand clear, as his blows were terrific, and the
thickest part of his body was as large as a man's thigh. I at length
thought of an expedient for securing him. Cutting some sharp-pointed
stakes, I waited till he was again quiet, when I suddenly pinned his
tail to the ground with my hunting-knife, and thrusting the pointed
stake into the hole, I drove it deeply into the ground with the butt
end of my rifle. The boa made some objection to this, and again he
commenced his former muscular contortions. I waited till they were
over, and having provided myself with some tough jungle rope (a
species of creeper), I once more approached him, and pinning his
throat to the ground with a stake, I tied the rope through the
incision, and the united exertions of myself and three men hauled him
out perfectly straight. I then drove a stake firmly through his throat
and pinned him out. He was fifteen feet in length, and it required our
united strength to tear off his skin, which shone with a variety of
passing colours. On losing his hide he tore away from the stakes; and
although his head was shivered to atoms, and he had lost three feet of
his length of neck by the ball having cut through this part, which
separated in tearing off the skin, still he lashed out and writhed in
frightful convulsions, which continued until I left him, bearing as my
trophy his scaly hide. These boas will kill deer, and by crushing them
into a sort of sausage they are enabled by degrees to swallow them.
There are many of these reptiles in Ceylon; but they are seldom seen,
as they generally wander forth at night. There are marvellous stories
of their size, and my men assured me that they had seen much larger
than the snake now mentioned; to me he appeared a horrible monster.
I do not know anything so disgusting as a snake. There is an
instinctive feeling that the arch enemy is personified when these
wretches glide by you, and the blood chills with horror. I took the
dried skin of this fellow to England; it measures twelve feet in its
dry state, minus the piece that was broken from his neck, making him
the length before mentioned of fifteen feet.
I have often been astonished that comparatively so few accidents
happen in Ceylon from snake-bites; their immense number and the close
nature of the country making it a dangerous risk to the naked feet of
the natives. I was once lying upon a sofa in a rest-house at
Kandellai, when I saw a snake about four feet long glide in at the
open door, and, as though accustomed to a particular spot for his
lodging, he at once climbed upon another sofa and coiled himself under
the pillow. My brother had only just risen from this sofa, and was
sitting at the table watching the movements of his uninvited
bedfellow. I soon poked him out with a stick, and cut off his head
with a hunting-knife. This snake was of a very poisonous description,
and was evidently accustomed to lodge behind the pillow, upon which
the unwary sleeper might have received a fatal bite. Upon taking
possession of an unfrequented rest-house, the cushions of the sofas
and bedsteads should always be examined, as they are great attractions
to snakes, scorpions, centipedes, and all manner of reptiles.
Capabilities of Ceylon--Deer at Illepecadewe--Sagacity of a Pariah
Dog--Two Deer at One Shot--Deer-stalking--Hambantotte
Country--Kattregam Festival--Sitrawelle--Ruins of Ancient Mahagam--
Wiharewelle--A Night Attack upon Elephants--Shooting by
Moonlight--Yalle River--Another Rogue--A Stroll before Breakfast-- A
Curious Shot--A Good Day's Sport.
There are few countries which present a more lovely appearance than
Ceylon. There is a diversity in the scenery which refreshes the eye;
and although the evergreen appearance might appear monotonous to some
persons, still, were they residents, they would observe that the
colour of the foliage is undergoing a constant change by the varying
tints of the leaves in the different stages of their growth. These
tints are far more lovely than the autumnal shades of England, and
their brilliancy is enhanced by the idea that it is the bursting of
the young leaf into life, the freshness of youth instead of the sere
leaf of a past summer, which, after gilding for a few days the beauty
of the woods, drops from frozen branches and deserts them. Every shade
of colour is seen in the Ceylon forests, as the young leaves are
constantly replacing those which have fallen without being missed. The
deepest crimson, the brightest yellow and green of every shade,
combine to form a beautiful crest to the forest-covered surface of the
island.
There is no doubt, however, that there is too much wood in Ceylon;
it prevents the free circulation of air, and promotes dampness,
malaria, and consequently fevers and dysentery, the latter disease
being the scourge of the colony. The low country is accordingly
decidedly unhealthy.
This vast amount of forest and jungle is a great impediment to the
enjoyment of travelling. The heat in the narrow paths cut through
dense jungles is extreme; and after a journey of seventy or eighty
miles through this style of country the eye scans the wild plains and
mountains with delight. Some districts, however, are perfectly devoid
of trees, and form a succession of undulating downs of short grass.
Other parts, again, although devoid of heavy timber, are covered with
dense thorny jungles, especially the country adjoining the sea-coast,
which is generally of a uniform character round the whole island,
being interspersed with sand plains producing a short grass.
Much has been said by some authors of the "capabilities" of Ceylon;
but however enticing the description of these capabilities may have
been, the proof has been decidedly in opposition to the theory. Few
countries exist with such an immense proportion of bad soil. There are
no minerals except iron, no limestone except dolomite, no other rocks
than quartz and gneiss. The natural pastures are poor; the timber of
the forests is the only natural production of any value, with the
exception of cinnamon. Sugar estates do not answer, and coffee
requires an expensive system of cultivation by frequent manuring. In
fact, the soil is wretched; so bad that the natives, by felling the
forest and burning the timber upon the ground, can only produce one
crop of some poor grain; the land is then exhausted, and upon its
consequent desertion it gives birth to an impenetrable mass of low
jungle, comprising every thorn that can be conceived. This deserted
land, fallen again into the hand of Nature, forms the jungle of
Ceylon; and as native cultivation has thus continued for some thousand
years, the immense tract of country now in this impenetrable state is
easily accounted for. The forests vary in appearance; some are
perfectly free from underwood, being composed of enormous trees, whose
branches effectually exclude the rays of the sun; but they generally
consist of large trees, which tower above a thick, and for the most
part thorny, underwood, difficult to penetrate.
The features of Ceylon scenery may, therefore, be divided as
follows:-
Natural forest, extending over the greater portion. Thorny jungle,
extending over a large portion.
Flat plains and thorny jungles, in the vicinity of the coast.
Open down country, extending over a small portion of the interior.
Open park country, extending over the greater portion of the Veddah
district.
The mountains, forming the centre of the island.
The latter are mostly covered with forest, but they are beautifully
varied by numberless open plains and hills of grass land at an
altitude of from three to nearly nine thousand feet.
If Ceylon were an open country, there would be no large game, as
there would be no shelter from the sun. In the beautiful open down
country throughout the Ouva district there is no game larger than wild
hogs, red-deer, mouse-deer, hares, and partridges. These animals
shelter themselves in the low bushes, which generally consist of the
wild guavas, and occupy the hollows between the undulations of the
hills. The thorny jungles conceal a mass of game of all kinds, but in
this retreat the animals are secure from attack. In the vicinity of
the coast, among the `flat plains and thorny jungles,' there is always
excellent shooting at particular seasons. The spotted deer abound
throughout Ceylon, especially in these parts, where they are often
seen in herds of a hundred together. In many places they are far too
numerous, as, from the want of inhabitants in these parts, there are
no consumers, and these beautiful beasts would be shot to waste.
In the neighbourhood of Paliar and Illepecadewe, on the north-west
coast, I have shot them till I was satiated and it ceased to be sport.
We had nine fine deer hanging up in one day, and they were putrefying
faster than the few inhabitants could preserve them by smoking and
drying them in steaks. I could have shot them in any number, had I
chosen to kill simply for the sake of murder; but I cannot conceive
any person finding an enjoyment in slaying these splendid deer to rot
upon the ground.
I was once shooting at Illepecadewe, which is a lonely, miserable
spot, when I met with a very sagacious and original sportsman in a
most unexpected manner. I was shooting with a friend, and we had
separated for a few hundred paces. I presently got a shot at a
peafowl, and killed her with my rifle. The shot was no sooner fired
than I heard another shot in the jungle, in the direction taken by my
friend. My rifle was still unloaded when a spotted doe bounded out of
the jungle, followed by a white pariah dog in full chase. Who would
have dreamt of meeting with a dog at this distance from a village
(about four miles)? I whistled to the dog, and to my surprise he came
to me, the deer having left him out of sight in a few seconds. He was
a knowing-looking brute, and was evidently out hunting on his own
account. Just at this moment my friend called to me that he had
wounded a buck, and that he had found the blood-track. I picked a
blade of grass from the spot which was tinged with blood; and holding
it to the dog's nose, he eagerly followed me to the track; upon which
I dropped it. He went off in a moment; but, running mute, I was
obliged to follow; and after a chase of a quarter of a mile I lost
sight of him. In following up the foot-track of the wounded deer I
heard the distant barking of the dog, by which I knew that he had
brought the buck to bay, and I was soon at the spot. The buck had
taken up a position in a small glade, and was charging the dog
furiously; but the pariah was too knowing to court the danger, and
kept well out of the way. I shot the buck, and, tying a piece of
jungle-rope to the dog's neck, gave him to a gun-bearer to lead, as I
hoped he might be again useful in hunting up a wounded deer.
I had not proceeded more than half a mile, when we arrived at the
edge of a small sluggish stream, covered in most places with rushes
and water-lilies. We forded this about hip-deep, but the gun-bearer
who had the dog could not prevail upon our mute companion to follow;
he pulled violently back and shrinked, and evinced every symptom of
terror at the approach of water.
I was now at the opposite bank, and nothing would induce him to
come near the river, so I told the gun-bearer to drag him across by
force. This he accordingly did, and the dog swam with frantic
exertions across the river, and managed to disengage his head from the
rope. The moment that he arrived on terra firma he rushed up a steep
bank and looked attentively down into the water beneath.
We now gave him credit for his sagacity in refusing to cross the
dangerous passage. The reeds bowed down to the right and left as a
huge crocodile of about eighteen feet in length moved slowly from his
shallow bed into a deep hole. The dog turned to the right-about, and
went off as fast as his legs would carry him. No calling or whistling
would induce him to return, and I never saw him again. How he knew
that a crocodile was in the stream I cannot imagine. He must have had
a narrow escape at some former time, which was a lesson that he seemed
determined to profit by.
Shortly after the disappearance of the dog, I separated from my
companion and took a different line of country. Large plains, with
thorny jungles and bushes of the long cockspur thorn interspersed,
formed the character of the ground. This place literally swarmed with
peafowl, partridges, and deer. I killed another peacock, and the shot
disturbed a herd of about sixty deer, who bounded over the plain till
out of sight. I tracked up this herd for nearly a mile, when I
observed them behind a large bush; some were lying down and others
were standing. A buck and doe presently quitted the herd, and
advancing a few paces from the bush they halted, and evidently winded
me. I was screening myself behind a small tree, and the open ground
between me and the game precluded the possibility of a nearer
approach. It was a random distance for a deer, but I took a rest
against the stem of the tree and fired at the buck as he stood with
his broadside exposed, being shoulder to shoulder with the doe. Away
went the herd, flying over the plain; but, to my delight, there were
two white bellies struggling upon the ground. I ran up to cut their
throats; (*1 This is necessary to allow the blood to escape, otherwise
they would be unfit for food) the two-ounce ball had passed through
the shoulders of both; and I stepped the distance to the tree from
which I had fired, 'two hundred and thirteen paces.'
Shortly after this 1 got another shot which, by a chance, killed
two deer. I was strolling through a narrow glade with open jungles
upon either side, when I suddenly heard a quick double shot, followed
by the rush of a large herd of deer coming through the jungle. I
immediately lay flat upon the ground, and presently an immense herd of
full a hundred deer passed across the glade at full gallop, within
seventy yards of me. Jumping up, I fired at a doe, and, to my
surprise, two deer fell to the shot, one of which was a fawn; the ball
had passed through the shoulder of the mother, and had broken the
fawn's neck upon the opposite side. I am astonished that this chance
of killing two at one shot does not more often happen when the dense
body of a herd of deer is exposed to a rifle-ball.
Deer-stalking is one of the most exciting sports in the world. I
have often crept upon hands and knees for upwards of a quarter of a
mile through mud and grass to get a shot at a fine antlered buck. It
frequently happens that after a long stalk in this manner, when some
sheltering object is reached which you have determined upon for the
shot, just as you raise your head above the grass in expectation of
seeing the game, you find a blank. He has watched your progress by the
nose, although the danger was hidden from his view, and your trouble
is unrewarded.
In all wild shooting, in every country and climate, the `wind' is
the first consideration. If you hunt down wind you will never get a
deer. You will have occasional glimpses of your game, who will be
gazing intently at you at great distances long before you can see
them, but you will never get a decent shot. The great excitement and
pleasure of all sport consists in a thorough knowledge of the pursuit.
When the dew is heavy upon the ground at break of day, you are
strolling noiselessly along with the rifle, scanning the wide plains
and searching the banks of the pools and streams for foot-marks of the
spotted deer. Upon discovering the tracks their date is immediately
known, the vicinity of the game is surmised, the tracks are followed
up, and the herd is at length discovered. The wind is observed; dry
leaves crumbled into powder and let fall from the hand detect the
direction if the slightest air is stirring, and the approach is made
accordingly. Every stone, every bush or tree or tuft of grass, is
noted as a cover for an advance, and the body being kept in a direct
line with each of these objects, you approach upon hands and knees
from each successive place of shelter till a proper distance is
gained. The stalking is the most exciting sport in the world. I have
frequently heard my own heart beat while creeping up to a deer. He is
an animal of wonderful acuteness, and possessing the keenest scent; he
is always on the alert, watching for danger from his stealthy foe the
leopard, who is a perfect deer-stalker.
To kill spotted deer well, if they are tolerably wild, a person
must be a really good rifle shot, otherwise wise he will wound many,
but seldom bag one. They are wonderfully fast, and their bounding pace
makes them extremely difficult to hit while running. Even when
standing they must be struck either through the head, neck, or
shoulder, or they will rarely be killed on the spot; in any other
part, if wounded, they will escape as though untouched, and die a
miserable death in solitude.
In narrating long shots that I have made, I recount them as bright
moments in the hours of sport; they are the exceptions and not the
rule. I consider a man a first-rate shot who can ALWAYS bag his deer
standing at eighty yards, or running at fifty. HITTING and BAGGING are
widely different. If a man can always bag at the distance that I have
named he will constantly hit, and frequently bag, at extraordinary
ranges, as there is no doubt of his shooting, and, when he misses, the
ball has whizzed somewhere very close to the object; the chances are,
therefore, in favour of the rifle.
The deer differ in character in various parts of Ceylon. In some
places where they are rarely disturbed they can be approached to
within thirty or forty paces, in which case a very moderate shot can
easily kill them; but it is better sport when they are moderately
wild. The greatest number of deer that I ever saw was in the
south-eastern part of Ceylon, in the neighbourhood of Pontane and
Yalle. The whole of this country is almost uninhabited, and
accordingly undisturbed. Yalle is the nearest town of importance, from
which a good road, lined on either side with cocoa-nut and bread-fruit
trees, extends as far as Tangalle, fifty miles. A few miles beyond
this village the wild country begins, and Hambantotte is the next
station, nearly ninety miles from Yalle. The country around
Hambantotte is absolutely frightful-wide extending plains of white
sand and low scrubby bushes scattered here and there; salt lakes of
great extent, and miserable plains of scanty herbage, surrounded by
dense thorny jungles. Notwithstanding this, at some seasons the whole
district is alive with game. January and February are the best months
for elephants and buffaloes, and August and September are the best
seasons for deer, at which time the whole country is burnt up with
drought, and the game is forced to the vicinity of Yalle river and the
neighbouring pools. In the wet season this district is nearly flooded,
and forms a succession of deep marshes, the malaria from which is
extremely unhealthy. At this time the grass is high, and the elephants
are very numerous.
When I was in this part of the country the drought was excessive;
the jungle was parched, and the leaves dropped from the bushes under
the influence of a burning sun. Not a cloud ever appeared upon the
sky, but a dazzling haze of intense heat spread over the scorched
plains. The smaller streams were completely dried up, and the large
rivers were reduced to rivulets in the midst of a bed of sand.
The whole of this country is a succession of flat sandy plains and
low jungles contiguous to the sea-coast. The intense heat and the
glare of the sun rendered the journey most fatiguing. I at length
descried a long line of noble forest in the distance, and this I
conjectured to be near the river, which turned out to be the case; we
were soon relieved from the burning sun by the shade of as splendid a
forest as I have ever seen. A few hundred yards from the spot at which
we had entered, Yalle river rolled along in a clear stream. In the wet
season this is a rapid torrent of about 150 yards in width, but at
this time the bed of the river was dry, with the exception of a stream
of about thirty paces broad, which ran directly beneath the bank we
were descending.
An unexpected scene now presented itself. The wide bed of the river
was shaded on either side by groves of immense trees, whose branches
stretched far over the channel; and not only beneath their shade, but
in every direction, tents formed of talipot leaves were pitched, and a
thousand men, women, and children lay grouped together; some were
bathing in the river, some were sitting round their fires cooking a
scanty meal, others lay asleep upon the sand, but all appeared to be
congregated together for one purpose; and so various were the castes
and costumes that every nation of the East seemed to have sent a
representative. This was the season for the annual offerings to the
Kattregam god, to whose temple these pilgrims were flocking, and they
had made the dry bed of Valle river their temporary halting-place. A
few days after, no less than 18,000 pilgrims congregated at Kattregam.
I was at this time shooting with my friend, Mr. H. Walters, then of
the 15th Regiment. We waded up the bed of the river for about a mile,
and then pitched the tent under some fine trees in the open forest.
Several wild buffaloes were drinking in the river within a short
distance of us; but thinking this a likely spot for elephants, we
determined not to disturb the neighbourhood by firing a shot until we
had first explored the country. After a walk of a couple of hours
through fine open forest and small bushy plains, we came to the
conclusion that there were very few elephants in the country, and we
devoted ourselves to other game.
After a day or two spent in killing deer, a few wild buffaloes, and
only one elephant, I felt convinced that we should never find the
latter, in the dry state of the country, unless by watching at some
tank at night. We therefore moved our encampment inland about
twenty-five miles from Yalle. Here there is a large tank, which I
concluded would be the resort of elephants.
A long day's journey through a burning sun brought us to
Sitrawelle. This is a small village, about six miles inward from the
sea-coast village of Kesinde. Here the natives brought us plantains
and buffalo milk, while we took shelter from the sun under a splendid
tamarind tree. Opposite to this was a 'bo'-tree; *(very similar to the
banian-tree) this grew to an extraordinary size; the wide spreading
branches covered about half an acre of ground, and the trunk measured
upwards of forty feet in circumference. The tamarind-tree was nearly
the same size; and I never saw together two such magnificent specimens
of vegetation. A few paces from this spot, a lake of about four miles'
circuit lay in the centre of a plain; this was surrounded by open
forests and jungles, all of which looked like good covers for game.
Skirting the opposite banks of the lake, we pitched the tent under
some shady trees upon a fine level sward. By this time it was nearly
dusk, and I had barely time to stroll out and kill a peacock for
dinner before night set in.
The next morning, having been joined by my friend, Mr. P.
Braybrook, then government agent of this district, our party was
increased to three, and seeing no traces of elephants in this
neighbourhood, we determined to proceed to a place called
Wihare-welle, about six miles farther inland.
Our route now lay along a broad causeway of solid masonry. On
either side of this road, stone pillars of about twelve feet in height
stood in broken, rows, and lay scattered in every direction through
the jungle. Ruined dagobas and temples jutted their rugged summits
above the tree-tops, and many lines of stone columns stood in parallel
rows, the ancient supports of buildings of a similar character to
those of Pollanarua and Anarajahpoora. We were among the ruins of
ancient Mahagam. One of the ruined buildings had apparently rested
upon seventy-two pillars. These were still erect, standing in six
lines of twelve columns; every stone appeared to be about fourteen
feet high by two feet square and twenty-five feet apart. This building
must therefore have formed an oblong of 300 feet by 150. Many of the
granite blocks were covered with rough carving; large flights of
steps, now irregular from the inequality of the ground, were scattered
here and there; and the general appearance of the ruins was similar to
that of Pollanarua, but of smaller extent. The stone causeway which
passed through the ruins was about two miles in length, being for the
most part overgrown with low jungle and prickly cactus. I traversed
the jungle for some distance until arrested by the impervious nature
of the bushes; but wherever I went, the ground was stewed with squared
stones and fallen brickwork overgrown with rank vegetation.
The records of Ceylon do not afford any satisfactory information
concerning the original foundation of this city. The first time that
we hear of it is in the year 286 B.C.; but we have no account of the
era or cause of its desertion. Although Mahagam is the only vestige of
an ancient city in this district, there are many ruined buildings and
isolated dagobas of great antiquity scattered throughout the country.
I observed on a peak of one of the Kattregam hills large masses of
fallen brickwork, the ruins of some former buildings, probably coeval
with Mahagam. The whole of this district, now so wild and desolate,
must in those days have been thickly populated and highly cultivated,
although, from the present appearance of the country, it does not seem
possible that it has ever altered its aspect since the Creation.
Descending a steep bank shaded by large trees, we crossed the bed
of the Manick Ganga (`Jewel River'). The sand was composed of a
mixture of mica, quartz, sapphire, ruby, and jacinth, but the large
proportion of ruby sand was so extraordinary that it seemed to rival
Sindbad the Sailor's vale of gems. The whole of this was valueless,
but the appearance of the sand was very inviting, as the shallow
stream in rippling over it magnified the tiny gems into stones of some
magnitude. I passed an hour in vainly searching for a ruby worth
collecting, but the largest did not exceed the size of mustard seed.
The natives use this sand for cutting elephants' teeth, in the same
manner that a stonemason uses sand to assist him in sawing through a
stone. Elephants' teeth or grinders are so hard that they will produce
sparks upon being struck with a hatchet.
About two miles from the opposite bank of the river, having
journeyed through a narrow path bordered upon either side by thick
jungle, we opened upon an extensive plain close to the village of
Wihare-welle. This plain was covered with wild indigo, and abounded
with peafowl. Passing through the small village at the extremity of
the plain, we pitched the tent upon the borders of the lake, about a
quarter of a mile beyond it. This tank was about three miles in
circumference, and, like that of Sitrawelle, was one of the ancient
works of the Mahagam princes.
The village was almost deserted; none but the old men and women and
children remained, as the able-bodied men had gone to the Kattregam
festival. We could, therefore, obtain no satisfactory information
regarding elephants; but I was convinced, from the high grass around
the lake, that if any elephants were in the district some would be
here. It was late in the evening, the coolies were heaping up the
night-fires, and as darkness closed upon us, the savoury steam of a
peacock that was roasting on a stick betokened the welcome approach of
dinner. We had already commenced, when the roaring of elephants within
a short distance of the tent gave us hope of sport on the following
day.
At daybreak the next morning I strolled round the lake to look for
tracks. A herd of about seven had been feeding during the night within
half a mile of the tent. During my walk I saw innumerable pea-fowl,
jungle-fowl, hares and ducks, in addition to several herds of deer;
but not wishing to disturb the country, I did not fire, but returned
to the tent and sent out trackers.
In the afternoon the natives returned with intelligence of a small
pool two miles from the opposite shore of the lake, situated in dense
jungle; here they had seen fresh elephant tracks, and they proposed
that we should watch the pool that evening at the usual drinking hour
of the game. As this was the only pool of water for miles round with
the exception of the lake, I thought the plan likely to succeed, and
we therefore started without loss of time.
On arrival at the pool we took a short survey of our quarters. A
small round sheet of water of perhaps eighty yards in diameter lay in
the midst of a dense jungle. Several large trees were growing close to
the edge, and around these lay numerous rocks of about four feet high,
forming a capital place for concealment. Covering the tops of the
rocks with boughs to conceal our heads, we lay quietly behind them in
expectation of the approaching game.
The sun sank, and the moon rose in great beauty, throwing a silvery
light upon the surface of the water chequered by the dark shadows of
the surrounding trees. Suddenly the hoarse bark of an elk sounded
within a short distance, and I could distinguish two or three dark
forms on the opposite bank. The shrill and continual barking of
spotted deer now approaching nearer and nearer, the rustling in the
jungle, and the splashing in the water announced continual arrivals of
game to the lonely drinking-place. Notwithstanding the immense
quantity of animals that were congregated together, we could not
distinguish them plainly on account of the dark background of jungle.
Elk, deer, buffaloes, and hogs were all bathing and drinking in
immense numbers, but there were no elephants.
For some hours we watched the accumulation of game; there was not a
breath of air, although the scud was flying fast above us,
occasionally throwing a veil over the moon and casting a sudden
obscurity on the dim scene before us. Our gun-bearers were crouched
around us; their dark skins matching with the ground on which they
squatted, they looked like so many stumps of trees. It was nearly ten
o'clock, and my eyes ached with watching; several times I found myself
nodding as sleep took me by surprise; so, leaving a man to look out,
we sat quietly down and discussed a cold fowl that we had brought with
us.
We had just finished a pint bottle of cherry brandy when I felt a
gentle touch upon my shoulder, and our look-out man whispered in my
ear the magic word 'alia' (elephant), at the same time pointing in the
direction of the tank. The guns were all wrapped up in a blanket to
keep them from the dew, so telling W. to uncover them and to
distribute them to the respective gun-bearers without noise, I crept
out and stole unperceived along the margin of the tank to discover the
number and position of the elephants. So deceitful was the moonlight,
being interrupted by the dark shadows of the jungle, that I was within
ten paces of the nearest elephant before I distinguished her. I
counted three--one large and two others about six feet high. Being
satisfied with my information, and having ascertained that no others
were in the jungle, I returned to my companions; they were all ready,
and we crept forward. We were within ten paces of the large elephant,
when a branch of hooked thorn caught W. by the clothes; the noise that
he made in extricating himself immediately attracted the attention of
the elephant, and she turned quickly round, receiving at the same
moment an ineffectual shot from W.; B. at the same time fired without
effect at one of the small elephants. The mother, hearing a roar from
the small elephant that B. had wounded, immediately rushed up to it,
and they stood side by side in the water about fifteen yards from the
bank. The large elephant now cocked her ears and turned her head from
side to side with great quickness to discover an enemy. I ran close to
the water's edge, and the mother perceiving me immediately came
forward. I could hardly distinguish the sights of my rifle, and I was,
therefore, obliged to wait till she was within four or five paces
before I fired. She gave me a good shot, and dropped dead. The young
one was rushing about and roaring in a tremendous manner, having again
been fired at and wounded by B. and W. By this time I had got a spare
gun, and, wading into the tank, I soon came to such close quarters
that I could not miss, and one shot killed him. The other small
elephant escaped unseen in the confusion caused by the firing.
The following evening we again watched the pool, and once more a
mother and her young one came to drink. W. and B. extinguished the
young one while I killed the mother.
This watching by moonlight is a kind of sport that I do not admire;
it is a sort of midnight murder, and many a poor brute who comes to
the silent pool to cool his parched tongue, finds only a cup of
bitterness, and retires again to his jungle haunts to die a lingering
death from some unskilful wound. The best shot must frequently miss by
moonlight; there is a silvery glare which renders all objects
indistinct, and the shot very doubtful; thus two animals out of three
fired at will generally escape wounded.
I was tired of watching by night, and I again returned to the
neighbourhood of Yalle. After a long ride through a burning sun, I
went down to the river to bathe. The water was not more than three
feet deep, and was so clear that every pebble was plainly
distinguishable at the bottom.
I had waded hip-deep into the river when my servant, who was on the
bank, suddenly cried out, 'Sar! sar! come back, sar! Mora! mora!' and
he pointed to some object a little higher up the stream. It was now
within ten or twelve yards of me, and I fancied that it was a piece of
drift timber, but I lost no time in reaching the shore. Slowly the
object sailed along with the stream, but as it neared me, to my
astonishment, a large black fin protruded from the water, and the
mystery was at once cleared up. It was a large SHARK about nine feet
long.
In some places the water was so shallow that his tail and a portion
of his back were now and then above the surface. He was in search of
grey mullet, with which fish the river abounded; and at this season
sharks were very numerous, as they followed the shoals for some
distance up the river. My servant had been in a great state of alarm,
as he thought his master would have been devoured in a few seconds;
but the natives of the village quietly told me not to be afraid, but
to bathe in peace, 'as sharks would not eat men at this season.' I was
not disposed to put his epicurean scruples to the test; as some
persons may kill a pheasant before the first of October, so he might
have made a grab at me a little before the season, which would have
been equally disagreeable to my feelings. The novelty of a white skin
in that clear river might have proved too strong a temptation for a
shark to withstand.
I never saw game in such masses as had now collected in this
neighbourhood. The heat was intense, and the noble forest in the
vicinity of Yalle river offered an asylum to all animals beneath its
shade, where good water and fine grass upon the river's bank supplied
their wants. In this forest there was little or no underwood; the
trees grew to an immense size and stood far apart, so that a clear
range might be obtained for a hundred yards. It was, therefore, a
perfect spot for deer-stalking; the tops of trees formed an impervious
screen to the sun's rays; and I passed several days in wandering with
my rifle through these shady solitudes, killing an immense quantity of
game. The deer were in such masses that I restricted myself to bucks,
and I at length became completely satiated. There was too much game;
during the whole day's walk I was certainly not FIVE MINUTES without
seeing either deer, elk, buffaloes, or hogs. The noise of the rifle
did not appear to scare them from the forest; they would simply
retreat for a time to some other portion of it, and fresh herds were
met with in following up one which had been disturbed. Still, there
were no elephants. Although I had upwards of fifty coolies and
servants, they could not dry the venison sufficiently fast to prevent
the deer from stinking as they were killed, and I resolved to leave
the country.
I gave orders for everything to be packed up in readiness for a
start, after an early breakfast, on the following morning. The
servants were engaged in arranging for the departure, when a native
brought intelligence of a rogue elephant within four miles of the
tent. It was late in the afternoon, but I had not seen an elephant for
so long that I was determined to make his acquaintance. My friend B.
accompanied me, and we immediately started on horseback.
Our route lay across very extensive plains, interspersed with low
thorny bushes and wide salt lakes. Innumerable wild hogs invited us to
a chase. There could not be a better spot for boar-spearing, as the
ground is level and clear for riding. There were numerous herds of
deer and buffaloes, but we did not fire a shot, as we had determined
upon an interview with the rogue. We traversed about four miles of
this style of country, and were crossing a small plain, when our guide
suddenly stopped and pointed to the elephant, who was about a quarter
of a mile distant. He was standing on a little glade of about fifty
yards across; this was surrounded upon all sides but one with dense
thorny jungle, and he therefore stood in a small bay of open ground.
It was a difficult position for an attack. The wind blew directly from
us to him, therefore an advance in that direction was out of the
question; on the other hand, if we made a circuit so as to get the
wind, we should have to penetrate through the thorny jungle to arrive
at him, and we should then have the five o'clock sun directly in our
eyes. However, there was no alternative, and, after a little
consultation, the latter plan was resolved upon.
Dismounting, we ordered the horse-keepers to conceal the horses and
themselves behind a thick bush, lest the elephant should observe them,
and with this precaution we advanced, making a circuit of nearly a
mile to obtain the wind. On arrival at the belt of thick jungle which
divided us from the small glade upon which he stood, I perceived, as I
had expected, that the sun was full in our eyes. This was a
disadvantage which I felt convinced would lose us the elephant, unless
some extraordinary chance intervened; however, we entered the thick
jungle before us, and cautiously pushed our way through it. This belt
was not more than fifty yards in width, and we soon broke upon the
small glade.
The elephant was standing with his back towards us, at about forty
paces distant, close to the thick jungle by his side; and, taking my
four-ounce rifle, I walked quietly but quickly towards him. Without a
moment's warning he flung his trunk straight up, and, turning sharp
round, he at once charged into us. The sun shone full in my eyes, so
that I could do nothing but fire somewhere at his head. He fell, but
immediately recovered himself, and before the smoke had cleared away
he was in full retreat through the thorny jungle, the heavy ball
having taken all the pluck out of him. This was just as I had
expected; pursuit in such a jungle was impossible, and I was perfectly
contented with having turned him.
The next morning, having made all arrangements for starting
homewards, after breakfast I took my rifle and one gun-bearer with a
double-barrelled gun to enjoy one last stroll in the forest. It was
just break of day. My first course was towards the river which flowed
through it, as I expected to find the game near the water, an hour
before sunrise being their time for drinking. I had not proceeded far
before immense herds of deer offered tempting shots; but I was out
simply in search of large antlers, and none appearing of sufficient
size, I would not fire. Buffaloes continually presented themselves: I
was tired of shooting these brutes, but I killed two who looked rather
vicious; and I amused myself with remarking the immense quantity of
game, and imagining the number of heads that I could bag had I chosen
to indulge in indiscriminate slaughter. At length I noticed a splendid
buck lying on the sandy bed of the river, beneath a large tree; his
antlers were beautiful, and I stalked him to within sixty yards and
shot him. I had not been reloaded ten minutes, and was walking quietly
through the forest, when I saw a fine antlered buck standing within
thirty yards of me in a small patch of underwood. His head was turned
towards me, and his nostrils were distended in alarm as he prepared to
bound off. I had just time to cock my rifle as he dashed off at full
speed; but it was a murderous distance, and he fell dead. His antlers
matched exactly with those I had last shot.
I turned towards the direction of the tent, and, descending to the
bed of the river, I followed the course of the stream upon the margin
of dry sand. I had proceeded about half a mile, when I noticed at
about 150 paces some object moving about the trunk of a large fallen
tree which lay across the bed of the river. This stem was about five
feet in diameter, and I presently distinguished the antlers and then
the head of a large buck, as they appeared above it; he had been
drinking in the stream on the opposite side, and he now raised his
head, sniffing the fresh breeze. It was a tempting shot, and taking a
very steady aim I fired. For a moment he was down, but recovering
himself he bounded up the bank, and was soon in full speed through the
forest with only one antler upon his head. I picked up the
fellow-antler, which the rifle-ball had cut off within an inch of his
skull. This was a narrow escape.
I did not reload my rifle, as I was not far from the tent, and I
was tired of shooting. Giving my rifle to the gun-bearer, I took the
double-barrelled gun which he carried, and walked quickly towards
breakfast. Suddenly I heard a crash in a small nook of thick bushes,
like the rush of an elephant, and the next instant a buck came rushing
by in full speed; his long antlers lay upon his back as he flew
through the tangled saplings with a force that seemed to defy
resistance. He was the largest spotted buck that I ever saw, and,
being within thirty paces, I took a flying shot with the right-hand
barrel. He faltered for a moment, and I immediately fired the
remaining barrel. Still he continued his course, but at a reduced
speed and dead lame. Loading the rifle, I soon got upon the
blood-track, and I determined to hunt him down.
There were many saplings in this part of the forest, and I noticed
that many of them in the deer's track were besmeared with blood about
two feet and a half from the ground. The tracks in the sandy soil were
uneven--one of the fore-feet showed a deep impression, while the other
was very faint, showing that he was wounded in the leg, as his whole
weight was thrown upon one foot. Slowly and cautiously I stalked along
the track, occasionally lying down to look under the bushes. For about
an hour I continued this slow and silent chase; the tracks became
fainter, and the bleeding appeared to have almost ceased; so few and
far between were the red drops upon the ground, that I was constantly
obliged to leave the gun-bearer upon the last trace, while I made a
cast to discover the next track. I was at length in despair of finding
him, and I was attentively scrutinising the ground for a trace of
blood, which would distinguish his track from those of other deer with
which the ground was covered, when I suddenly heard a rush in the
underwood, and away bounded the buck at about fifty yards' distance,
apparently as fresh as ever. The next instant he was gasping on the
ground, the rifle-ball having passed exactly through his heart. I
never could have believed that a spotted buck would have attained so
large a size; he was as large as a doe elk, and his antlers were the
finest I have ever seen of that species. It required eight men with
two cross poles to bring him home.
I reached the tent to breakfast at eight o'clock, having bagged
three fine bucks and two buffaloes that morning; and being, for the
time, satiated with sport, I quitted Ceylon.
Beat-hounds for Elk-hunting--Smut--Killbuck--The Horton Plains--A
Second Soyer--The Find--The Buck at Bay--The Bay--The Death--Return of
Lost Dogs--Comparative Speed of Deer--Veddah Ripped by a Boar--A
Melee--Buck at Black Pool--Old Smut's Ruse--Margosse Oil.
The foregoing description of sporting incidents closed my first
visit to Ceylon. I had arrived in the island to make a tour of the
country and to enjoy its sports; this I had accomplished by a
residence of twelve months, the whole of which had been occupied in
wandering from place to place. I now returned to England; but the
Fates had traced ANOTHER road for me, and after a short stay in the
old country I again started for Ceylon, and became a resident at
Newera Ellia.
Making use of the experience that I had gained in wild sports, I
came out well armed, according to my own ideas of weapons for the
chase. I had ordered four double-barrelled rifles of No. 10 bore to be
made to my own pattern; my hunting-knives and boarspear heads I had
made to my own design by Paget of Piccadilly, who turned out the
perfection of steel; and I arrived in Ceylon with a pack of fine
foxhounds and a favourite greyhound of wonderful speed and strength,
'Bran,' who, though full of years, is still alive.
The usual drawbacks and discomforts attendant upon a new settlement
having been overcome, Newera Ellia forms a delightful place of
residence. I soon discovered that a pack of thoroughbred foxhounds
were not adapted to a country so enclosed by forest; some of the
hounds were lost, others I parted with, but they are all long since
dead, and their progeny, the offspring of crosses with pointers,
bloodhounds and half-bred foxhounds, have turned out the right stamp
for elk-hunting.
It is a difficult thing to form a pack for this sport which shall
be perfect in all respects. Sometimes a splendid hound in character
may be more like a butcher's dog than a hound in appearance, but the
pack cannot afford to part with him if he is really good.
The casualties from leopards, boars, elk and lost dogs are so great
that the pack is with difficulty kept up by breeding. It must be
remembered that the place of a lost dog cannot be easily supplied in
Ceylon. Newera Ellia is one of the rare climates in Ceylon which is
suited to the constitution of a dog. In the low and hot climates they
lead a short and miserable life, which is soon ended by a liver
complaint; thus if a supply for the pack cannot be kept up by
breeding, hounds must be procured from England at a great expense and
risk.
The pack now in the kennel is as near perfection as can be attained
for elk-hunting, comprising ten couple, most of whom are nearly
thoroughbred fox-hounds, with a few couple of immense seizers, a cross
between bloodhound and greyhound, and a couple of large wire-haired
lurchers, like the Scotch deer-hound.
In describing the sport, I must be permitted to call up the spirits
of a few heroes, who are now dead, and place them in the vacant places
which they formerly occupied in the pack.
The first who answers to the magic call is `Smut,' hero of at least
400 deaths of elk and boar. He appears the same well-remembered form
of strength, the sullen growl which greeted even his master, the
numerous scars and seams upon his body; behold old Smut! His sire was
a Manilla blood-hound, which accounted for the extreme ferocity of the
son. His courage was indomitable. He was a large dog, but not high,
considering his great length, but his limbs were immense in
proportion. His height at the shoulder was 26 1/2 inches; his girth of
brisket 34 inches. In his younger days he always opened upon a scent,
and the rocky mountains and deep valleys have often echoed back his
deep notes which have now, like himself, passed away. As he grew older
he became cunning, and he ran entirely mute, knowing well that the
more noise the elk heard behind him the faster he would run. I have
frequently known him to be out by himself all night, and return the
next morning blown out with food which he had procured for himself by
pulling down a doe single-handed. When he was a young dog, and gave
tongue upon a scent, a challenge was offered, but never accepted, that
the dog should find, hunt, and pull down two buck elk, single-handed,
within a fortnight, assisted only by his master, with no other weapon
than a hunting-knife; there is no doubt whatever that he would have
performed it easily. He then belonged to Lieutenant Pardoe, of the
15th Regiment.
He had several pitched battles with leopards, from which he has
returned frightfully torn, but with his yellow hair bristled up, his
head and stern erect; and his deep growl, with which he gave a dubious
reception to both man and beast, was on these occasions doubly
threatening.
I never knew a dog that combined superlative valour with discretion
in the degree exhibited by Smut. I have seen many dogs who would rush
heedlessly upon a boar's tusks to certain destruction; but Smut would
never seize until the proper time arrived, and when the opportunity
offered he never lost it. This rendered him of great value in these
wild sports, where the dog and his master are mutually dependent upon
each other. There was nothing to fear if Smut was there; whether boar
or buck you might advance fearlessly to him with the knife, with the
confidence that the dog would pin the animal the instant that it
turned to attack you; and when he once obtained his hold he was seldom
shaken off until in his old age, when he lost his teeth. Even then he
was always one of the first to seize. Although comparatively useless,
the spirit was ever willing; and this courage, poor fellow, at length
caused his death.
The next dog who claims a tribute to his memory is `Killbuck.' He
was an Australian greyhound of the most extraordinary courage. He
stood at the shoulder 28 inches high; girth of brisket, 31 inches.
Instead of the surly and ferocious disposition of Smut, he was the
most gentle and affectionate creature. It was a splendid sight to
witness the bounding spring of Killbuck as he pinned an elk at bay
that no other dog could touch. He had a peculiar knack of seizing that
I never saw equalled; no matter where or in what position an elk might
be, he was sure to have him. When once started from the slips it was
certain death to the animal he coursed, and even when out of view, and
the elk had taken to the jungle, I have seen the dog, with his nose to
the ground, following upon the scent at full speed like a foxhound. I
never heard him bark at game when at bay. With a bulldog courage he
would recklessly fly straight at the animal's head, unheeding the
wounds received in the struggle. This unguided courage at length
caused his death when in the very prime of his life. Poor Killbuck!
His was a short but glorious career, and his name will never be
forgotten.
Next in rotation in the chronicles of seizers appears `Lena,' who
is still alive, an Australian bitch of great size, courage, and
beauty, wire-haired, like a Scotch deerhound.
`Bran,' a perfect model of a greyhound.
`Lucifer,' combining the beauty, speed, and courage of his parents,
`Bran' and ` Lena,' in a superlative degree.
There are many others that I could call from the pack and introduce
as first-rate hounds, but as no jealousy will be occasioned by their
omission, I shall be contented with those already named.
Were I to recount the twentieth part of the scenes that I have
witnessed in this sport, it would fill a volume, and become very
tedious. A few instances related will at once explain the whole
character of the sport, and introduce a stranger to the wild hunts of
the Ceylon mountains.
I have already described Newera Ellia, with its alternate plains
and forests, its rapid streams and cataracts, its mountains, valleys,
and precipices; but a portion of this country, called the Horton
Plains, will need a further description.
Some years ago I hunted with a brother Nimrod, Lieutenant de
Montenach, of the 15th Regiment, in this country; and in two months we
killed forty-three elk.
The Horton Plains are about twenty miles from Newera Ellia. After a
walk of sixteen miles through alternate plains and forests, the steep
ascent of Totapella mountain is commenced by a rugged path through
jungle the whole way. So steep is the track that a horse ascends with
difficulty, and riding is of course impossible. After a mile and a
quarter of almost perpendicular scrambling, the summit of the pass is
reached, commanding a splendid view of the surrounding country, and
Newera Ellia can be seen far beneath in the distance. Two miles
farther on, after a walk through undulating forest, the Horton Plains
burst suddenly upon the view as you emerge from the jungle path. These
plains are nearly 800 feet higher than Newera Ellia, or 7,000 feet
above the sea. The whole aspect of the country appears at once to have
assumed a new character; there is a feeling of being on the top of
everything, and instead of a valley among surrounding hills, which is
the feature of Newera Ellia and the adjacent plains, a beautiful
expanse of flat table-land stretches before the eye, bounded by a few
insignificant hill-tops. There is a peculiar freedom in the Horton
Plains, an absence from everywhere, a wildness in the thought that
there is no tame animal within many miles, not a village, nor hut, nor
human being. It makes a man feel in reality one of the 'lords of the
creation' when he first stands upon this elevated plain, and,
breathing the pure thin air, he takes a survey of his hunting-ground:
no boundaries but mountain tops and the horizon; no fences but the
trunks of decayed trees fallen from old age; no game laws but strong
legs, good wind, and the hunting-knife; no paths but those trodden by
the elk and elephant. Every nook and corner of this wild country is as
familiar to me as my own garden. There is not a valley that has not
seen a burst in full cry; not a plain that has not seen the greyhounds
in full speed after an elk; and not a deep pool in the river that has
not echoed with a bay that has made the rocks ring again.
To give a person an interest in the sport, the country must be
described minutely. The plain already mentioned as the flat table-land
first seen on arrival, is about five miles in length, and two in
breadth in the widest part. This is tolerably level, with a few gentle
undulations, and is surrounded, on all sides but one, with low,
forest-covered slopes. The low portions of the plains are swamps, from
which springs a large river, the source of the Mahawelli Ganga.
From the plain now described about fifteen others diverge, each
springing from the parent plain, and increasing in extent as they
proceed; these are connected more or less by narrow valleys, and deep
ravines. Through the greater portion of these plains, the river winds
its wild course. In the first a mere brook, it rapidly increases as it
traverses the lower portions of every valley, until it attains a width
of twenty or thirty yards, within a mile of the spot where it is first
discernible as a stream. Every plain in succession being lower than
the first, the course of the river is extremely irregular; now a maze
of tortuous winding, then a broad, still stream, bounded by grassy
undulations; now rushing wildly through a hundred channels formed by
obtruding rocks, then in a still, deep pool, gathering itself together
for a mad leap over a yawning precipice, and roaring at a hundred feet
beneath, it settles in the lower plain in a pool of unknown depth; and
once more it murmurs through another valley.
In the large pools formed by the sudden turns in the river, the elk
generally takes his last determined stand, and he sometimes keeps dogs
and men at bay for a couple of hours. These pools are generally about
sixty yards across, very deep in some parts, with a large shallow
sandbank in the centre, formed by the eddy of the river.
We built a hunting bivouac in a snug corner of the plains, which
gloried in the name of 'Elk Lodge.' This famous hermitage was a
substantial building, and afforded excellent accommodation: a verandah
in the front, twenty-eight feet by eight; a dining-room twenty feet by
twelve, with a fireplace eight feet wide; and two bed-rooms of twenty
feet by eight. Deer-hides were pegged down to form a carpet upon the
floors, and the walls were neatly covered with talipot leaves. The
outhouses consisted of the kennel, stables for three horses, kitchen,
and sheds for twenty coolies and servants.
The fireplace was a rough piece of art, upon which we prided
ourselves extremely. A party of eight persons could have sat before it
with comfort. Many a roaring fire has blazed up that rude chimney; and
dinner being over, the little round table before the hearth has
steamed forth a fragrant attraction, when the nightly bowl of mulled
port has taken its accustomed stand. I have spent many happy hours in
this said spot; the evenings were of a decidedly social character. The
day's hunting over, it was a delightful hour at about seven
P.M.--dinner just concluded, the chairs brought before the fire,
cigars and the said mulled port. Eight o'clock was the hour for bed,
and five in the morning to rise, at which time a cup of hot tea, and a
slice of toast and anchovy paste were always ready before the start.
The great man of our establishment was the cook.
This knight of the gridiron was a famous fellow, and could perform
wonders; of stoical countenance, he was never seen to smile. His whole
thoughts were concentrated in the mysteries of gravies, and the magic
transformation of one animal into another by the art of cookery; in
this he excelled to a marvellous degree. The farce of ordering dinner
was always absurd. It was something in this style: 'Cook!' (Cook
answers) 'Coming, sar!' (enter cook): ' Now, cook, you make a good
dinner; do you hear?' Cook: `Yes, sar; master tell, I make.'--`Well,
mulligatawny soup.' 'Yes, sar.'--'Calves' head with tongue and brain
sauce.' 'Yes, sar.'--' Gravy omelette.' 'Yes, sar.'--'Mutton chops.'
'Yes, sar.'--'Fowl cotelets.' `Yes, sar.'--'Beefsteaks.' 'Yes,
sar.'--'Marrow- bones.' 'Yes, sar.'--'Rissoles.' 'Yes, sar.' All these
various dishes he literally imitated uncommonly well, the different
portions of an elk being their only foundation.
The kennel bench was comfortably littered, and the pack took
possession of their new abode with the usual amount of growling and
quarrelling for places; the angry grumbling continuing throughout the
night between the three champions of the kennel--Smut, Bran, and
Killbuck. After a night much disturbed by this constant quarrelling,
we unkennelled the hounds just as the first grey streak of dawn spread
above Totapella Peak.
The mist was hanging heavily on the lower parts of the plain like a
thick snowbank, although the sky was beautifully clear above, in which
a few pale stars still glimmered. Long lines of fog were slowly
drifting along the bottoms of the valleys, dispelled by a light
breeze, and day fast advancing bid fair for sport; a heavy dew lay
upon the grass, and we stood for some moments in uncertainty as to the
first point of our extensive hunting-grounds that we should beat.
There were fresh tracks of elk close to our 'lodge,' who had been
surveying our new settlement during the night. Crossing the river by
wading waist-deep, we skirted along the banks, winding through a
narrow valley with grassy hills capped with forest upon either side.
Our object in doing this was to seek for marks where the elk had come
down to drink during the night, as we knew that the tracks would then
lead to the jungle upon either side the river. We had strolled quietly
along for about half a mile, when the loud bark of an elk was suddenly
heard in the jungle upon the opposite hills. In a moment the hounds
dashed across the river towards the well-known sound, and entered the
jungle at full speed. Judging the direction which the elk would most
probably take when found, I ran along the bank of the river, down
stream, for a quarter of a mile, towards a jungle through which the
river flowed previous to its descent into the lower plains, and I
waited, upon a steep grassy hill, about a hundred feet above the
river's bed. From this spot I had a fine view of the ground.
Immediately before me, rose the hill from which the elk had barked;
beneath my feet, the river stretched into a wide pool on its entrance
to the jungle. This jungle clothed the precipitous cliffs of a deep
ravine, down which the river fell in two cataracts; these were
concealed from view by the forest. I waited in breathless expectation
of 'the find.' A few minutes passed, when the sudden burst of the pack
in full cry came sweeping down upon the light breeze; loudly the
cheering sound swelled as they topped the hill, and again it died away
as they crossed some deep ravine. In a few minutes the cry became very
distant; as the elk was evidently making straight up the hills; once
or twice I feared he would cross them, and make away for a different
part of the country. The cry of the pack was so indistinct that my ear
could barely catch it, when suddenly a gust of wind from that
direction brought down a chorus of voices that there was no mistaking:
louder and louder the music became; the elk had turned, and was coming
down the hill-side at a slapping pace. The jungle crashed as he came
rushing through the yielding branches. Out he came, breaking cover in
fine style, and away he dashed over the open country. He was a noble
buck, and had got a long start; not a single hound had yet appeared,
but I heard them coming through the jungle in full cry. Down the side
of the hill he came straight to the pool beneath my feet. Yoick to
him! Hark forward to him! and I gave a view halloa till my lungs had
well-nigh cracked. I had lost sight of him, as he had taken to water
in the pool within the jungle.
One more halloa! and out came the gallant old fellow Smut from the
jungle, on the exact line that the elk had taken. On he came, bounding
along the rough side of the hill like a lion, followed by only two
dogs--Dan, a pointer (since killed by a leopard), and Cato, a young
dog who had never yet seen an elk. The remainder of the pack had taken
after a doe that had crossed the scent, and they were now running in a
different direction. I now imagined that the elk had gone down the
ravine to the lower plains by some run that might exist along the edge
of the cliff, and accordingly I started off along a deer-path through
the jungle, to arrive at the lower plains by the shortest road that I
could make.
Hardly had I run a hundred yards, when I heard the ringing of the
bay and the deep voice of Smut, mingled with the roar of the
waterfall, to which I had been running parallel. Instantly changing my
course, I was in a few moments on the bank of the river just above the
fall. There stood the buck at bay in a large pool about three feet
deep, where the dogs could only advance by swimming. Upon my jumping
into the pool, he broke his bay, and, dashing through the dogs, he
appeared to leap over the verge of the cataract, but in reality he
took to a deer-path which skirted the steep side of the wooded
precipice. So steep was the inclination that I could only follow on
his track by clinging to the stems of the trees. The roar of the
waterfall, now only a few feet on my right hand, completely
overpowered the voices of the dogs wherever they might be, and I
carefully commenced a perilous descent by the side of the fall,
knowing that both dogs and elk must be somewhere before me. So
stunning was the roar of the water, that a cannon might have been
fired without my hearing it. I was now one-third of the way down the
fall, which was about fifty feet deep. A large flat rock projected
from the side of the cliff, forming a platform of about six feet
square, over one corner of which, the water struck, and again bounded
downwards. This platform could only be reached by a narrow ledge of
rock, beneath which, at a depth of thirty feet, the water boiled at
the foot of the fall. Upon this platform stood the buck, having gained
his secure but frightful position by passing along the narrow ledge of
rock. Should either dog or man attempt to advance, one charge from the
buck would send them to perdition, as they would fall into the abyss
below. This the dogs were fully aware of, and they accordingly kept up
a continual bay from the edge of the cliff, while I attempted to
dislodge him by throwing stones and sticks upon him from above.
Finding this uncomfortable, he made a sudden dash forward, and,
striking the dogs over, away he went down the steep sides of the
ravine, followed once more by the dogs and myself.
By clinging from tree to tree, and lowering myself by the tangled
creepers, I was soon at the foot of the first fall, which plunged into
a deep pool on a flat plateau of rock, bounded on either side by a
wall-like precipice.
This plateau was about eighty feet in length, through which, the
water flowed in two rapid but narrow streams from the foot of the
first fall towards a second cataract at the extreme end. This second
fall leaped from the centre of the ravine into the lower plain.
When I arrived on this fine level surface of rock, a splendid sight
presented itself. In the centre of one of the rapid streams, the buck
stood at bay, belly-deep, with the torrent rushing in foam between his
legs. His mane was bristled up, his nostrils were distended, and his
antlers were lowered to receive the dog who should first attack him. I
happened to have a spear on that occasion, so that I felt he could not
escape, and I gave the baying dogs a loud cheer on. Poor Cato! it was
his first elk, and he little knew the danger of a buck at bay in such
a strong position. Answering with youthful ardour to my halloa, the
young dog sprang boldly at the elk's face, but, caught upon the ready
antlers, he was instantly dashed senseless upon the rocks. Now for old
Smut, the hero of countless battles, who, though pluck to the
back-bone, always tempers his valour with discretion.
Yoick to him, Smut! and I jumped into the water. The buck made a
rush forward, but at that moment a mass of yellow hair dangled before
his eyes as the true old dog hung upon his cheek. Now came the tug of
war--only one seizer! The spring had been so great, and the position
of the buck was so secure, that the dog had missed the ear, and only
held by the cheek. The elk, in an instant, saw his advantage, and
quickly thrusting his sharp brown antlers into the dog's chest, he
reared to his full height and attempted to pin the apparently fated
Smut against a rock. That had been the last of Smut's days of prowess
had I not fortunately had a spear. I could just reach the elk's
shoulder in time to save the dog. After a short but violent struggle,
the buck yielded up his spirit. He was a noble fellow, and pluck to
the last.
Having secured his horns to a bush, lest he should be washed away
by the torrent, I examined the dogs. Smut was wounded in two places,
but not severely, and Cato had just recovered his senses, but was so
bruised as to move with great difficulty. In addition to this, he had
a deep wound from the buck's horn under the shoulder.
The great number of elk at the Horton plains and the open character
of the country, make the hunting a far more enjoyable sport than it is
in Newera Ellia, where the plains are of much smaller extent, and the
jungles are frightfully thick. During a trip of two months at the
Horton Plains, we killed forty-three elk, exclusive of about ten which
the pack ran into and killed by themselves, bringing home the account
of their performances in distended stomachs. These occurrences
frequently happen when the elk takes away through an impervious
country, where a man cannot possibly follow. In such cases the pack is
either beaten off, or they pull the elk down and devour it.
This was exemplified some time ago, when the three best dogs were
nearly lost. A doe elk broke cover from a small jungle at the Horton
Plains, and, instead of taking across the patinas (plains), she
doubled back to an immense pathless jungle, closely followed by three
greyhounds--Killbuck, Bran, and Lena. The first dog, who ran
beautifully by nose, led the way, and their direction was of course
unknown, as the dogs were all mute. Night came, and they had not
returned. The next day passed away, but without a sign of the missing
dogs. I sent natives to search the distant jungles and ravines in all
directions. Three days passed away, and I gave up all hope of them. We
were sitting at dinner one night, the fire was blazing cheerfully
within, but the rain was pouring without, the wind was howling in
fitful gusts, and neither moon nor stars relieved the pitchy darkness
of the night, when the conversation naturally turned to the lost dogs.
What a night for the poor brutes to be exposed to, roaming about the
wet jungles without a chance of return!
A sudden knock at the door arrested our attention; it opened. Two
natives stood there, dripping with wet and shivering with cold. One
had in his hand an elk's head, much gnawed; the other man, to my
delight, led the three lost dogs. They had run their elk down, and
were found by the side of a rocky river several miles distant--the two
dogs asleep in a cave, and the bitch was gnawing the remains of the
half-consumed animal. The two men who had found them were soon
squatted before a comfortable fire, with a good feed of curry and
rice, and their skins full of brandy.
Although the elk are so numerous at the Horton Plains, the sport at
length becomes monotonous from the very large proportion of the does.
The usual ratio in which they were killed was one buck to eight does.
I cannot at all account for this small proportion of bucks in this
particular spot. At Newera Ellia they are as two or three compared
with the does. The following extract of deaths, taken from my
game-book during three months of the year, will give a tolerably
accurate idea of the number killed:
1852. March 24. Doe . . Killed in the Elk Plains. 30. Two Does
. Killed in Newera Ellia Plain. April 3. Doe . . Killed at the
foot of Hack Galla. 5. Buck . . Killed at the foot of Pedro. 8.
Doe . . Killed at the top of the Pass. 13. Buck . . Killed at the
foot of the Pass. 16. Buck . . Killed in the river at the Pass. 19.
Doe . . Killed on the patinas on Badulla road. 21. Buck . . Killed
in the river at the base of Pedro. 23. Buck . . Killed in Matturatta
Plain. 25. Doe . . Killed in the Elk Plains. 25. Sow . . Killed
in the Elk Plains. 27. Boar . . Killed at the Limestone Quarry. May
3. Sow . . Killed in the Elk Plains. 6. Two Does . Killed in the
Barrack Plain. 10. Two Does . One killed in the Barrack Plain, and
the other at the bottom of the Pass. 12. Buck . . Killed in Newera
Ellia Plain. 19. Buck . . Killed in the Newera Ellia River. 22. Doe
. . Killed at the Pioneer Lines-Laboukelle. 31. Two does . Killed
in the Barrack Plain. June 5. Buck . . Killed at the foot of Pedro.
8. Buck . . Killed in the Barrack Plain. 11. Two Bucks . Killed on
Kicklamane Patina. 24. Two Does . Killed on Newera Ellia Plain. 28.
Boar . . Killed on Elk Plains. 29. Doe . . Killed at the ` Rest and
be Thankful bottom
Total--28 Elk (11 Bucks, 17 Does), and 4 Hogs.
This is a tolerable show of game when it is considered that the
sport continues from year to year; there are no seasons at which time
the game is spared, but the hunting depends simply on the weather.
Three times a week the pack turns out in the dry season, and upon
every fine day during the wet months. It must appear a frightful
extravagance to English ideas to feed the hounds upon venison, but as
it costs nothing, it is a cheaper food than beef, and no other flesh
is procurable in sufficient quantity. Venison is in its prime when the
elk's horns are in velvet. At this season, when the new antlers have
almost attained their full growth, they are particularly tender, and
the buck moves slowly and cautiously through the jungle, lest he
should injure them against the branches, taking no further exercise
than is necessary in the search of food. He therefore grows very fat,
and is then in fine condition.
The speed of an elk, although great, cannot be compared to that of
the spotted deer. I have seen the latter almost distance the best
greyhounds for the first 200 yards, but with this class of dogs the
elk has no chance upon fair open ground. Coursing the elk, therefore,
is a short-lived sport, as the greyhounds run into him immediately,
and a tremendous struggle then ensues, which must be terminated as
soon as possible by the knife, otherwise the dogs would most probably
be wounded. I once saw Killbuck perform a wonderful feat in seizing. A
buck elk broke cover in the Elk Plains, and I slipped a brace of
greyhounds after him, Killbuck and Bran. The buck had a start of about
200 yards, but the speed of the greyhounds told rapidly upon him, and
after a course of a quarter of a mile, they were at his haunches,
Killbuck leading. The next instant he sprang in full fly, and got his
hold by the ear. So sudden was the shock, that the buck turned a
complete somersault, but, recovering himself immediately, he regained
his feet, and started off at a gallop down hill towards a stream, the
dog still hanging on. In turning over in his fall, the ear had twisted
round, and Killbuck, never having left his hold, was therefore on his
back, in which position he was dragged at great speed over the rugged
ground. Notwithstanding the difficulty of his position, he would not
give up his hold. In the meantime, Bran kept seizing the other ear,
but continually lost his hold as the ear gave way. Killbuck's weight
kept the buck's head on a level with his knees; and after a run of
some hundred yards, during the whole of which, the dog had been
dragged upon his back without once losing his hold, the elk's pace was
reduced to a walk. With both greyhounds now hanging on his ears, the
buck reached the river, and he and the dogs rolled down the steep bank
into the deep water. I came up just at this moment and killed the elk,
but both dogs were frightfully wounded, and for some time I despaired
of their recovery.
This was an extraordinary feat in seizing; but Killbuck was
matchless in this respect, and accordingly of great value, as he was
sure to retain his hold when he once got it. This is an invaluable
qualification in a dog, especially with boars, as any uncertainty in
the dog's hold, renders the advance of the man doubly dangerous. I
have frequently seen hogs free themselves from a dog's hold at the
very moment that I have put the knife into them; this with a large
boar is likely to cause an accident.
I once saw a Veddah who nearly lost his life by one of these
animals. He was hunting 'guanas' (a species of large lizard which is
eaten by all the natives) with several small dogs, and they suddenly
found a large boar, who immediately stood to bay. The Veddah advanced
to the attack with his bow and arrows; but he had no sooner wounded
the beast than he was suddenly charged with great fury. In an instant
the boar was into him, and the next moment the Veddah was lying on the
ground with his bowels out. Fortunately a companion was with him, who
replaced his entrails and bandaged him up. I saw the man some years
after; he was perfectly well, but he had a frightful swelling in the
front of the belly, traversed by a wide blue scar of about eight
inches in length.
A boar is at all times a desperate antagonist, where the
hunting-knife and dogs are the only available weapons. The largest
that I ever killed, weighed four hundredweight. I was out hunting,
accompanied by my youngest brother. We had walked through several
jungles without success, but on entering a thick jungle in the Elk
Plains we immediately noticed the fresh ploughings of an immense boar.
In a few minutes we heard the pack at bay without a run, and shortly
after a slow running bay-there was no mistake as to our game. He
disdained to run, and, after walking before the pack for about three
minutes, he stood to a determined bay. The jungle was frightfully
thick, and we hastily tore our way through the tangled underwood
towards the spot. We had two staunch dogs by our side, Lucifer and
Lena, and when within twenty paces of the bay, we gave them a halloa
on. Away they dashed to the invisible place of conflict, and we almost
immediately heard the fierce grunting and roaring of the boar. We knew
that they had him, and scrambled through the jungle as fast as we
could towards the field of battle. There was a fight! the underwood
was levelled, and the boar rushed to and fro with Smut, Bran, Lena,
and Lucifer all upon him. Yoick to him! and some of the most daring of
the maddened pack went in. The next instant we were upon him, mingled
with a confused mass of hounds, and throwing our whole weight upon the
boar, we gave him repeated thrusts, apparently to little purpose.
Round came his head and gleaming tusks to the attack of his fresh
enemies, but old Smut held him by the nose, and, although the bright
tusks were immediately buried in his throat, the staunch old dog kept
his hold. Away went the boar covered by a mass of dogs, and bearing
the greater part of our weight in addition, as we hung on to the
hunting-knives buried in his shoulders. For about fifty paces he tore
through the thick jungle, crashing it like a cobweb. At length he
again halted; the dogs, the boar, and ourselves were mingled in a heap
of confusion. All covered with blood and dirt; our own cheers added to
the wild bay of the infuriated hounds and the savage roaring of the
boar. Still he fought and gashed the dogs right and left. He stood
about thirty-eight inches high, and the largest dogs seemed like
puppies beside him; still not a dog relaxed his hold, and he was
covered with wounds. I made a lucky thrust for the nape of his neck. I
felt the point of the knife touch the bone; the spine was divided, and
he fell dead.
Smut had two severe gashes in the throat, Lena was cut under the
ear, and Bran's mouth was opened completely up to his ear in a
horrible wound. The dogs were completely exhausted, and lay panting
around their victim. We cut off the boar's head, and, slinging it upon
a pole, we each shouldered an end and carried it to the kennel. The
power of this animal must have been immense. My brother's weight and
mine, together being upward of twenty-four stone, in addition to that
of half-a-dozen heavy dogs, did not appear to trouble him, and had we
not been close to the spot when he came to bay, so that the knives
came to the instant succour of the dogs, he would have most probably
killed or wounded half the pack.
In this wild and rough kind of sport, the best dogs are constantly
most seriously wounded, and after a fight of this kind, needles and
thread and bandages are in frequent requisition. It is wonderful to
see the rapid recovery of dogs from wounds which at first sight appear
incurable. An instance occurred a short time ago, when I certainly
gave up one of the best dogs for lost. We had found a buck, who after
a sharp run, came to bay in a deep part of the river known by the name
of Black Pool. My youngest brother* {* James Baker, late
Lieut.-Colonel of Cambridge University Volunteers.} (who is always my
companion in hunting) and I were at some distance, but feeling certain
of the locality of the bay, we started off at full speed towards the
supposed spot. A run of a mile, partly through jungle leading into a
deep wooded ravine, brought us to the river, which flowed through the
hollow, and upon approaching the water, we distinctly heard the pack
at bay at some distance down the stream. Before we could get up, the
buck dashed down the river, and turning sharp up the bank, he took up
the hill through a dense jungle. Every hound was at fault, except two,
who were close at his heels, and being very fast they never lost sight
of him. These two dogs were Merriman and Tiptoe; and having followed
the whole pack to their track, we soon heard them in full cry on the
top of the high hills which overlook the river; they were coming down
the hill-side at full speed towards the Black Pool. Hiding behind the
trees lest we should head the buck, who we now heard crashing towards
us through the jungle, we suddenly caught a glimpse of his dun hide as
he bounded past us, and splashed into the river. A few seconds after,
and Tiptoe, the leading hound, came rushing on his track, but to our
horror HE WAS DRAGGING HIS ENTRAILS AFTER HIM. The excitement of the
chase recognised no pain, and the plucky animal actually plunged into
the river, and in spite of his mangled state, he swam across, and
disappeared in the jungle on the opposite side, upon the track which
the elk had taken. The pack now closed up; swimming the river, they
opened upon a hot scent on the opposite bank, and running parallel to
the stream, they drove the buck out of the jungle, and he came to bay
on a rocky part of the river, where the velocity of the torrent swept
every dog past him and rendered his position secure. The whole pack
was there with the exception of Tiptoe; we looked for him among the
baying hounds in vain. For about twenty minutes the buck kept his
impregnable position, when in a foolish moment he forsook it, and
dashing along the torrent, he took to deep water. The whole pack was
after him; once Merriman got a hold, but was immediately beaten off.
Valiant, who was behaving nobly, and made repeated attempts to seize,
was struck beneath the water as often as he advanced. The old veteran
Smut was well to the point, and his deep voice was heard loud above
the din of the bay; but he could do nothing. The buck had a firm
footing, and was standing shoulder-deep; rearing to his full height,
and springing at the dogs as they swam towards him, he struck them
beneath the water with his fore feet. The bay lasted for half an hour;
at the expiration of this time, a sudden thought appeared to strike
old Smut; instead of continuing the attack, he swam direct for the
shore, leaving the buck still occupied with the baying pack. The elk
was standing about fourteen feet from the bank, which was covered with
jungle. Presently we saw the cunning old hero Smut creeping like a
leopard along the edge of the bank till opposite the elk; he slowly
retreated for a few paces, and the next moment he was seen flying
through the air, having made a tremendous spring at the elk's ear. A
cloud of spray for an instant concealed the effect. Both dog and buck
were for a few moments beneath the water; when they reappeared, the
old dog was hanging on his ear! Merriman at once had him by the other
ear; and one after another the seizers held him. In vain he tried to
drown them off by diving; as his head again rose above the surface,
the dogs were at their places: his struggles were useless, and the
knife finished him.
We now searched the jungle for Tiptoe's body, expecting to find him
dead where we had last seen him enter the jungle. Upon searching the
spot, we found him lying down, with his bowels in a heap by his side;
the quantity would have filled a cap. The hole in his side was made-by
a blow from the buck's hoof, and not being more than two inches in
length, strangulation had taken place, and I could not return the
bowels. The dog was still alive, though very faint. Fortunately we had
a small-bladed knife, with which I carefully enlarged the aperture,
and, having cleaned the bowels from the dirt and dead leaves which had
adhered to them, I succeeded in returning them; although I expected
the dog's death every instant. Taking off my neck tie, I made a pad,
with which I secured the aperture, and bound him tightly round with a
handkerchief. Making a sling with a couple of jackets upon a pole, we
placed the dog carefully, within it, and carried him home. By dressing
the wound every day with margosse oil, and keeping the pad and bandage
in the place, to my astonishment the dog recovered, and he is now as
well as ever he was, with the exception of the loss of one eye, which
was knocked out by the horn of an elk on another. occasion.
The margosse oil that I have mentioned is a most valuable balsam
for wounds, having a peculiar smell, which prevents the attacks of
flies, who would otherwise blow the sore and occasion a nest of
maggots in a few hours. This oil is very healing, and soon creates a
healthy appearance in a bad cut. It is manufactured from the fruit of
a plant in Ceylon, but I have never met with it in the possession of
an English medical man. The smell of this oil is very offensive, even
worse than assafoetida, which it in some degree resembles. There are
many medicinal plants in Ceylon of great value, which, although made
use of by the natives, are either neglected or unknown to the
profession in our own country. One of the wild fruits of the jungle,
the wood-apple or wild quince, is very generally used by the natives
in attacks of diarrhoea and dysentery in the early stages of the
disease; this has been used for some years by English medical men in
this island, but with no very satisfactory effect.
A Morning's Deer-coursing--Kondawataweny--Rogue at Kondawa
taweny--A Close Shave--Preparations for Catching an Elephant--Catching
an Elephant--Taming Him--Flying Shot at a Buck--Cave at
Dimbooldene--Awkward Ground--A Charmed Life.
IT was in July, 1848, that I pitched my tent in the portion of
Ceylon known as the 'Park,' for the purpose of deer-coursing. I had
only three greyhounds, Killbuck, Bran and Lena, and these had been
carried in a palanquin from Newera Ellia, a distance of one hundred
miles. The grass had all been burnt about two months previously, and
the whole country was perfectly fresh and green, the young shoots not
being more than half a foot high. The deer were numerous but wild,
which made the sport the more enjoyable. I cannot describe the country
better than by comparing it to a rich English park, well watered by
numerous streams and large rivers, but ornamented by many beautiful
rocky mountains, which are seldom to be met with in England. If this
part of the country had the advantage of the Newera Ellia climate, it
would be a Paradise, but the intense heat destroys much of the
pleasure in both shooting and coursing, especially in the latter
sport, as the greyhounds must be home by 8 A. M., or they would soon
die from the effects of the sun.
It was in the cool hour of sunrise, when the dew lay thickly upon
the grass, and the foliage glistened with the first beams of morning,
that we stalked over the extensive plains with Killbuck and Lena in
the slips, in search of deer. Several herds winded us at a distance of
half a mile, and immediately bounded away, rendering pursuit
impossible; and we determined not to slip the dogs unless they had a
fair start, as one run in this climate was quite work enough for a
morning. After several disappointments in stalking, we at length
discovered a noble buck standing alone by the edge of a narrow belt of
jungle; the instant that he observed us, he stepped proudly into the
cover. This being open forest, my brother took the greyhounds in at
the spot where the deer had entered, while I ran round to the opposite
side of the cover, and took my position upon an extensive lawn of fine
grass about half a mile in width.
I had not remained a minute at my post before I heard a crash in
the jungle, as though an elephant were charging through, and in
another instant, a splendid buck burst upon the plain at full speed,
and away he flew over the level lawn, with the brace of greyhounds
laying out about fifty paces behind him. Here was a fair trial of
speed over a perfect bowling-green, and away they flew, the buck
exerting his utmost stride, and the greyhounds stretching out till
their briskets nearly touched the ground; Killbuck leading with
tremendous bounds, and Lena about a length behind him.
By degrees the beautiful spring of the greyhounds appeared to tell,
and the distance between them and the buck gradually decreased,
although both deer and dogs flew along with undiminished speed. The
plain was nearly crossed, and the opposite jungle lay within 200 yards
of them. To gain this, the buck redoubled his exertions; the
greyhounds knew as well as he did, that it was his chance of escape,
and with equal efforts they pressed upon him. Not fifty paces now
separated the buck from the jungle, and with prodigious bounds he sped
along; he neared it; he won it! the yielding branches crashed before
him, but the dogs were at his haunches as the jungle closed over them
and concealed the chase.
I was soon up; and upon entering the jungle, I could neither hear
nor see anything of them, but, by following up the track, I found them
about fifty yards from the entrance of the bush. The buck was standing
on the sandy bed of a dry stream, endeavouring in vain to free
himself, while the greyhounds pinned his nose to the ground, each
hanging upon his ears. The knife finished him immediately. There never
was a more exciting course; it had been nobly run by both the dogs,
and well contested by the buck, who was a splendid fellow and in fine
condition.
On my way to the tent I wounded a doe at full speed, which Lena
followed singly and pulled down, thus securing our coolies a good
supply of venison. The flesh of the spotted deer is more like mutton
than English venison, and is excellent eating; it would be still
better if the climate would allow of its being kept for a few days.
There is no sport in Ceylon, in my opinion, that is equal to
deer-coursing, but the great difficulty attending it, is the lack of
good greyhounds. The spotted buck (or axis) is an animal of immense
power and courage; and although most greyhounds would course him, very
few would have sufficient courage and strength to hold him, unless
slipped two brace at a time, which would immediately spoil the sport.
A brace of greyhounds to one buck is fair play, and a good strong
horse will generally keep them in view. In two weeks' coursing in the
Park, we killed seventeen deer with three greyhounds; at the
expiration of which time, the dogs were so footsore and wounded by the
hard burnt stubble of the old grass that they were obliged to be sent
home.
When the greyhounds had left, I turned my attention to elephants.
There were very few at this season in the Park, and I therefore left
this part of the country, which was dried up, and proceeded to
Kondawataweny, in the direction of Batticaloa.*(*The jungles have now
been cleared away, and a plain of 25,000 acres of rice cultivation has
usurped the old resort of elephants.) Kondawataweny is a small
village, inhabited by Moormen, situated on the edge of a large lake or
tank. Upon arrival, I found that the neighbourhood was alive with game
of all kinds, and the Moormen were excellent hands at elephants. There
was accordingly no difficulty in procuring good gun-bearers and
trackers, and at 4 P.M. of the day of our arrival, we started to make
a circuit of the tank in quest of the big game. At about 5 P.M. we
observed several rogues scattered in various directions around the
lake; one of these fellows, whose close acquaintance I made with the
telescope, I prophesied would show some fight before we owned his
tail. This elephant was standing some distance in the water, feeding
and bathing. There were two elephants close to the water's edge
between him and us, and we determined to have a shot at them en
passant, and then try to bag the big fellow.
Although we stalked very cautiously along the edge of the jungle
which surrounded the lake, divided from it by a strip of plain of
about 200 yards in width, the elephants winded us, and retreated over
the patina* (*Grassy plains) at full speed towards the jungle.
Endeavouring to cut them off before they could reach the thick cover,
we ran at our best pace along the edge of the jungle, so as to meet
them at right angles. One reached the jungle before us, but a lucky
shot at a distance of sixty paces floored the other, who lay
struggling on the ground, and was soon extinguished. Having reloaded,
we went in quest of the large rogue, who was bathing in the tank. This
gentleman had decamped, having taken offence at the firing.
Close to the edge of the lake grew a patch of thick thorny jungle
of about two acres, completely isolated, and separated from the main
jungle by about eighty paces' length of fine turf. The Moormen knew
the habits of this rogue, who was well known in the neighbourhood, and
they at once said, "that he had concealed himself in the small patch
of jungle." Upon examining the tracks from the tank, we found they
were correct.
The question was, how to dislodge him; the jungle was so dense that
it was impossible to enter, and driving was the only chance.
There was a small bush within a few paces of the main jungle,
exactly opposite that in which the elephant was concealed, and we
determined to hide behind this, while a few Moormen should endeavour
to drive him from his retreat, in which case, he would be certain to
make for the main forest, and would most probably pass near the bush,
behind which we lay in wait for him. Giving the Moormen a gun, we took
to our hiding-place. The men went round to the tank side of the patch
of jungle, and immediately commenced shouting and firing; securing
themselves from an attack by climbing into the highest trees. A short
interval elapsed, and not a sound of the elephant could be heard. The
firing and shouting ceased, and all was as still as death. Some of the
Moormen returned from the jungle, and declared that the elephant was
not there; but this was all nonsense; the fact was, they did not like
the idea of driving him out. Knowing the character of these 'rogues',
I felt convinced that he was one of the worst description, and that he
was quietly waiting his time, until some one should advance within his
reach. Having given the Moormen a supply of powder, I again despatched
them to drive the jungle. Once more the firing and shouting commenced,
and continued until their supply of powder was exhausted: no effects
had been produced; it was getting late, and the rogue appeared
determined not to move. A dead silence ensued, which was presently
disturbed by the snapping of a bough; in another moment the jungle
crashed, and forth stepped the object of our pursuit! He was a
magnificent elephant, one of the most vicious in appearance that I
have ever seen; he understood the whole affair as well as we did; and
flourishing his trunk, he paced quickly backwards and forwards for a
few turns before the jungle he had just quitted; suddenly making his
resolution, he charged straight at the bush behind which we had
imagined ourselves concealed. He was about eighty yards off when he
commenced his onset; and seeing that we were discovered, I left the
hiding-place, and stepped to the front of the bush to meet him with
the four-ounce rifle. On he came at a great pace, carrying his head
very high, and making me the sole object of his attack. I made certain
of the shot, although his head was in a difficult position, and I
accordingly waited for him till he was within fifteen paces. At this
distance I took a steady shot and fired. A cloud of smoke, from the
heavy charge of powder, obscured everything, but I felt so certain
that he was down, that I looked under the smoke to see where he lay.
Ye gods! He was just over me in full charge! I had not even checked
him by the shot, and he was within three feet of me, going at a
tremendous pace. Throwing my heavy rifle into the bush, I doubled
quickly to one side, hoping that he would pass me and take to the main
jungle, to which I ran parallel as fast as my legs could carry me.
Instead of taking to the jungle, he turned short and quickly after me,
and a fair race commenced. I had about three feet start of him, and I
saw with delight that the ground was as level and smooth as a lawn;
there was no fear of tripping up, and away I went at the fastest pace
that I ever ran either before or since, taking a look behind me to see
how the chase went on. I saw the bullet-mark in his forehead, which
was covered with blood; his trunk was stretched to its full length to
catch me, and was now within two feet of my back; he was gaining on
me, although I was running at a tremendous pace. I could not screw an
inch more speed out of my legs, and I kept on, with the brute gaining
on me at every stride. He was within a foot of me, and I had not heard
a shot fired, and not a soul had come to the rescue. The sudden
thought struck me that my brother could not possibly overtake the
elephant at the pace at which we were going, and I immediately doubled
short to my left into the open plain, and back towards the guns. The
rogue overshot me. I met my brother close to his tail, which position
he had with difficulty maintained; but he could not get a shot, and
the elephant turned into the jungle, and disappeared just as I escaped
him by a sharp turn. This was a close shave; had not the ground been
perfectly level I must have been caught to a certainty, and even as it
was, he would have had me in another stride had I not turned from my
straight course. It was nearly dark, and we returned to the tent,
killing several peacocks and ducks on our way, with which the country
swarmed.
We passed a miserable night, not being able to sleep on account of
the mosquitoes, which were in swarms. I was delighted to see the first
beam of morning, when our little winged enemies left us, and a
'chatty' bath was most enjoyable after the restless tossings of a
sleepless night. The Moormen were out at dawn to look for elephants,
the guns were cleaned, and I looked forward to the return of the
trackers with peculiar interest, as we had determined to 'catch an
elephant.' The Moormen were all full of excitement and preparation.
These men were well practised in this sport, and they were soon busied
in examining and coiling their hide ropes for the purpose.
At about mid-day the trackers returned, having found a herd about
five miles from the village. We were all ready, and we set off without
a moment's delay, our party consisting of my brother, myself, four
gun-bearers, and about thirty Moormen, each of whom carried a coil of
finely-twisted rope made of thongs of raw deer's hide; these ropes
were each twenty yards in length, and about an inch in diameter.
Having skirted the borders of the tank for about three miles, we
turned into the forest, and continued our route through alternate open
and thick forest, until we at length reached a rough, open country,
interspersed with low jungles. Here we met the watchers, who reported
the herd to be a few hundred paces from us in some patches of thick
jungle. Taking the wind, we carefully approached their position. The
ground was very rough, being a complete city of anthills about two
feet high; these were overgrown with grass, giving the open country an
appearance of a vast churchyard of turf graves. Among these tumps grew
numerous small clusters of bushes, above which, we shortly discovered
the flapping ears of the elephants, they were slowly feeding towards
the more open ground. It was a lovely afternoon, the sky was covered
with a thin grey cloud, and the sun had little or no power. Hiding
behind a bush, we watched the herd for some time, until they had all
quitted the bushes and were well out in the open. There were two
elephants facing us, and the herd, which consisted of seven, were
tolerably close together, with the exception of one, who was about
thirty yards apart from the main body; this fellow we determined to
catch. We therefore arranged that our gun-bearers and four
rope-carriers should accompany us, while the remaining portion of our
party should lie in reserve to come to our assistance when required,
as so large a body of men could not possibly stalk the herd without
being discovered. Falling upon our hands and knees, we crept between
the grassy ant-hills towards the two leading elephants, who were
facing us. The wind was pretty brisk, and the ant-hills effectually
concealed us till we were within seven paces of our game. The two
leaders then both dropped dead to the front shot, and the fun began.
The guns were so well handed up, that we knocked over the six
elephants before they had given us a run of twenty yards, and we all
closed up and ran under the tail of the retreating elephant that we
had devoted to the ropes. He was going at about seven miles an hour;
we therefore had no difficulty in keeping up with him, as we could run
between the ant-hills much faster than he could. The ropes were in
readiness, and with great dexterity, one of the Moormen slipped a
noose over one of his hind feet, as he raised it from the ground; and
drawing it tight, he dropped his coil. We all halted, and allowed the
unconscious elephant to run out his length of line; this he soon did,
and the rope trailed after him like a long snake, we all following at
about the centre of the length of rope, or twenty paces behind him. He
was making for the jungle, which was not far distant, and we were
running him like a pack of hounds, but keeping a gun in readiness,
lest he should turn and charge. He at length reached the wooded bank
of a dry river, and thick rattan jungle bordered the opposite side; he
thought he was safe, and he plunged down the crumbling bank. We were a
little too quick for him, by taking a double turn round a tree with
the slack end of the rope just as he descended the bank; the effect of
this was to bring him to a sudden standstill, and the stretching of
the hide rope threw him upon his knees. He recovered himself
immediately, and used extraordinary efforts to break away; tightening
the rope to its utmost length, he suddenly lifted up his tied leg and
threw his whole weight forward. Any but a hide rope of that diameter
must have given way, but this stretched like a harp-string, and at
every effort to break it, the yielding elasticity of the hide threw
him upon his head, and the sudden contraction after the fall, jerked
his leg back to its full length.
After many vain, but tremendous efforts to free himself, he turned
his rage upon his pursuers, and charged everyone right and left; but
he was safely tied, and we took some little pleasure in teasing him.
He had no more chance than a fly in a spider's web. As he charged in
one direction, several nooses were thrown round his hind legs; then
his trunk was caught in a slip-knot, then his fore legs, then his
neck, and the ends of all these ropes being brought together and
hauled tight, he was effectually hobbled.
This had taken some time to effect (about half an hour), and we now
commenced a species of harness to enable us to drive him to the
village.
The first thing was to secure his trunk by tying it to one of his
fore legs; this leg was then fastened with a slack rope to one of his
hind legs, which prevented him from taking a longer stride than about
two feet; his neck was then tied to his other fore leg, and two ropes
were made fast to both his fore and hind legs; the ends of these ropes
being manned by thirty men.
Having completed these arrangements, he was released from the ties
which hobbled him, and we commenced the arduous task of driving him
towards the village, a distance of five miles. The only method of
getting him along, was to keep two men to tease him in front, by
shouting and waving cloths before his face; he immediately charged
these fellows, who, of course, ran in the right direction for the
village, and by this repeated manoeuvre we reached the borders of the
tank by nightfall. We were still at least two miles from the village,
and we were therefore obliged to tie him to a tree for the night. The
next morning we succeeded in driving him to the village. He was a fine
elephant, but not full grown, and for this reason he had been selected
from the herd for capture, as they are more valuable at this
particular period of their growth, being easily rendered docile. He
was about sixteen years of age; and by starving for two days, and
subsequent gentle treatment, the natives mounted and rode him on the
third day of his capture, taking the precaution, however, of first
securing his trunk. This elephant was then worth fifteen pounds to be
sold to the Arabs for the Indian market.
After a stay of a few days in this neighbourhood, during which we
had good sport in elephant-shooting, we returned to the Park country.
The first evening of our return, we heard elephants roaring in the
jungle within a short distance of the tent. At daybreak the next
morning we were on their tracks, and after a walk of five miles we
found them in thick thorny jungle, and only killed three. We had a
long day's work, and we were returning home in the afternoon when we
suddenly observed a herd of deer grazing in the beautiful park. The
headman of this part of the country is a first-rate sportsman, and has
always accompanied me in shooting through this district. This man,
whose name is Banda, is the only Cingalese that I have ever seen who
looks like a man of good birth in his nation. Strikingly handsome and
beautifully proportioned, with the agility of a deer, he is in all
respects the beau ideal of a native hunter. His skill in tracking is
superb, and his thorough knowledge of the habits of all Ceylon
animals, especially of elephants, renders him a valuable ally to a
sportsman. He and I commenced a careful stalk, and after a long
circuit I succeeded in getting within seventy paces of the herd of
deer. The ground was undulating, and they were standing on the top of
a low ridge of hills. I dropped a buck with my two-ounce rifle, and
the herd immediately disappeared behind the top of the hill. Taking
one of my double-barrelled rifles, which Banda gave me, I ran to the
top of the hill as fast as I could, just in time to see the herd going
at a flying speed along a small valley at a long distance. Another
buck was separated from the herd by about forty paces, and putting up
the second sight of my rifle, I took a shot at him; to my delight he
plunged heavily upon the turf. I fired my remaining barrel at the
herd, but I must have missed, as none fell. I immediately stepped the
distance to the dead buck, 187 paces. I had fired a little too high,
and missed his body, but the ball struck him in the neck and had
broken his spine. A successful flying shot at this distance has a very
pretty effect, and Banda was delighted.
There were very few elephants at this season at the Park, and the
numberless 'ticks' which swarmed in the grass, spoilt all the pleasure
of shooting. These little wretches, which are not larger than a small
grain of gunpowder, find their way to every part of the body, and the
irritation of their bites is indescribable. Scratching, is only adding
fuel to fire; there is no certain prevention or relief from their
attacks; the best thing that I know is cocoa-nut oil rubbed daily over
the whole body, but the remedy is almost as unpleasant as the bite.
Ceylon is, at all times, a frightful place for vermin: in the dry
weather we have ticks; it the wet weather mosquitoes, and, what are
still more disgusting, 'leeches,' which swarm in the grass, and upon
the leaves of the jungle. These creatures insinuate themselves through
all the openings in a person's dress--up the trousers, under the
waistcoat, down the neck, up the wrists, and in fact everywhere,
drawing blood with insatiable voracity, and leaving an unpleasant
irritation for some days after.
All these annoyances form great drawbacks to the enjoyment of the
low-country sports; although they are afterwards forgotten, and the
bright moments of the sport are all that are looked back to, they are
great discomforts at the time. When the day is over, and the man,
fatigued by intense heat and a hard day's work, feels himself
refreshed by a bath and a change of clothes, the incurable itching of
a thousand tick-bites destroys all his pleasure; he finds himself
streaming with blood from leech-bites, and for the time he feels
disgusted with the country. First-rate sport can alone compensate for
all these annoyances.
There is a portion of the Park country known as Dimbooldene. In
this part there is a cave formed by a large overhanging rock, which is
a much cooler residence than the tent. Here we accordingly bivouacked,
the cave being sufficiently large to contain the horses in addition to
ourselves and servants. After a delightfully cool night, free from
mosquitoes, we made a day of it, but we walked from sunrise till 5
P.M. without seeing a sign of an elephant. At length, from the top of
a high hill on the very confines of the Park country, we looked across
a deep valley, and with the assistance of the telescope we plainly
distinguished a large single elephant feeding on the grassy side of an
opposite mountain. To cross the deep valley that separated us, and to
ascend the mountain, would have taken several hours, and at this time
of the day it was impracticable; we were thus compelled to turn our
backs upon the game, and return towards our rocky home. Tired, more
from our want of success than from the day's work, we strolled
leisurely along, and we were talking of the best plan to be adopted
for the next day's work, when I suddenly observed a herd of eight
elephants going up the side of a small hill at their best pace within
200 yards of us. They had just quitted a small jungle at the bottom of
a ravine, and they had been alarmed by our approach.
Off we started in pursuit, down the rugged side of the hill we were
descending, and up the opposite hill, upon the elephants' tracks, as
hard as we could run. Just as we reached the top of the hill, the
elephants were entering a small jungle on the other side. My brother
got a shot, and killed the last of the herd; in another moment they
had disappeared. It had been a sharp burst up the steep hill, and we
stopped to breathe, but we were almost immediately in pursuit again,
as we saw the herd emerge from the jungle at the base of the hill, and
plough their way through a vast field of high lemon grass.
Upon arriving on their tracks, they had fairly distanced us. The
grass, which was as thick as a hedge, was trodden into lanes by the
elephants, and upon either side it stood like a wall ten or twelve
feet high. Upon these tracks we ran along for some time, until it
became dusk. We halted, and were consulting as to the prudence of
continuing the chase at this late hour, when we suddenly heard the
cracking of the branches in a small jungle in a hollow close to our
left, and upon taking a position upon some rising ground, we
distinctly saw several elephants standing in the high grass about a
hundred paces before us, close to the edge of the jungle in which the
remaining portion of the herd was concealed. Two of the elephants were
looking at us, and as there was no time to lose, we walked straight up
to them. They stood quietly watching us till we were within twenty
yards, when they came a few paces forward, one immediately fall ing
dead to my shot, while the other was turned by a shot from my brother;
the rest retreated to the jungle over the most difficult ground for
both man and beast. Immense rocks lay scattered in heaps over the
surface, forming chasms by the intervening crevices of five and six
feet in depth; from these crevices the long lemon grass grew in dense
tufts, completely hiding the numerous pitfalls, and making the retreat
of the elephants and our pursuit equally difficult. I was close to the
tail of a large elephant, who was picking his way carefully over the
treacherous surface, and I was waiting for an opportunity for a shot
should he turn his head, when I suddenly pitched head first into one
of these rocky holes. Here I scrambled for some seconds before I could
extricate myself, as I was carrying my heavy four-ounce rifle; and at
length, upon recovering my footing, I found that all the elephants had
gained the jungle, except the one that I had been following. He was
about twenty yards from me, and was just entering the jungle, but I
got a splendid shot at him behind the ear and rolled him over.
It was very nearly dark, and we could not of course follow the herd
any farther; we therefore reloaded, and turned towards the direction
of the cave; this was plainly shown by a distant blaze of light from
the night-fires, which were already lit. We were walking slowly along
parallel to the jungle, into which the elephants had retreated, when
my man Wallace, who is a capital gun-bearer, halloed out, `Here comes
an elephant!' and in the dim twilight I could see an elephant bowling
at a great pace towards us, but close to the jungle. He was forty
yards from me, but my brother fired at him and without effect. I took
a quick shot with a double-barrelled rifle, and he dropped
immediately. Hearing him roar as he lay in the high lemon grass by the
edge of the jungle, I ran down the gentle slope to the spot, followed
by my trusty gun-bearer Wallace, as I knew the elephant was only
stunned and would soon recover. Upon arriving within a few feet of the
spot, pushing my way with difficulty through the tangled lemon grass,
I could not see where he lay, as daylight had now vanished. I was
vainly looking about, when I suddenly heard a rush in the grass close
to me, and I saw the head and cocked ears of the elephant within six
feet, as he came at me. I had just time to fire my remaining barrel,
and down he dropped to the shot! I jumped back a few paces to assure
myself of the result, as the smoke hanging in the high grass, added to
the darkness, completely blinded me. Wallace pushed the spare rifle
into my hand, and to my astonishment I saw the head and cocked ears
again coming at me! It was so dark that I could not take an aim, but I
floored him once more by a front shot, and again I jumped back through
the tangled grass, just in time to avoid him, as he, for the third
time, recovered himself and charged. He was not five paces from me; I
took a steady shot at him with my last barrel, and I immediately
bolted as hard as I could run. This shot once more floored him, but he
must have borne a charmed life, as he again recovered his legs, and to
my great satisfaction he turned into the jungle and retreated. This
all happened in a few seconds; had it been daylight I could of course
have killed him, but as it happened I could not even dis tinguish the
sights at the end of my rifle. In a few minutes afterwards, it became
pitch dark, and we could only steer for the cave by the light of the
fire, which was nearly two miles distant.
The next day, we found a herd of eight elephants in very favourable
ground, and succeeded in killing seven; but this was the last herd in
the Park, and after a few days spent in beating up the country without
success, I returned to Newera Ellia, the bag being twenty-two
elephants during a trip of three weeks, in addition to deer, hogs,
buffalo, and small game, which had afforded excellent sport.
Another Trip to the Park-A Hard Day's Work-Discover a Herd-Death of
the Herd-A Furious Charge-Caught at Last-The Consequences-A Thorough
Rogue-Another Herd in High Lemon Grass-Bears-A Fight between a Moorman
and a Bear-A Musical Herd-Herd Escape-A Plucky Buck-Death of
`Killbuck' -Good Sport with a Herd-End of the Trip.
ABOUT twelve months elapsed without my pulling a trigger. I had
contented myself with elk-hunting in Newera Ellia and the vicinity,
but in November, 1850, the greyhounds were again in their palanquin,
and, ac companied by my brother V., I was once more in the saddle on
my steady-going old horse Jack, en route for the Park.
It was 5 P.M. on a cool and lovely evening that we halted, and
unsaddled in this beautiful country. Our tents and coolies were far
behind, our horse-keepers were our only attendants, and we fixed upon
a spot as the most eligible site for the tents. A large open park lay
before us, interspersed with trees, and clumps of forest. A clear
stream flowed from some low rocky hills upon our right, and several
detached masses of rock lay scattered irregularly here and there, like
the ruins of an old castle. Large trees grew from the crevices of
these rocks, and beneath their shade we turned our horses loose to
graze upon a soft sweet grass, with which this part of the Park is
covered. We had the greyhounds with us, and a single rifle, but no
other guns, as the servants were far behind. Having given directions
to the horse-keepers to point out the spot for the tents on the
arrival of the people, we took a stroll with the greyhounds to get a
deer, as we depended upon this chance for our dinner.
Just as we were starting, we noticed two large elephants feeding on
the rocky hills within a quarter of a mile of us; but having no guns
up, with the exception of one rifle, we were obliged to postpone the
attack, and, cautioning the horse-keepers to observe silence lest the
game should be alarmed, we left the elephants to their meal, while we
struck off in another direction with the greyhounds. We found a herd
of deer within half a mile of our starting-place; they had just come
out from the forest for the night's feeding; and when I first saw
them, they were barking to each other in a small glade within sixty
paces of the jungle. Dinner depending upon success, I stalked them
with the greatest caution. Taking Killbuck and Lena in the slips I
crept from tree to tree without the slightest noise; I had the wind,
and if any dogs could kill a deer in the difficult position in which
the herd stood, these two would do it. I got within sixty yards of the
herd before they observed me, and as they dashed off towards the
jungle, I slipped the straining greyhounds. A loud cheer to the dogs
confused the herd, and they scattered to the right and left as they
gained the forest, the dogs being close up with them, and Killbuck
almost at a buck's throat as he reached the jungle. Following as well
as I could through the dusky jungle, I shortly heard the cry of a
deer, and on arriving at the spot I found Killbuck and Lena with a
buck on the ground. No deer had a chance with this wonderful dog
Killbuck. When he was once slipped, there was no hope for the game
pursued; no matter what the character of the country might be, it was
certain death to the deer. We gralloched the buck, and having fed the
dogs with the offal, we carried him on a pole to the place where we
had left the horses. On arrival, we deposited our heavy burden; and to
our satisfaction, we found all our people had arrived. The tents were
pitched, and the night-fires were already blazing, as daylight had
nearly ceased.
In the course of an hour, we were comfortably seated at our table,
with venison steaks, and chops smoking before us--thanks to the dogs,
who were now soundly sleeping at our feet. During the progress of
dinner I planned the work for the day following. We were now eight
miles from Nielgalla (Blue Rock), the village at which Banda resided,
and I ordered a man to start off at daybreak to tell him that I was in
his country, and to bring old Medima and several other good men (that
I knew) to the tent without delay. I proposed that we should, in the
meantime, start at daylight on the tracks of the two elephants that we
had seen upon the hills, taking Wallace and a few of the best coolies
as gun-bearers. Wallace is a Cochin man, who prides himself upon a
mixture of Portuguese blood. He speaks six different languages
fluently, and is without exception the best interpreter and the most
plucky gun-bearer that I have ever seen. He has accompanied me through
so many scenes with unvarying firmness that I never have the slightest
anxiety about my spare guns if he is there, as he keeps the little
troop of gun-bearers in their places in a most methodical manner.
At break of day on the following morning we were upon the tracks of
the two elephants, but a slight shower during the night had so
destroyed them that we found it was impossible to follow them up. We
therefore determined to examine the country thoroughly for fresh
tracks, and we accordingly passed over many miles of ground, but to
little purpose, as none were to be seen.
We at length discovered fresh traces of a herd in thick thorny
jungle, which was too dense to enter, but marking their position, we
determined to send out watchers on the following day to track them
into better country. Having killed a deer, we started him off with
some coolies that we had taken with us on this chance, and we
continued our route till 3 P.M. We had lost our way, and, not having
any guide, we had no notion of the position of the tents; the heat of
the day had been intense, and, not having breakfasted, we were rather
anxious about the direction. Strolling through this beautiful expanse
of Park country, we directed our course for a large rocky mountain, at
a few miles' distance, at the base of which I knew lay the route from
the tent to Nielgalla. To our great satisfaction we found the path at
about 4 P.M., and we walked briskly along at the foot of the mountain
in the direction of our encampment, which was about four miles
distant.
We had just arrived at an angle of the mountain, which, in passing,
we were now leaving to our left, when we suddenly halted, our
attention having been arrested by the loud roaring of elephants in a
jungle at the foot of the hills, within a quarter of a mile of us. The
roaring continued at intervals, reverberating among the rocks like
distant thunder, till it at length died away to stillness.
We soon arrived in the vicinity of the sound, and shortly
discovered tracks upon a hard sandy soil, covered with rocks and
overgrown with a low, but tolerably open jungle at the base of the
mountain. Following the tracks, we began to ascend steep flights of
natural steps formed by the successive layers of rock, which girded
the foot of the mountain; these were covered with jungle, interspersed
with large detached masses of granite, which in some places formed
alleys through which the herd had passed. The surface of the ground
being nothing but hard rock, tracking was very difficult, and it took
me a considerable time to follow them up by the pieces of twigs and
crunched leaves, which the elephants had dropped while feeding. I at
length tracked them to a small pool formed by the rain-water in the
hollow of the rock; here they had evidently been drinking only a few
minutes previous, as the tracks of their feet upon the margin of the
pool were still wet. I now went on in advance of the party with great
caution, as I knew that we were not many paces from the herd. Passing
through several passages among the rocks, I came suddenly upon a level
plateau of ground covered with dense lemon grass about twelve feet
high, which was so thick and tangled, that a man could with difficulty
force his way through it. This level space was about two acres in
extent, and was surrounded by jungle upon all sides but one; on this
side, to our right as we entered, the mountain rose in rocky steps,
from the crevices of which, the lemon grass grew in tall tufts.
The instant that I arrived in this spot, I perceived the nap of an
elephant's ear in the high grass, about thirty paces from me, and upon
careful inspection I distinguished two elephants standing close
together. By the rustling of the grass in different places I could see
that the herd was scattered, but I could not make out the elephants
individually, as the grass was above their heads.
I paused for some minutes to consider the best plan of attack; but
the gun-bearers, who were behind me, being in a great state of
excitement, began to whisper to each other, and in arranging their
positions behind their respective masters, they knocked several of the
guns together. In the same moment, the two leading elephants
discovered us, and, throwing their trunks up perpendicularly, they
blew the shrill trumpet of alarm without attempting to retreat.
Several trumpets answered the call immediately from different
positions in the high grass, from which, trunks were thrown up, and
huge heads just appeared in many places, as they endeavoured to
discover the danger which the leaders had announced.
The growl of an elephant is exactly like the rumbling of thunder,
and from their deep lungs the two leader, who had discovered us, kept
up an uninterrupted peal, thus calling the herd together.
Nevertheless, they did not attempt to retreat, but stood gazing
attentively at us with their ears cocked, looking extremely vicious.
In the meantime, we stood perfectly motionless, lest we should scare
them before the whole herd had closed up. In about a minute, a dense
mass of elephants had collected round the two leaders, who were all
gazing at us; and thinking this a favourable moment, I gave the word,
and we pushed towards them through the high grass. A portion of the
herd immediately wheeled round and retreated as we advanced, but five
elephants, including the two who had first discovered us, formed in a
compact line abreast, and thrashing the long grass to the right and
left with their trunks, with ears cocked and tails up, they came
straight at us. We pushed forward to meet them, but they still came on
in a perfect line, till within ten paces of us.
A cloud of smoke hung over the high grass as the rifles cracked in
rapid succession, and the FIVE ELEPHANTS LAY DEAD in the same order as
they had advanced. The spare guns had been beautifully handed; and
running between the carcasses, we got into the lane that the remaining
portion of the herd had made by crushing the high grass in their
retreat. We were up with them in a few moments; down went one! then
another! up he got again, almost immediately recovering from V.'s
shot; down he went again! as I floored him with my last barrel.
I was now unloaded, as I had only two of my double-barrelled No. 10
rifles out that day, but the chase was so exciting that I could not
help following empty-handed, in the hope that some gun-bearer might
put one of V.'s spare guns in my hand. A large elephant and her young
one, who was about three feet and a half high, were retreating up the
rugged side of the mountain, and the mother, instead of protecting the
little one, was soon a hundred paces ahead of him, and safely located
in a thick jungle which covered that portion of the mountain. Being
empty-handed, I soon scrambled up and caught the little fellow by the
tail; but he was so strong that I could not hold him, although I
exerted all my strength, and he dragged me slowly towards the jungle
to which his mother had retreated. V. now came up, and he being
loaded, I told him to keep a look-out for the mother's return, while I
secured my captive, by seizing him by the trunk with one hand and by
the tail with the other; in this manner I could just master him by
throwing my whole weight down the hill, and he began to roar like a
full-grown elephant. The mother was for a wonder faithless to her
charge, and did not return to the little one's assistance. While I was
engaged in securing him, the gun-bearers came up, and at this moment I
observed, at the foot of the hill, another elephant, not quite full
grown, who was retreating through the high grass towards the jungle.
There were no guns charged except one of my No. 10 rifles, which some
one had reloaded; taking this, I left the little 'Ponchy' with V. and
the gun-bearers, and running down the side of the hill, I came up with
the elephant just as he was entering the jungle, and getting the
earshot, I killed him.
We had bagged nine elephants, and only one had escaped from the
herd; this was the female who had forsaken her young one.
Wallace now came up and cut off the tails of those that I had
killed. I had one barrel still loaded, and I was pushing my way
through the tangled grass towards the spot where the five elephants
lay together, when I suddenly heard Wallace shriek out, 'Look out,
sir! Look out!--an elephant's coming!'
I turned round in a moment; and close past Wallace, from the very
spot where the last dead elephant lay, came the very essence and
incarnation of a 'rogue' elephant in full charge. His trunk was thrown
high in the air, his ears were cocked, his tail stood erect above his
back as stiff as a poker, and screaming exactly like the whistle of a
railway engine, he rushed upon me through the high grass with a
velocity that was perfectly wonderful. His eyes flashed as he came on,
and he had singled me out as his victim.
I have often been in dangerous positions, but I never felt so
totally devoid of hope as I did in this instance. The tangled grass
rendered retreat impossible. I had only one barrel loaded, and that
was useless, as the upraised trunk protected his forehead. I felt
myself doomed; the few thoughts that rush through men's minds in such
hopeless positions, flew through mine, and I resolved to wait for him
till he was close upon me, before I fired, hoping that he might lower
his trunk and expose his forehead.
He rushed along at the pace of a horse in full speed; in a few
moments, as the grass flew to the right and left before him, he was
close upon me, but still his trunk was raised and I would not fire.
One second more, and at this headlong pace he was within three feet of
me; down slashed his trunk with the rapidity of a whip-thong! and with
a shrill scream of fury he was upon me!
I fired at that instant; but in a twinkling of an eye I was flying
through the air like a ball from a bat. At the moment of firing. I had
jumped to the left, but he struck me with his tusk in full charge upon
my right thigh, and hurled me eight or ten paces from him. That very
moment he stopped, and, turning round, he beat the grass about with
his trunk, and commenced a strict search for me. I heard him advancing
close to the spot where I lay as still as death, knowing that my last
chance lay in concealment. I heard the grass rustling close to me;
closer and closer he approached, and he at length beat the grass with
his trunk several times exactly above me. I held my breath,
momentarily expecting to feel his ponderous foot upon me. Although I
had not felt the sensation of fear while I had stood opposed to him, I
felt like what I never wish to feel again while he was deliberately
hunting me up. Fortunately I had reserved my fire until the rifle had
almost touched him, for the powder and smoke had nearly blinded him,
and had spoiled his acute power of scent. To my joy I heard the
rustling of the grass grow fainter; again I heard it at a still
greater distance; at length it was gone!
At that time I thought that half my bones were broken, as I was
numbed from head to foot by the force of the blow. His charge can only
be compared to a blow from a railway engine going at twenty miles an
hour.
Not expecting to be able to move, I crept to my hands and knees. To
my delight there were no bones broken, and with a feeling of
thankfulness I stood erect. I with difficulty reached a stream of
water near the spot, in which I bathed my leg, but in a few minutes it
swelled to the size of a man's waist. In this spot everyone had
congregated, and were loading their guns, but the rogue had escaped.
My cap and rifle were now hunted for, and they were at length found
near the spot where I had been caught. The elephant had trodden on the
stock of the rifle, and it bears the marks of his foot to this day.
In a few minutes I was unable to move. We therefore sent to the
tent for the horses, and arrived at 6 P.M., having had a hard day's
work from 5 A.M. without food.
On arrival at the tent we found Banda and the trackers.
There could not be a better exemplification of a rogue than in this
case. A short distance apart from the herd, he had concealed himself
in the jungle, from which position he had witnessed the destruction of
his mates. He had not stirred a foot until he saw us totally
unprepared, when he instantly seized the opportunity and dashed out
upon me. If I had attempted to run from him, I should have been
killed, as he would have struck me in the back; my only chance was in
the course which I pursued--to wait quietly until he was just over me,
and then to jump on one side; he thus struck me on the thickest part
of the thigh instead of striking me in the stomach, which he must have
done had I remained in my first position; this would have killed me on
the spot.
I passed an uncomfortable night, my leg being very painful and
covered with wet bandages of vinegar and water. The bruise came out
from my ankle to my hip; the skin was broken where the tush had struck
me, and the blood had started under the skin over a surface of nearly
a foot, making the bruise a bright purple, and giving the whole affair
a most unpleasant appearance. The next morning I could not move my
leg, which felt like a sack of sand, and was perfectly numbed;
however, I kept on a succession of cold lotions, and after breakfast I
was assisted upon my horse, and we moved the encampment to Nielgalla.
On the following day I could just manage to hobble along, my leg being
at least double its usual size, and threatening to spoil my sport for
the whole trip.
We were seated at breakfast when a native came in, bringing
intelligence of a herd of elephants about four miles distant. I was
not in a state for shooting, but I resolved to mount my steady old
horse Jack, and take my chance of revenge for my mishap. The guns were
accordingly loaded, and we started.
We had ridden through the Park for about three miles, and had just
turned round the corner of a patch of jungle, when we came suddenly
upon a large rogue elephant, who was standing in the open, facing us
at about seventy yards. The moment that he saw the horses he turned
sharp round, and retreated to a long belt of fine open forest which
was close behind him. There was no resisting the invitation upon such
favourable ground, and immediately dismounting, we followed him. I now
found that my leg was nearly useless, and I could only move at a
snail's pace, and even then with great pain. Upon reaching the forest,
we found that the rogue had decamped, not wishing to meet us in such
advantageous ground. We followed his tracks for a few hundred yards
through the wood, till we suddenly emerged upon a large tract of high
lemon grass. Into this, our cunning foe had retreated, and with my
decreased powers of locomotion, I did not wish to pursue him farther.
I was at length persuaded by Banda to make a trial, and we accordingly
left the track, and pushed our way through the high grass to some
rising ground, from which we could look over the surface of waving
vegetation, and find out the exact position of the elephant. While
forcing our way through the dense mass, I momentarily expected to hear
the rush of the rogue charging down upon us, and I was glad to find
myself at length safe in the position we had steered for.
Upon scanning the surface of the grass, I distinguished the
elephant immediately; he was standing close to the edge of the jungle
in the high grass facing us, at about 150 yards distant. He was a
picture of intense excitement and attention, and was evidently waiting
for us. In the position that we now occupied, we unavoidably gave him
the wind, and he of course almost immediately discovered us. Giving
two or three shrill trumpets, he paced quickly to and fro before the
jungle, as though he were guarding the entrance. To enter the high
grass to attack him, would have been folly, as he was fully prepared,
and when once in the tangled mass we could not have seen him until he
was upon us; we therefore amused ourselves for about ten minutes by
shouting at him. During this time he continued pacing backwards and
forwards, screaming almost without intermission; and having suddenly
made up his mind to stand this bullying no longer, he threw his trunk
up in the air and charged straight at us. The dust flew like smoke
from the dry grass as he rushed through it; but we were well prepared
to receive him. Not wishing him to come to close quarters with my
useless leg, I gave him a shot with my two-ounce rifle, at about 120
paces. It did not even check him, but it had the effect of making him
lower his trunk, and he came on at undiminished speed. Taking the
four-ounce rifle from Wallace, I heard the crack of the ball as it
entered his head at about 100 yards. He was down! A general shout of
exclamation rose from Banda and all the gun-bearers. I reloaded the
four-ounce immediately, and the ball was just rammed home when we
heard the supposed dead elephant roaring on the ground. In another
moment he regained his legs and stood with his broadside exposed to
us, stunned with the heavy ball in his head. Taking a steady shot at
his shoulder, I gave him a second dose of the four- ounce; he reeled
to and fro and staggered into the jungle. I dared not follow him in my
crippled state, and we returned to the horses; but the next day he was
found dead by the natives.
I much feared that the shot fired might have disturbed the herd of
elephants, as they were reported to be not far distant; this, however,
proved not to be the case, as we met the watchers about a mile farther
on, who reported the herd to be perfectly undisturbed, but located in
the everlasting lemon grass. At this time the greater portion of the
Park was a mass of this abominable grass, and there was no chance of
getting the elephants in any other position, this serving them at the
same time for both food and shelter. How they can eat it is a puzzle;
it is as sharp as a knife, and as coarse as a file, with a flavour of
the most pungent lemon peel.
We shortly arrived at the spot in which the herd was concealed; it
was a gentle slope covered with dense lemon grass, terminated by a
jungle. We could just distinguish the tops of the elephants' heads in
several places, and, having dismounted, we carefully entered the
grass, and crept towards the nearest elephants. The herd was much
scattered, but there were five elephants close to each other, and we
made towards these, Banda leading the way. My only chance of making a
bag lay in the first onset; I therefore cautioned Wallace to have the
spare guns handed with extra diligence, and we crept up to our game.
There were two elephants facing us, but we stalked them so carefully
through the high grass that we got within four paces of them before
they discovered us; they cocked their ears for an instant, and both
rolled over at the same moment to the front shot. Away dashed the
herd, trumpeting and screaming as they rushed through the high grass.
For a few moments my game leg grew quite lively, as it was all
downhill work, and I caught up an elephant and killed him with the
left-hand barrel. Getting a spare gun, I was lucky enough to get
between two elephants who were running abreast towards the jungle, and
I bagged them by a right and left shot. Off went the herd at a
slapping pace through the jungle, V. pitching it into them, but
unfortunately to very little purpose, as they had closed up and formed
a barrier of sterns; thus we could not get a good shot. For about a
quarter of a mile I managed to hobble along, carried away by the
excitement of the chase, through jungles, hollows, and small glades,
till my leg, which had lost all feeling, suddenly gave way, and I lay
sprawling on my face, incapable of going a step farther. I had killed
four elephants; six had been killed altogether. It was very bad luck,
as the herd consisted of eleven; but the ground was very unfavourable,
and my leg gave way when it was most required.
A few days after this, the tents were pitched on the banks of the
broad river of Pattapalaar, about eight miles beyond Nielgalla.
Elephants were very scarce, and the only chance of getting them, was
to work hard. We were on horseback at break of day, and having forded
the river, we rode silently through plain and forest in search of
tracks. We refused every shot at deer, lest we should disturb the
country, and scare away the elephants.
We had ridden for some distance upon an elephant path, through a
tolerably open forest at the foot of a range of rocky mountains, when
Banda, who was some paces in advance, suddenly sprang back again,
crying, 'Wallaha! wallaha!' (Bears! bears!) We were off our horses in
a moment, but I fell sprawling upon my back, my leg being so powerless
and numbed that I could not feel when I touched the ground. I
recovered myself just in time to see a bear waddling along through the
jungle, and I pushed after him in pursuit at my best pace. V. had
disappeared in the jungle in pursuit of another bear, and I presently
heard two or three shots. In the meantime my game had slackened speed
to a careless kind of swaggering walk; and the underwood being rather
thick, I was determined to get close to him before I fired, as I knew
that I could not follow him far, and my success would therefore depend
upon the first shot. I overtook him in a few moments, and I was
following within a foot of his tail, waiting for a chance for a clear
shot between his shoulders, as the thick underwood parted above his
back, when he suddenly sprang round, and with a fierce roar, he leaped
upon the muzzle of the gun. I fired both barrels into him as he threw
his whole weight against it, and I rolled him over in a confused cloud
of smoke and crackling bushes. In a moment he was on his legs again,
but going off through the thick underwood at a pace that in my
helpless state soon left me far behind. His state must have been far
from enviable, as he left portions of his entrails all along his
track. V. had killed his bear; he weighed about two hundred pounds,
and measured fourteen inches round the arm, without his hide.
The Ceylon bear is a most savage animal, constantly attacking men
without the slightest provocation. I have seen many natives
frightfully disfigured by the attacks of bears, which they dread more
than any other animal. Nothing would induce my trackers to follow up
the wounded beast. I followed him as far as I could, but my useless
limb soon gave way, and I was obliged to give him up. I once saw a
Moorman, who was a fine powerful fellow and an excellent
elephant-tracker, who had a narrow escape from a bear. He was cutting
bamboos with a catty or kind of bill-hook, when one of these animals
descended from a tree just above him and immediately attacked him. The
man instinctively threw his left arm forward to receive the bear, who
seized it in his mouth and bit the thumb completely off, lacerating
the arm and wrist at the same time in a frightful manner. With one
blow of the bill-hook the Moorman cleft the bear's skull to the teeth,
at the same time gashing his own arm to the bone by the force of the
blow; and he never afterwards recovered the proper use of the limb.
The Ceylon bear feeds upon almost anything that offers; he eats
honey, ants, fruit, roots, and flesh whenever he can procure it: his
muscular power is enormous, and he exerts both teeth and claws in his
attack. They are very numerous in Ceylon, although they are seldom met
with in any number, owing to their nocturnal habits, which attract
them to their caves at break of day.
After strolling over the country for some miles, we came upon fresh
elephant-tracks in high grass, which we immediately followed up. In
the course of half an hour, after tracking them for about two miles
through open country, we entered a fine forest, in which the herd had
retired; but our hopes of meeting them in this favourable ground were
suddenly damped by arriving at a dense chenar jungle in the very heart
of the forest. This chenar extended for some acres, and rose like a
hedge, forming a sudden wall of thorns, which effectually checked our
advance. The elephants had retired to this secure retreat, and having
winded us they kept up an uninterrupted roaring. I never heard such a
musical herd: the deep and thunder-like growls, combined with the
shrill trumpet and loud roars, as they all joined in concert, had a
particularly grand effect, and a novice in elephant-shooting would
have felt his heart beat in double time.
There was a rogue consorting with this herd, and it was necessary
to be particularly cautious in the attack. It was impossible to enter
such thick jungle, and I've waited for some hours in the forest, close
to the edge of the chenar, trying every dodge in vain to induce the
herd to quit their stronghold. They were continually on the QUI VIVE.
Sometimes a tremendous rush would be heard in the thick jungle as the
herd would charge towards us; but they invariably stopped just upon
the borders, and would not venture into the open forest. On one
occasion I thought we had them: they rushed to the edge of the thick
jungle, and suddenly filed off to the left and halted in a line within
a few feet of the forest. We were within six paces of them, concealed
behind the trunks of several large trees, from which we could discover
the dim forms of six elephants through the screen of thorns, which had
a similar effect to that produced by looking through a gauze veil. For
some moments they stood in an attitude of intense attention, and I
momentarily expected them to break cover, as we were perfectly still
and motionless in our concealed position. Suddenly they winded us, and
whisked round to the thick jungle, disappearing like magic.
We now tried the effect of bullying, and we sent men to different
parts of the jungle to shout and fire guns; this stirred up the wrath
of the rogue, and he suddenly burst from the thick jungle and rushed
into the open forest right among us. We were both standing behind the
trees; and the gun-bearers, with the exception of Wallace, had thrown
the guns down and had bolted up the trees when they heard the rush of
the elephant through the jungle; thus, upon his arrival in the open
forest, he could see no one, and he stood gazing about him with his
ears cocked and tail on end, not knowing exactly what to do, but ready
to charge the first person that showed himself. He was an immense
elephant, being one of the largest that I have ever seen, and he had
as fine an expression of vice in his appearance as any rogue could
wish for. Suddenly he turned his trunk towards us, but he was puzzled
as to the exact position of any one, as so many men were scattered
among the trees. I was within twenty yards of him, and he turned his
head towards the spot, and was just on the move forward, when I
anticipated his intentions by running up to him and knocking him over
by a shot in the forehead, which killed him. Unfortunately the herd at
the same moment broke cover on the opposite side of the jungle, and
escaped without a shot being fired at them. It was nearly dusk, and we
were five miles from the tent; we were therefore obliged to give them
up.
The next morning, at daybreak, I rode out with the greyhounds,
Killbuck, Bran and Lena, to kill a deer. The lemon grass was so high
at this season that the dogs had no chance, and I was therefore
compelled to pick out some spot which was free from this grass, and
employ beaters to drive the jungles, instead of stalking the deer in
the usual manner. I tracked a herd of deer into a large detached piece
of cover, and, sending the beaters round to the opposite side, I
posted myself with the greyhounds in the slips behind a clump of
trees, upon a small plain of low, soft grass.
The noise of the beaters approached nearer and nearer, and
presently two splendid bucks with beautiful antlers rushed from the
jungle about two hundred yards from me, and scudded over the plain. I
slipped the greyhounds, and away they went in full fly, bounding over
the soft turf in grand style.
Mounting old Jack, who was standing at my elbow, and giving him the
spur, I rode after them. It was a splendid course; the two bucks
separated, Bran and Lena taking after one, and Killbuck following the
other in his usual dashing manner. Away they went with wonderful
speed, the bucks constantly doubling to throw the dogs out; but
Killbuck never overshot his game, and as the buck doubled, he was
round after him in fine style. I now followed him, leaving Bran and
Lena to do their best, and at a killing pace we crossed the
plain--through a narrow belt of trees, down a stony hollow, over
another plain, through a small jungle, on entering which Killbuck was
within a few yards of the buck's haunches.
Now, old Jack is as fond of the sport as I am, and he kept up the
chase in good style; but just as we were flying through some high
lemon grass, a fallen tree, which was concealed beneath, tripped up
the horse's fore legs, and in an instant he was on his nose, turning a
complete somersault. I was pitched some yards, and upon instinctively
mounting again, the sparks were dancing in my eyes for some seconds
before I recovered myself, as we continued the chase with unabated
speed.
We pressed along up some rising ground, having lost sight of the
game; and as we reached the top of the hill I looked around and saw
the buck at bay about a hundred paces from me, upon fine level ground,
fighting face to face with the dog, who sprang boldly at his head.
That buck was a noble fellow; he rushed at the dog, and they met like
knights in a tournament; but it was murderous work; he received the
reckless hound upon his sharp antlers and bored him to the ground. In
another instant Killbuck had recovered himself, and he again came in
full fly at the buck's face with wonderful courage; again the buck
rushed forward to meet him, and once more the pointed antlers pinned
the dog, and the buck, following up his charge, rolled him over and
over for some yards.
By this time I had galloped up, and I was within a few feet of the
buck, when he suddenly sprang round with the evident intention of
charging the horse. In the same moment Killbuck seized the
opportunity, and the buck plunged violently upon the ground, with the
staunch dog hanging upon his throat. I, jumped off my horse, and the
buck fell dead by a thrust with the knife behind the shoulder.
I now examined the dog; he was wounded in several places, but as he
bled but little, I hoped that his apparent exhaustion arose more from
the fatigue of the fight than from any severe injury.
At this time Bran and Lena came up; they had lost their deer in
some high lemon grass, but they also were both wounded by the buck's
horns. I now put Killbuck and Lena together in the slips, and with the
buck, carried upon cross-poles by six men, I rode towards the tent. I
had not proceeded far when the man who was leading the greyhounds
behind my horse suddenly cried out, and on turning round I saw
Killbuck lying on the ground. I was at his side in a moment, and I
released his neck from the slips. It was too late; his languid head
fell heavily upon the earth; he gave me one parting look, and after a
few faint gasps he was gone.
I could hardly believe he was dead. Taking off my cap, I ran to a
little stream and brought some water, which I threw in his face; but
his teeth were set, his eyes were glazed, and the best and truest dog
that was ever born was dead. Poor Killbuck! he had died like a hero,
and though I grieved over him, I could not have wished him a more
glorious death.
I was obliged to open him to discover the real injury. I had little
thought that the knife which had so often come to his assistance was
destined to so sad a task. His lungs were pierced through by the
deer's horns in two places, and he had died of sudden suffocation by
internal haemorrhage. A large hollow tree grew close to the spot; in
this I buried him. The stag's antlers now hang in the hall, a
melancholy but glorious memento of poor Killbuck.
In a few days my leg had so much improved that I could again use it
without much inconvenience; I therefore determined to pay the cave a
visit, as I felt convinced that elephants would be more numerous in
that neighbourhood. We started in the cool of the afternoon, as the
distance was not more than eight miles from our encampment. We had
proceeded about half-way, and our horses were picking their way with
difficulty over some rocky hills, when we came upon fresh tracks of a
herd of elephants. It was too late to go after them that evening; we
therefore pitched the tent upon the spot, resolving to track them up
at daybreak on the following morning.
We were accordingly out before sunrise, and came upon the tracks
within a mile of the tent. We at length discovered the herd upon the
summit of a steep rocky hill. There were no trees in this part, and we
carefully ascended the hill, stepping from rock to rock and
occasionally concealing ourselves in the high grass, till we at length
stood at the very feet of the elephants, two of whom were standing
upon a large platform of rock, about seven feet above us. They were so
high above us that I was obliged to aim about four inches down the
trunk, so that the ball should reach the brain in an upward direction;
this shot proved successful, and killed him. V., who had not taken
this precaution, missed; and the whole herd of eight elephants started
off in full retreat.
The rocks were so steep that it occupied some time in climbing over
the top of the hill; upon reaching which, we saw the elephants going
off at great speed, with a start of about two hundred paces. The
ground was perfectly open, covered by small loose rocks free from
grass, and the chase commenced in good earnest. With the elephants in
view the whole time, and going at a great pace, a mile was run without
the possibility of firing a shot. By this time we had arrived at an
undulating country covered with small rocks, and grass about four feet
high, which made the pace dreadfully fatiguing; still we dared not
slacken the speed for an instant lest the elephants should distance
us. This was the time for rifles to tell, although their weight (15
lbs.) was rather trying in so long and fast a run. I was within eighty
paces of the herd, and I could not decrease the distance by a single
yard. I halted and took a shot at the ear of a large elephant in the
middle of the herd. The shot so stunned him that, instead of going on
straight, he kept turning round and round as though running after his
tail; this threw the herd into confusion, and some ran to the right
and others to the left, across some steep hollows. Running up to my
wounded elephant, I extinguished him with my remaining barrel; and
getting a spare rifle from Wallace, who was the only gun-bearer who
had kept up, I floored another elephant, who was ascending the
opposite side of a hollow about forty yards off: this fellow took two
shots, and accordingly I was left unloaded. V. had made good play with
the rifles as the herd was crossing the hollow, and he had killed
three, making six bagged in all. The remaining two elephants reached a
thick jungle and escaped.
We returned to the tent, and after a bath we sat down with a
glorious appetite to breakfast, having bagged six elephants before
seven o'clock A.M.
In the afternoon we went to the cave and sent out trackers. We were
very hard up for provisions in this place: there were no deer in the
neighbourhood, and we lived upon squirrels and parrots, both of which
are excellent eating, but not very substantial fare.
The whole of this part of the country was one dark mass of high
lemon grass, which, not having been burnt, was a tangled mixture of
yellow stalks and sharp blades, that completely destroyed the pleasure
of shooting.
In this unfavourable ground we found a herd of ten elephants, and
after waiting for some time in the hope of their feeding into a better
country, we lost all patience and resolved to go in at them and do the
best we could. It was late in the afternoon, and the herd, who were
well aware of our position, had all closed up in a dense body, and
with their trunks thrown up they were trumpeting and screaming as
though to challenge us to the attack.
Pushing our way through the high grass, we got within six paces of
the elephants before they attempted to turn, and the heavy battery
opened upon them in fine style. Levelling the grass in their path,
they rushed through it in a headlong retreat, V. keeping on one flank,
while I took the other; and a race commenced, which continued for
about half a mile at full speed, the greater part of this distance
being up hill. None of these elephants proved restive; and on arriving
at thick jungle two only entered out of the ten that had composed the
herd; the remaining eight lay here and there along the line of the
hunt.
Out of four herds and three rogues fired at we had bagged
thirty-one elephants in a few days' shooting. My mishap on the first
day had much destroyed the pleasure of the sport, as the exercise was
too much for my wounded leg, which did not recover from the feeling of
numbness for some months.
Excitement of Elephant-shooting--An Unexpected Visitor--A Long Run
with a Buck--Hard Work Rewarded--A Glorious Bay--End of a Hard Day's
Work--Bee-hunters--Disasters of Elk-hunting--Bran Wounded--'Old
Smut's' Buck--Boar at Hackgalla--Death of `Old Smut'--Scenery from the
Perewelle Mountains--Diabolical Death of 'Merriman'--Scene of the
Murder.
In describing so many incidents in elephant-shooting it is
difficult to convey a just idea of the true grandeur of the sport: it
reads too easy. A certain number are killed out of a herd after an
animated chase, and the description of the hunt details the amount of
slaughter, but cannot possibly explain the peculiar excitement which
attends elephant-shooting beyond all other sports. The size of the
animal is so disproportionate to that of the hunter that the effect of
a large herd of these monsters flying before a single man would be
almost ridiculous could the chase be witnessed by some casual observer
who was proof against the excitement of the sport. The effect of a
really good elephant shot in the pursuit of a herd over open country
is very fine. With such weapons as the double-barrelled No. 10 rifles
a shot is seldom wasted; and during the chase, an elephant drops from
the herd at every puff of smoke. It is a curious sight, and one of the
grandest in the world, to see a fine rogue elephant knocked over in
full charge. His onset appears so irresistible, and the majesty of his
form so overwhelming, that I have frequently almost mistrusted the
power of man over such a beast; but one shot well placed, with a heavy
charge of powder behind the ball, reduces him in an instant to a mere
heap of flesh.
One of the most disgusting sights is a dead elephant four or five
days after the fatal shot. In a tropical climate, where decomposition
proceeds with such wonderful rapidity, the effect of the sun upon such
a mass can be readily understood. The gas generated in the inside
distends the carcass to an enormous size, until it at length bursts
and becomes in a few hours afterwards one living heap of maggots.
Three weeks after an elephant is killed, nothing remains but his bones
and a small heap of dried cases, from which the flies have emerged
when the time arrived for them to change from the form of maggots. The
sight of the largest of the animal creation being thus reduced from
life to nothingness within so short a space of time is an instance of
the perishable tenure of mortality which cannot fail to strike the
most unthinking. The majesty, the power, and the sagacity of the
enormous beast are scattered in the myriads of flies which have fed
upon him.
It is a delightful change after a sporting trip of a few weeks in
the hot climates to return again to the cool and even temperature of
Newera Ellia. The tent is a pleasant dwelling when no other can be
obtained, but the comfort of a good house is never so much appreciated
as on the return from the jungle.
One great pleasure in the hunting at Newera Ellia is the ease with
which it is obtained. In fact, the sport lies at the very door. This
may be said to be literally true and not a facon de parler, as I once
killed an elk that jumped through a window. It was a singular
incident. The hounds found three elk at the same time on the mountain
at the back of the hotel at Newera Ellia. The pack divided: several
hounds were lost for two days, having taken their elk to an impossible
country, and the rest of the pack concentrated upon a doe, with the
exception of old Smut, who had another elk all to himself. This elk,
which was a large doe, he brought down from the top of the mountain to
the back of the hotel, just as we had killed the other, which the pack
had brought to the same place. A great number of persons were standing
in the hotel yard to view the sport, when old Smut and his game
appeared, rushing in full fly through the crowd. The elk was so
bothered and headed that she went through the back door of the hotel
at full gallop, and Smut, with his characteristic sagacity,
immediately bolted round to the front of the house, naturally
concluding that if she went in at the back door she must come out at
the front. He was perfectly right; the old dog stood on the lawn
before the hotel, watching the house with great eagerness. In the
meantime the elk was galloping from room to room in the hotel, chased
by a crowd of people, until she at length took refuge in a lady's
bedroom, from which there was no exit, as the window was closed. The
crash of glass may be imagined as an animal as large as a pony leaped
through it; but old Smut was ready for her, and after a chase of a few
yards he pulled her down. This is the only instance that I have ever
known of an elk entering a building, although it is a common
occurrence with hunted deer in England. An elk found on the top of
Pedro talla Galla, which rises from the plain of Newera Ellia, will
generally run straight down the mountain, and, unless headed, he will
frequently come to bay in the river close to the hotel, which is
situated at the foot of the mountain. This, however, is not a rule
without an exception, as the elk on some occasions takes a totally
different direction, and gives a hard day's work. It was on July 27,
1852, that I had a run of this kind. It was six A.M. when my youngest
brother and I started from the foot of Pedro to ascend the mountain.
The path is three miles long, through jungle the whole way to the
summit. There were fresh tracks of elk near the top of the mountain;
the dew lay heavily upon the leaves, and the scent was evidently
strong, as Merriman and Ploughboy, the two leading hounds, dashed off
upon it, followed by the whole pack. In a few minutes we heard them in
full cry about a quarter of a mile from us, going straight down the
hill. Giving them a good holloa, we started off down the path at a
round pace, and in less than a quarter of an hour we were at the foot
of the mountain on the plain. Here we found a number of people who had
headed the elk (a fine buck) just as he was breaking cover, and he had
turned back, taking off to some other line of country at a great pace,
as we could not hear even a whimper. This was enough to make a saint
swear, and, blessing heartily the fellows who had headed him, we
turned back and retraced our steps up the mountain to listen for the
cry of the pack among the numerous ravines which furrow the sides.
It was of no use; we could hear nothing but the mocking chirp of
birds and the roaring of the mountain torrents. Not a sign of elk or
dogs. The greyhounds were away with the pack, and knowing that the
dogs would never leave him till dark, we determined not to give them
up. No less than three times in the course of the day did we reascend
the mountain to listen for them in vain. We went up to the top of the
Newera Ellia Pass, in the hope of hearing them in that direction, but
with the same want of success. Miles of ground were gone over to no
purpose. Scaling the steep sides of the mountains at the back of the
barracks, we listened among the deep hollows on the other side, but
again we were disappointed; the sound of the torrents was all that we
could hear.
Descending again to the plain, we procured some breakfast at a
friend's house, and we started for the Matturatta Plains. These plains
are about three or four miles from the barracks; and I had a faint
hope that the buck might have crossed over the mountain, and descended
into this part of the country to a river which flows through the
patinas. We now mounted our horses, having been on foot all the
morning. It was three o'clock P.M., and, with little hope of finding
the dogs, we rode along the path towards the Matturatta Plains.
We had just entered the forest, when we met a young hound returning
along the path with a wound from a buck's horn in the shoulder. There
was now no doubt of the direction, and we galloped along the path
towards the plains as hard as we could go. About half way to the
plains, to my joy I saw an immense buck's track in the path going in
the same direction; the toes were spread wide apart, showing the pace
at which he had been going; and there were dogs' tracks following him,
all as fresh as could be. This was a gladdening sight after a hard
day's work, and we gave a random cheer to encourage any dogs that
might be within hearing, rattling our horses over the ground at their
best speed.
At last the plains were reached. We pulled up our panting steeds,
and strained every nerve to hear the cry of the hounds. The snorting
of the horses prevented our hearing any distant sound, and I gave a
holloa and listened for some answering voice from a dog. Instead of a
sound, Bran and Lucifer suddenly appeared. This was conclusive
evidence that the pack was somewhere in this direction, and we rode
out into the plain and again listened. Hark to old Smut! there was his
deep voice echoing from the opposite hills. Yoick to him, Bran!
forward to him, Lucifer! and away the greyhounds dashed towards the
spot from which the sound proceeded. The plain forms a wide valley,
with a river winding through the centre, and we galloped over the
patinas after the greyhounds in full speed. There was no mistaking the
bay. I could now distinguish Merriman's fine voice in addition to that
of old Smut, and a general chorus of other tongues joined in, till the
woods rang again. The horses knew the sport, and away they went, but
suddenly over went old Jack, belly-deep in a bog, and sent me flying
over his head. There is nothing like companionship in an accident, and
Momus accordingly pitched upon his nose in the same bog, my brother
describing a fine spread-eagle as he sprawled in the soft ground, We
were close to the bay; the horses extricated themselves directly, and
again mounting we rode hard to the spot
The buck was at bay in the river, and the exhausted dogs were
yelling at him from the bank. The instant that we arrived and cheered
them on, old Smut came from the pack towards us with an expression of
perfect delight; he gave himself two or three rolls on the grass, and
then went to the fight like a lion. The buck, however, suddenly
astonished the whole pack by jumping out of the river, and, charging
right through them, he started over the plain towards the jungle, with
the hounds after him. He had refreshed himself by standing for so long
in the cold stream, while the dogs, on the contrary, were nearly worn
out. He reached the jungle with the whole pack at his heels; but after
doubling backward and forward in the forest for about five minutes, we
heard the crash in the bushes as he once more rushed towards the
plain, and he broke cover in fine style, with the three greyhounds,
Bran, Lucifer and Lena, at his haunches. In another instant he was
seized, but he fell with such a shock that it threw the greyhounds
from their hold, and recovering himself with wonderful quickness, he
went down the slope towards the river at a tremendous pace. The
greyhounds overtook him just as he gained the steep bank of the river,
and they all rolled over in a confused crowd into the deep water.
The next moment the buck was seen swimming proudly down the river,
with the pack following him down the stream in full cry. Presently he
gained his footing, and, disdaining farther flight, he turned bravely
upon the hounds.
He was a splendid fellow; his nostrils were distended, his mane was
bristled up, and his eyes flashed, as, rearing to his full height, he
plunged forward and struck the leading dogs under the water. Not a dog
could touch him; one by one they were beaten down and half-drowned
beneath the water. Old Smut was to the front as usual: down the old
dog was beaten, but he reappeared behind the elk's shoulder, and the
next moment he was hanging on his ear. The poor old dog had lost so
many of his teeth in these encounters that he could not keep his hold,
and the buck gave a tremendous spring forward, shaking off the old dog
and charging through the pack, sinking nearly half of them for a few
moments beneath the water. He had too much pluck to fly farther, and,
after wading shoulder-deep against the stream for a few yards, he
turned majestically round, and, facing the baying pack, he seemed
determined to do or die. I never saw a finer animal; there was a proud
look of defiance in his aspect that gave him a most noble appearance;
but at that time he had little pity bestowed upon him.
There he stood ready to meet the first dog. Old Smut had been
thrown to the rear as the buck turned, and Lena came beautifully to
the front, leading the whole pack. There was a shallow sandbank in the
river where the bitch could get a footing, and she dashed across it to
the attack. The buck met her in her-advance by a sudden charge, which
knocked her over and over, but at the same instant Valiant, who is a
fine, powerful dog, made a clever spring forward and pinned the buck
by the ear. There was no shaking him off, and he was immediately
backed up by Ploughboy, who caught the other ear most cleverly. There
the two dogs hung like ear-rings as the buck, rearing up, swung them
to and fro, but could not break their hold. In another moment the
greyhounds were upon him-the whole pack covered him; his beautiful
form was seen alternately rearing from the water with the dogs hanging
upon him in all directions, then struggling in a confused mass nearly
beneath the surface of the stream. He was a brave fellow, and had
fought nobly, but there was no hope for him, and we put an end to the
fight with the hunting-knife.
It was past four o'clock P.M., and he had been found at seven A.M.,
but the conclusion fully repaid us for the day's work. The actual
distance run by the buck was not above eight miles, but we had gone
about twenty during the day, the greater portion of which was over
most fatiguing ground.
On an open country an elk would never be caught without greyhounds
until he had run fifteen or twenty miles. The dense jungles fatigue
him as he ploughs his way through them, and thus forms a path for the
dogs behind him. How he can move in some of these jungles is an
enigma; a horse would break his legs, and, in fact, could not stir in
places through which an elk passes in full gallop.
The principal underwood in the mountain districts of Ceylon is the
'nillho.' This is a perfectly straight stem, from twelve to twenty
feet in length, and about an inch and a half in diameter, having no
branches except a few small arms at the top, which are covered with
large leaves. This plant, in proportion to its size, grows as close as
corn in a field, and forms a dense jungle most difficult to penetrate.
When the jungles are in this state, the elk is at a disadvantage, as
the immense exertion required to break his way through this mass soon
fatigues him, and forces him to come to bay.
Every seven years this 'nillho' blossoms. The jungles are then
neither more nor less than vast bouquets of bright purple and white
flowers; the perfume is delicious, and swarms of bees migrate from
other countries to make their harvest of honey. The quantity collected
is extraordinary. The bee-hunters start from the low country, and
spend weeks in the jungle in collecting the honey and wax. When
looking over an immense tract of forest from some elevated point, the
thin blue lines of smoke may be seen rising in many directions,
marking the sites of the bee-hunters fires. Their method of taking the
honey is simple enough. The bees' nests hang from the boughs of the
trees, and a man ascends with a torch of green leaves, which creates a
dense smoke. He approaches the nest and smokes off the swarm, which,
on quitting the exterior of the comb, exposes a beautiful circular
mass of honey and wax, generally about eighteen inches in diameter and
six inches thick. The bee-hunter being provided with vessels formed
from the rind of the gourd attached to ropes, now cuts up the comb and
fills his chatties, lowering them down to his companions below.
When the blossom of the nillho fades, the seed forms; this is a
sweet little kernel, with the flavour of a nut. The bees now leave the
country, and the jungles suddenly swarm, as though by magic, with
pigeons, jungle-fowl, and rats. At length the seed is shed and the
nillho dies.
The jungles then have a curious appearance. The underwood being
dead, the forest-trees rise from a mass of dry sticks like thin
hop-poles. The roots of these plants very soon decay, and a few weeks
of high wind, howling through the forest, levels the whole mass,
leaving the trees standing free from underwood. The appearance of the
ground can now be imagined-a perfect chaos of dead sticks and poles,
piled one on the other, in every direction, to a depth of between two
and three feet. It can only be compared to a mass of hurdles being
laid in a heap. The young nillho grows rapidly through this,
concealing the mass of dead sticks beneath, and forms a tangled
barrier which checks both dogs and man. With tough gaiters to guard
the shins, we break through by main force and weight, and the dogs
scramble sometimes over, sometimes under the surface. At this period
the elk are in great numbers, as they feed with great avidity upon the
succulent young nillho. The dogs are now at a disadvantage. While they
are scrambling with difficulty through this mass of half-rotten
sticks, the elk bounds over it with ease, leaving no path behind him,
as he clears it by leaps, and does not exhaust himself by bursting
through it. He now constantly escapes, and leaves the pack miles
behind; the best hounds follow him, but with such a start he leads
them into the unknown depths of the jungles, over high mountains and
across deep ravines, from which the lost dogs frequently never return.
There can be no question that it is a bad country for hunting at
all times, as the mass of forest is so disproportionate to the
patinas; but, on the other hand, were the forests of smaller size
there would be less game. Elk-hunting is, on the whole, fine sport.
There are many disappointments constantly occurring, but these must
happen in all sports. The only important drawback to the pleasure of
elk-hunting is the constant loss of the dogs. The best are always sure
to go. What with deaths by boars, leopards, elk, and stray hounds, the
pack is with difficulty maintained. Puppies are constantly lost in the
commencement of their training by straying too far into the jungle,
and sometimes by reckless valour. I lost a fine young greyhound,
Lancer, own brother to Lucifer, in this way. It was his first day with
the pack.
We found a buck who came to bay in a deep rocky torrent, where the
dogs had no chance with him, and he amused himself by striking them
under water at his pleasure. He at length took his stand among some
large rocks, between which the torrent rushed with great rapidity
previous to its descent over a fall of sixty feet.
In this impregnable position young Lancer chose to distinguish
himself, and with a beautiful spring he flew straight at the buck's
head; but the elk met him with a tremendous blow with the fore feet,
which broke his back, and the unfortunate Lancer was killed in his
first essay and swept over the waterfall. This buck was at bay for two
hours before he was killed.
A veteran seizer is generally seamed with innumerable scars. Poor
old Bran, who, being a thoroughbred greyhound, is too fine in the skin
for such rough hunting, has been sewn up in so many places that he is
a complete specimen of needlework. If any dog is hurt in a fight with
elk or boar, it is sure to be old Bran. He has now a scar from a wound
that was seven inches in length, which he received from a buck whose
horns are hanging over my door.
I had started with the pack at daybreak, and I was riding down the
Badulla road, about a mile from the kennel, when the whole pack
suddenly took up a scent off the road, and dashed into the jungle in
full cry. The road was enclosed by forest on either side. The pack had
evidently divided upon two elk, as they were running in different
directions.
Starting off down the pass, I soon reached the steep patinas, and I
heard the pack coming down through the jungle which crowns the hills
on the left of the road. There was a crush in the underwood, and the
next moment a fine buck broke cover and went away along the hillside.
Merriman and Tiptoe were the two leading dogs, and they were not fifty
yards behind him. Old smut came tearing along after them, and I gave
Bran a holloa and slipped him immediately. It was a beautiful sight to
see Bran fly along the patina: across the swampy bottom, taking the
broad stream in one bound, and skimming up the hill, he was on the
buck's path in a few minutes, pulling up to him at every stride. He
passed the few dogs that were in chase like lightning, and in a few
more bounds he was at the buck's side. With a dexterous blow, however,
the buck struck him with his fore foot, and sent him rolling down the
hill with a frightful gash in his side. The buck immediately descended
the hillside, and came to bay in a deep pool in the river. Regardless
of his wound, old Bran followed him; Smut and the other dogs joined,
and there was a fine bay, the buck fighting like a hero. The dogs
could not touch him, as he was particularly active with his antlers.
I jumped into the water and gave them a cheer, on which the buck
answered immediately by charging at me. I met him with the point of my
hunting-knife in the nose, which stopped him, and in the same moment
old Smut was hanging on his ear, having pinned him the instant that I
had occupied his attention. Bran had the other ear just as I had given
him the fatal thrust. In a few seconds the struggle was over. Bran's
wound was four inches wide and seven inches long.
My brother had a pretty run with the doe with the other half of the
pack, and we returned home by eight A.M., having killed two elk.
Daybreak is the proper time to be upon the ground for elk-hunting.
At this hour they have only just retired to the jungle after their
night's wandering on the patinas, and the hounds take up a fresh
scent, and save the huntsman the trouble of entering the jungle. At a
later hour the elk have retired so far into the jungle that much time
is lost in finding them, and they are not so likely to break cover as
when they are just on the edge of the forest. I had overslept myself
one morning when I ought to have been particularly early, as we
intended to hunt at the Matturatta Plains, a distance of six miles.
The scent was bad, and the sun was excessively hot; the dogs were
tired and languid. It was two o'clock P.M., and we had not found, and
we were returning through the forest homewards, having made up our
minds for a blank day.
Suddenly I thought I heard a deep voice at a great distance; it
might have been fancy, but I listened again. I counted the dogs, and
old Smut was missing. There was no mistaking his voice when at bay,
and I now heard him distinctly in the distance. Running towards the
sound through fine open forests, we soon arrived on the Matturatta
Plains. The whole pack now heard the old dog distinctly, and they
rushed to the sound across the patinas. There was Smut, sure enough,
with a fine buck at bay in the river, which he had found and brought
to bay single-handed.
The instant that the pack joined him, the buck broke his bay, and,
leaping up the bank, he gave a beautiful run over the patinas, with
the whole pack after him, and Bran a hundred paces in advance of the
other dogs, pulling up to him with murderous intent. Just as I thought
that Bran would have him, a sudden kick threw the dog over, but he
quickly recovered himself, and again came to the front, and this time
he seized the buck by the ear, but, this giving way, he lost his hold
and again was kicked over. This had checked the elk's speed for some
seconds, and the other dogs were fast closing up, seeing which, the
buck immediately altered his course for the river, and took to water
in a deep pool. Down came old Smut after him, and in a few moments
there was a beautiful chorus, as the whole pack had him at bay.
The river went through a deep gorge, and I was obliged to sit down
and slide for about thirty yards, checking a too rapid descent by
holding on to the rank grass. On arriving at the river, I could at
first see nothing for the high grass and bushes which grew upon the
bank, but the din of the bay was just below me. Sliding through the
tangled underwood, I dropped into deep water, and found myself
swimming about with the buck and dogs around me. Smut and Bran had him
by the ears, and a thrust with the knife finished him.
However great the excitement may be during the actual hunting,
there is a degree of monotony in the recital of so many scenes of the
same character that may be fatiguing: I shall therefore close the
description of these mountain sports with the death of the old hero
Smut, and the loss of the best hound, Merriman, both of whom have left
a blank in the pack not easily filled.
On October 16, 1852, I started with a very short pack. Lucifer was
left in the kennel lame; Lena was at home with her pups; and several
other dogs were sick. Smut and Bran were the only two seizers out that
day, and, being short-handed, I determined to hunt in the more green
country at the foot of Hackgalla mountain.
My brother and I entered the jungle with the dogs, and before we
had proceeded a hundred yards we heard a fierce bay, every dog having
joined. The bay was not a quarter of a mile distant, and we were
puzzled as to the character of the game: whatever it was, it had stood
to bay without a run. Returning to the patina, in which position we
could distinctly assure ourselves of the direction, we heard the bay
broken, and a slow run commenced. The next instant Bran came hobbling
out of the jungle covered with blood, which streamed from a frightful
gash in his hind-quarters. There was no more doubt remaining as to the
game at bay; I it was an enormous boar.
Bran was completely HORS DE COMBAT; and Smut, having lost nearly
all his teeth, was of no use singlehanded with such an enemy. We had
no seizers to depend upon, and the boar again stood to bay in a thick
jungle.
I happened to have a rifle with me that morning, as I had noticed
fresh elephant-tracks in the neighbourhood a few days previous, and
hoping to be able to shoot the boar, we entered the jungle and
approached the scene of the bay.
When within twenty paces of the spot I heard his fierce grunting as
he charged right and left into the baying pack.* (*It was impossible
to call the hounds off their game; therefore the only chance lay in
the boar being seized, when I could have immediately rushed in with
the knife. It was thus necessary to cheer the pack to the attack,
although a cruel alternative.) In vain I cheered them on. I heard no
signs of his being seized, but the fierce barking of old Smut, mingled
with the savage grunts of the boar, and the occasional cry of a
wounded dog, explained the hopeless nature of the contest. Again I
cheered them on, and suddenly Smut came up to me from the fight, which
was now not ten paces distant, but perfectly concealed in thick bamboo
underwood. The old dog was covered with blood, his back was bristled
up, and his deep growl betokened his hopeless rage. Poor old dog! he
had his death-wound. He seemed cut nearly in half; a wound fourteen
inches in length from the lower part of the belly passed up his flank,
completely severing the muscle of the hind leg, and extending up to
the spine. His hind leg had the appearance of being nearly off, and he
dragged it after him in its powerless state, and, with a fierce bark,
he rushed upon three legs once more to the fight. Advancing to within
six feet of the boar, I could not even see him, both he and the dogs
were so perfectly concealed by the thick underwood. Suddenly the boar
charged. I jumped upon a small rock and hoped for a shot, but although
he came within three feet of the rifle, I could neither see him nor
could he see me. Had it not been for the fear of killing the dogs, I
would have fired where the bushes were moving, but as it was I could
do nothing. A rifle was useless in such jungle. At length the boar
broke his bay, but again resumed it in a similar secure position.
There was no possibility of assisting the dogs, and he was cutting up
the pack in detail. If Lucifer and Lena had been there we could have
killed him, but without seizers we were helpless in such jungle.
This lasted for an hour, at the expiration of which we managed to
call the dogs off. Old Smut had stuck to him to the last, in spite of
his disabled state. The old dog, perfectly exhausted, crawled out of
the jungle : he had received several additional wounds, including a
severe gash in his throat. He fell from exhaustion, and we made a
litter with two poles and a horsecloth to carry him home. Bran,
Merriman, and Ploughboy were all severely wounded. We were thoroughly
beaten. It was the first time that we had ever been beaten off, and I
trust it may be the last. We returned home with our vanquished and
bleeding pack--Smut borne in his litter by four men--and we arrived at
the kennel a melancholy procession. The pack was disabled for weeks,
as the two leading hounds, Merriman and Ploughboy, were severely
injured.
Poor old Smut lingered for a few days and died. Thus closed his
glorious career of sport, and he left a fame behind him which will
never be forgotten. His son, who is now twelve months old, is the
facsimile of his sire, and often recalls the recollection of the old
dog. I hope he may turn out as good.* (*Killed four months afterwards
by a buck elk.)
Misfortunes never come alone. A few weeks after Smut's death,
Lizzie, an excellent bitch, was killed by a leopard, who wounded
Merriman in the throat, but he being a powerful dog, beat him off and
escaped. Merriman had not long recovered from his wound, when he came
to a lamentable and diabolical end.
On December 24, 1852, we found a buck in the jungles by the Badulla
road. The dead nillho so retarded the pack that the elk got a long
start of the dogs; and stealing down a stream he broke cover, crossed
the Badulla road, ascended the opposite hills, and took to the jungle
before a single hound appeared upon the patina. At length Merriman
came bounding along upon his track, full a hundred yards in advance of
the pack. In a few minutes every dog had disappeared in the opposite
jungle on the elk's path.
This was a part of the country where we invariably lost the dogs,
as they took away across a vast jungle country towards a large and
rapid river situated among stupendous precipices. I had often
endeavoured to find the dogs in this part, but to no purpose; this
day, however, I was determined to follow them if possible. I made a
circuit of about twenty miles down into the low countries, and again
ascending through precipitous jungles, I returned home in the evening,
having only recovered two dogs, which I found on the other side of the
range of mountains, over which the buck had passed. No pen can
describe the beauty of the scenery in this part of the country, but it
is the most frightful locality for hunting that can be imagined. The
high lands suddenly cease; a splendid panoramic view of the low
country extends for thirty miles before the eye; but to descend to
this, precipices of immense depth must be passed; and from a deep
gorge in the mountain, the large river, after a succession of falls,
leaps in one vast plunge of three hundred feet into the abyss below.
This is a stupendous cataract, about a mile below the foot of which is
the village of Perewelle. I passed close to the village, and, having
ascended the steep sides of the mountain, I spent hours in searching
for the pack, but the roaring of the river and the din of the
waterfalls would have drowned the cry of a hundred hounds. Once, and
only once, when halfway up the side of the mountain, I thought I heard
the deep bay of a hound in the river below; then I heard the shout of
a native; but the sound was not repeated, and I thought it might
proceed from the villagers driving their buffaloes. I passed on my
arduous path, little thinking of the tragic fate which at that moment
attended poor Merriman.
The next day all the dogs found their way home to the kennel, with
the exception of Merriman. I was rather anxious at his absence, as he
knew the whole country so thoroughly that he should have been one of
the first dogs to return. I was convinced that the buck had been at
bay in the large river, as I had seen his tracks in several places on
the banks, with dog tracks in company; this, added to the fact of the
two stray dogs being found in the vicinity, convinced me that they had
brought the elk to bay in the river, in which I imagined he had beaten
the dogs off. Two or three days passed away without Merriman's return;
and, knowing him to be the leading hound of the pack, I made up my
mind that he had been washed down a waterfall and killed.
About a week after this had happened, a native came up from the low
country with the intelligence that the dogs had brought the buck to
bay in the river close to the village of Perewelle, and that the
inhabitants had killed the elk and driven the dogs away. The remaining
portion of this man's story filled me with rage and horror. Merriman
would not leave the body of the elk: the natives thought that the dog
might be discovered in their village, which would lead to the
detection of the theft of the elk; they, therefore, tied this
beautiful hound to a tree, knocked his brains out with a hatchet, and
threw his body into the river. This dog was a favourite with everyone
who knew the pack. The very instant that I heard the intelligence, I
took a good stick, and, in company with my brother, three friends, and
my informant, we started to revenge Merriman. Perewelle is twelve
miles from my house across country: it was six P.M. when we started,
and we arrived at a village within two miles of this nest of villains
at half-past eight. Here we got further information, and a man who
volunteered to point out three men who were the principal actors in
murdering the dog. We slept at this village, and, rising at four
o'clock on the following morning, we marched towards Perewelle to
surprise the village and capture the offenders.
It was bright moonlight, and we arrived at the village just at
break of day. The house was pointed out in which the fellows lived; we
immediately surrounded it, and upon entering we seized the offenders.
Upon searching the house we found a quantity of dried venison, a spear
and an axe, covered with blood, with which they had destroyed the
unfortunate dog.
Taking a fine gutta-percha whip, I flogged the culprits soundly;
and we forced them to lead the way and point out the very spot of the
elk's death. They would not confess the dog's murder, although it was
proved against them.
It was a frightful spot, about two hundred paces below the foot of
the great fall. The river, swollen by the late rain, boiled, and
strove with the opposite rocks, lashing itself into foam, and roaring
down countless cataracts, which, though well worthy of the name, sank
into insignificance before the mighty fall which fed them. High above
our heads reared the rocky precipice of a thousand feet in height, the
grassy mountains capped with forest, and I could distinguish the very
spot from which I had heard the shouts of men on the day of Merriman's
death. Had I only known what was taking place below, I might perhaps
have been in time to save the dog.
We found the blood and remains of the offal of the buck, but we, of
course, saw no remains of the dog, as the power of the torrent must
soon have dashed him to atoms against the rocks.
Thus ended poor Merriman: a better hound never lived.
Unfortunately, Ceylon laws are often administered by persons who have
never received a legal education, and the natives escaped without
further punishment than the thrashing they had received. Of this,
however, they had a full dose, which was a sweet sauce to their
venison which they little anticipated.
The few descriptions that I have given of elk-hunting should
introduce a stranger thoroughly to the sport. No one, however, can
enjoy it with as much interest as the owner of the hounds; he knows
the character of every dog in the pack--every voice is familiar to his
ear; he cheers them to the attack; he caresses them for their courage;
they depend upon him for assistance in the struggle, and they mutually
succour each other. This renders the dog a more cherished companion
than he is considered in England, where his qualities are not of so
important a nature; and it makes the loss of a good hound more deeply
felt by his master.
Having thus described the general character of Ceylon sports in all
branches, I shall conclude by a detailed journal of one trip of a few
weeks in the low country, which will at once explain the whole
minutiae of the shooting in the island. This journal is taken from a
small diary which has frequently accompanied me on these excursions,
containing little memoranda which, by many, might be considered
tedious. The daily account of the various incidents of a trip will, at
all events, give a faithful picture of the jungle sports.
ON November 16, 1851 I started from Kandy, accompanied by my
brother, Lieutenant V. Baker,* (*Now Colonel Valentine Baler, late
10th Hussars.) then of the Ceylon Rifle Regiment. Having sent on our
horses from Newera Ellia some days previous, as far as Matille,
sixteen miles from Kandy, we drove there early in the morning, and
breakfasted with F. Layard, Esq., who was then assistant government
agent. It had rained without ceasing during twenty-four hours, and
hoping that the weather might change, we waited at Matille till two
o'clock P.M. The rain still poured in torrents, and giving up all
ideas of fine weather, we started.
The horses were brought round, and old Jack knew as well as I did
that he was starting for a trip, as the tether rope was wound round
his neck, and the horse-cloth was under his saddle. The old horse was
sleek and in fine condition for a journey, and, without further loss
of time, we started for Dambool, a distance of thirty-one miles. Not
wishing to be benighted, we cantered the whole way, and completed the
distance in three hours and a half, as we arrived at Dambool at
half-past five P.M.
I had started off Wallace and all the coolies from Newera Ellia
about a week beforehand; and, having instructed him to leave a small
box with a change of clothes at the Dambool rest-house, I now felt the
benefit of the arrangement. The horsekeepers could not possibly arrive
that night. We therefore cleaned and fed our own horses, and littered
them down with a good bed of paddy straw; and, that being completed,
we turned our attention to curry and rice.
The next morning at break of day we fed the horses. Old Jack was as
fresh as a daisy. The morning was delightfully cloudy, but free from
rain; and we cantered on to Innamalow, five miles from Dambool. Here
we procured a guide to Minneria; and turning off from the main road
into a narrow jungle path, we rode for twenty miles through dense
jungle. Passing the rock of Sigiri, which was formerly used as a fort
by the ancient inhabitants of the country, we gradually entered better
jungle, and at length we emerged upon the beautiful plains of
Minneria. I had ordered Wallace to pitch the encampment in the exact
spot which I had frequently occupied some years ago. I therefore knew
the rendezvous, and directed my course accordingly.
What a change had taken place! A continuous drought had reduced the
lake from its original size of twenty-two miles in circumference to a
mere pool of about four miles in circuit; this was all that remained
of the noble sheet of water around which I had formerly enjoyed so
much sport. From the rich bed of the dry lake sprang a fine silky
grass of about two feet in height, forming a level plain of velvet
green far as the eye could reach. The turf was firm and elastic; the
four o'clock sun had laid aside the fiercest of his rays, and threw a
gentle glow over the scene, which reminded me of an English midsummer
evening. There is so little ground in Ceylon upon which a horse can
gallop without the risks of holes, bogs, and rocks that we could not
resist a canter upon such fine turf; and although the horses had made
a long journey already, they seemed to enjoy a more rapid pace when
they felt the inviting sward beneath their feet. Although every inch
of this country had been familiar to me, I felt some difficulty in
finding the way to the appointed spot, the scene was so changed by the
disappearance of the water.
There were fresh elephants' tracks in many parts of the plain, and
I was just anticipating good sport for the next day, when we suddenly
heard an elephant trumpet in the open forest, which we were skirting.
The next instant I saw eight elephants among the large trees which
bordered the forest. For the moment I thought it was a herd, but I
almost immediately noticed the constrained and unnatural positions in
which they were standing. They were all tied to different trees by the
legs, and upon approaching the spot, we found an encampment of Arabs
and Moormen who had been noosing elephants for sale. We at once saw
that the country was disturbed, as these people had been employed in
catching elephants for some weeks.
After a ride of seven or eight miles along the plain, I discovered
a thin blue line of smoke rising from the edge of a distant forest,
and shortly after, I could distinguish forms moving on the plain in
the same direction. Cantering towards the spot, we found our coolies
and encampment. The tents were pitched under some noble trees, which
effectually excluded every ray of sun. It was the exact spot upon
which I had been accustomed to encamp some years ago. The servants had
received orders when they started from Kandy, to have dinner prepared
at five o'clock on the 17th of November; it was accordingly ready on
our arrival.
Minneria was the appointed rendezvous from which this trip was to
commence. Our party was to consist of the Honourable E. Stuart
Wortley,* (* The present Lord Wharncliffe.)E. Palliser, Esq.,
Lieutenant V. Baker, S.W. Baker. My brother had unfortunately only
fourteen days' leave from his regiment, and he and I had accordingly
hurried on a day in advance of our party, they having still some
preparations to complete in Kandy, and not being quite so well horsed
for a quick journey.
Nothing could be more comfortable than our arrangements. Our
followers and establishment consisted of four personal servants, an
excellent cook, four horse-keepers, fifty coolies, and Wallace; in
all, sixty people. The coolies were all picked men, who gave not the
slightest trouble during the whole trip. We had two tents, one of
which contained four beds and a general dressing-table; the other,
which was my umbrella-shaped tent, was arranged as the diningroom,
with table and chairs. With complete dinner and breakfast services for
four persons, and abundance of table linen, we had everything that
could be wished for. Although I can rough it if necessary, I do not
pretend to prefer discomfort from choice. A little method and a
trifling extra cost will make the jungle trip anything but
uncomfortable. There was nothing wanting in our supplies. We had
sherry, madeira, brandy and curacoa, biscuits, tea, sugar, coffee,
hams, tongues, sauces, pickles, mustard, sardines en huile, tins of
soups and preserved meats and vegetables, currant jelly for venison,
maccaroni, vermicelli, flour, and a variety of other things that add
to the comfort of the jungle, including last, but not least, a double
supply of soap and candles. No one knows the misery should either of
these fail--dirt and darkness is the necessary consequence.
There was a large stock of talipots* (*Large leaves from the
talipot tree.) to form tents for the people and coverings for the
horses in case of rain; in fact, there never was a trip more happily
planned or more comfortably arranged, and there was certainly never
such a battery assembled in Ceylon as we now mustered. Such guns
deserve to be chronicled :--
These guns were all by the first makers, and we took possession of
our hunting country with the confidence of a good bag, provided that
game was abundant.
But how changed was this country since I had visited it in former
years, not only in appearance but in the quantity of game!
On these plains, where in times past I had so often counted immense
herds of wild buffaloes, not one was now to be seen. The deer were
scared and in small herds, not exceeding seven or ten, proving how
they had been thinned out by shooting. In fact, Minneria had become
within the last four years a focus for most sportsmen, and the
consequence was, that the country was spoiled; not by the individual
shooting of visitors, but by the stupid practice of giving the natives
large quantities of powder and ball as a present at the conclusion of
a trip. They, of course, being thus supplied with ammunition, shot the
deer and buffaloes without intermission, and drove them from the
country by incessant harassing.
I saw immediately that we could not expect much sport in this
disturbed part of the country, and we determined to waste no more time
in this spot than would be necessary in procuring the elephant
trackers from Doolana. We planned our campaign that evening at dinner.
Nov. 18.--At daybreak I started Wallace off to Doolana to bring my
old acquaintance the Rhatamahatmeya and the Moormen trackers. I felt
confident that I could prevail upon him to accompany us to the limits
of his district; this was all-important to our chance of sport, as
without him we could procure no assistance from the natives.
After breakfast we mounted our horses and rode to Cowdelle, eight
miles, as I expected to find elephants in this open but secluded part
of the country. There were very fresh tracks of a herd; and as we
expected Wortley and Palliser on the following day, we would not
disturb the country, but returned to Minneria and passed the afternoon
in shooting snipe and crocodiles. The latter were in incredible
numbers, as the whole population of this usually extensive lake was
now condensed in the comparatively small extent of water before us.
The fish of course were equally numerous, and we had an unlimited
supply of 'lola' of three to four pounds weight at a penny each. Our
gang of coolies feasted upon them in immense quantities, and kept a
native fully employed in catching them. Our cook exerted his powers in
producing some piquante dishes with these fish. Stewed with melted
butter (ghee), with anchovy sauce, madeira, sliced onion and green
chillies, this was a dish worthy of 'Soyer,' but they were excellent
in all shapes, even if plain boiled or fried.
Nov. 19.--At about four P.M. I scanned the plain with my telescope,
in expectation of the arrival of our companions, whom I discovered in
the distance, and as they approached within hearing, we greeted them
with a shout of welcome to show the direction of our encampment. We
were a merry party that evening at dinner, and we determined to visit
Cowdelle, and track up the herd that we had discovered, directly that
the Moormen trackers should arrive from Doolana.
The worst of this country was the swarm of mosquitoes which fed
upon us at night; it was impossible to sleep with the least degree of
comfort, and we always hailed the arrival of morning with delight.
Nov. 20.-At dawn this morning, before daylight could be called
complete, Palliser had happened to look out from the tent, and to his
surprise he saw a rogue elephant just retreating to the jungle, at
about two hundred yards distance. We loaded the guns and went after
him in as short a time as possible, but he was too quick for us, and
he had retreated to thick jungle before we were out. Wortley and I
then strolled along the edge of the jungle, hoping to find him again
in some of the numerous nooks which the plain formed by running up the
forest. We had walked quietly along for about half a mile, when we
crossed an abrupt rocky promontory, which stretched from the jungle
into the lake like a ruined pier. On the other side, the lake formed a
small bay, shaded by the forest, which was separated from the water's
edge by a gentle slope of turf about fifty yards in width. This bay
was a sheltered spot, and as we crossed the rocky promontory, the
noise that we made over the loose stones in turning the corner,
disturbed a herd of six deer, five of whom dashed into the jungle; the
sixth stopped for a moment at the edge of the forest to take a parting
look at us. He was the buck of the herd, and carried a noble pair of
antlers; he was about a hundred and twenty yards from us, and I took a
quick shot at him with one of the No. 10 rifles. The brushwood closed
over him as he bounded into the jungle, but an ominous crack sounded
back from the ball, which made me think he was hit. At this moment
Palliser and V. Baker came running up, thinking that we had found the
elephant.
The buck was standing upon some snow-white quartz rocks when I
fired, and upon an examination of the spot frothy patches of blood
showed that he was struck through the lungs. Men are bloodthirsty
animals, for nothing can exceed the pleasure, after making a long
shot, of finding the blood-track on the spot when the animal is gone.
We soon tracked him up, and found him lying dead in the jungle within
twenty yards of the spot. This buck was the first head of game we had
bagged, with the exception of a young elk that I had shot on horseback
during the ride from Dambool. We had plenty of snipe, and, what with
fish, wildfowl, and venison, our breakfast began to assume an inviting
character. After breakfast we shot a few couple of snipe upon the
plain, and in the evening we formed two parties--Palliser and V.
Baker, and Wortley and myself--and taking different directions, we
scoured the country, agreeing to meet at the tent at dusk.
W. and I saw nothing beyond the fresh tracks of game which
evidently came out only at night. We wandered about till evening, and
then returned towards the tent. On the way I tried a long shot at a
heron with a rifle; he was standing at about a hundred and fifty yards
from us, and by great good luck I killed him.
On arrival at the tent we found P. and V. B., who had returned.
They had been more fortunate in their line of country, having found
two rogue elephants--one in thick jungle, which V. B. fired at and
missed; and shortly after this shot they found another rogue on the
plain not far from the tent. The sun was nearly setting, and shone
well in the elephant's eyes; thus they were able to creep pretty close
to him without being observed, and P. killed him by a good shot with a
rifle, at about twenty-five yards. In my opinion this was the same
elephant that had been seen near the tent early in the morning.
Wallace, with the Rhatamahatmeya and the trackers, had arrived, and
we resolved to start for Cowdelle at daybreak on the following
morning.
Nov. 21.--Having made our preparations over night for an early
start, we were off at daybreak, carrying with us the cook with his
utensils, and the canteen containing everything that could be required
for breakfast. We were thus prepared for a long day's work, should it
be necessary.
After a ride of about eight miles along a sandy path, bordered by
dense jungle, we arrived at the open but marshy ground upon which we
had seen the tracks of the herd a few days previous. Fresh elephant
tracks had accompanied us the whole way along our path, and a herd was
evidently somewhere in the vicinity, as the path was obstructed in
many places by the branches of trees upon which they had been feeding
during the night. The sandy ground was likewise printed with
innumerable tracks of elk, deer, hogs and leopards. We halted under
some wide-spreading trees, beneath which, a clear stream of water
rippled over a bed of white pebbles, with banks of fine green sward.
In this spot were unmistakable tracks of elephants, where they had
been recently drinking. The country was park-like, but surrounded upon
its borders with thick jungles; clumps of thorny bushes were scattered
here and there, and an abundance of good grass land water ensured a
large quantity of game. The elephants were evidently not far off, and
of course were well secured in the thorny jungles
Wortley had never yet seen a wild elephant, and a dense jungle is
by no means a desirable place for an introduction to this kind of
game. It is a rule of mine never to follow elephants in such ground,
where they generally have it all their own way; but, as there are
exceptions to all rules, we determined to find them, after having
taken so much trouble in making our arrangements.
We unsaddled, and ordered breakfast to be ready for our return
beneath one of the most shady trees; having loaded, we started off
upon the tracks. As I had expected, they led to a thick thorny jungle,
and slowly and cautiously we followed the leading tracker. The jungle
became worse and worse as we advanced, and had it not been for the
path which the elephants had formed, we could not have moved an inch.
The leaves of the bushes were wet with dew, and we were obliged to
cover up all the gun-locks to prevent any of them missing fire. We
crept for about a quarter of a mile upon this track, when the sudden
snapping of a branch a hundred paces in advance plainly showed that we
were up with the game.
This is the exciting moment in elephant-shooting, and every breath
is held for a second intimation of the exact position of the herd. A
deep, guttural sound, like the rolling of very distant thunder, is
heard, accompanied by the rustling and cracking of the branches as
they rub their tough sides against the trees. Our advance had been so
stealthy that they were perfectly undisturbed. Silently and carefully
we crept up, and in a few minutes I distinguished two immense heads
exactly facing us at about ten paces distant. Three more indistinct
forms loomed in the thick bushes just behind the leaders.
A quiet whisper to Wortley to take a cool shot at the left-hand
elephant, in the exact centre of the forehead, and down went the two
leaders! Wortley's and mine; quickly we ran into the herd, before they
knew what had happened, and down went another to V Baker's shot. The
smoke hung in such thick volumes that we could hardly see two yards
before us, when straight into the cloud of smoke an elephant rushed
towards us. V. Baker fired, but missed; and my left-hand barrel
extinguished him. Running through the smoke with a spare rifle I
killed the last elephant. They were all bagged--five elephants within
thirty seconds from the first shot fired. Wortley had commenced well,
having killed his first elephant with one shot.
We found breakfast ready on our return to the horses, and having
disturbed this part of the country by the heavy volley at the herd, we
returned to Minneria.
I was convinced that we could expect no sport in this
neighbourhood; we therefore held a consultation as to our line of
country.
Some years ago I had entered the north of the Veddah country from
this point, and I now proposed that we should start upon a trip of
discovery, and endeavour to penetrate from the north to the south of
the Veddah country into the 'Park.' No person had ever shot over this
route, and the wildness of the idea only increased the pleasure of the
trip. We had not the least idea of the distance, but we knew the
direction by a pocket compass.
There was but one objection to the plan, and this hinged upon the
shortness of V. Baker's leave. He had only ten days unexpired, and it
seemed rash, with so short a term, to plunge into an unknown country;
however, he was determined to push on, as he trusted in the powers of
an extraordinary pony that would do any distance on a push. This
determination, however destroyed a portion of the trip, as we were
obliged to pass quickly through a lovely sporting country, to arrive
at a civilised, or rather an acknowledged, line of road by which he
could return to Kandy. Had we, on the contrary, travelled easily
through this country, we should have killed an extraordinary amount of
game.
We agreed that our route should be this. We were to enter the
Veddah country at the north and strike down to the south. I knew a
bridle-path from Badulla to Batticaloa, which cut through the Veddah
country from west to east; therefore we should meet it at right
angles. From this point V. Baker was to bid adieu, and turn to the
west and reach Badulla; from thence to Newera Ellia and to his
regiment in Kandy. We were to continue our direction southward, which
I knew would eventually bring us to the 'Park.'
Nov. 22.--We moved our encampment, accompanied by the headman and
his followers; and after a ride of fourteen miles we arrived at the
country of Hengiriwatdowane, a park-like spot of about twelve square
miles, at which place we were led to expect great sport. The
appearance of the ground was all that we could wish; numerous patches
of jungle and single trees were dotted upon the surface of fine turf.
In the afternoon, after a cooling shower, we all separated, and
started with our respective gun-bearers in different directions, with
the understanding that no one was to fire a shot at any game but
elephants. We were to meet in the evening and describe the different
parts of the country, so that we should know how to proceed on the
following day.
I came upon herds of deer in several places, but I of course did
not fire, although they were within a certain shot. I saw no
elephants.
Everyone saw plenty of deer, but V. Baker was the one lucky
individual in meeting with elephants. He came upon a fine herd, but
they winded him and escaped. There was evidently plenty of game, but
V. B. having fired at the elephants, we knew that this part of the
country was disturbed; we therefore had no hesitation in discharging
all the guns and having them well cleaned for the next morning, when
we proposed to move the tent a couple of miles farther off.
NOV. 23.--A most unfortunate day, proving the disadvantage of being
ignorant of the ground. Although I knew the whole country by one
route, from Minneria to the north of the Veddah country, we had now
diverged from that route to visit this particular spot, which I had
never before shot over. We passed on through beautiful open country
interspersed with clumps of jungle, but without one large tree that
would shade the tent.
A single-roofed tent exposed to the sun is perfectly unbearable,
and we continued to push on in the hope of finding a tree of
sufficient size to afford shelter.
Some miles were passed; fresh tracks of elephants and all kinds of
game were very numerous, and the country was perfection for shooting.
At length the open plains became more contracted, and the patches
of jungle larger and more frequent. By degrees the open ground ceased
altogether, and we found ourselves in a narrow path of deep mud
passing through impenetrable thorny jungle. Nevertheless our guide
insisted upon pushing on to a place which he compared to that which we
had unfortunately left behind us. Instead of going two miles, as we
had originally intended, we had already ridden sixteen at the least,
and still the headman persisted in pushing on. No coolies were up; the
tents and baggage were far behind; we had nothing to eat; we had left
the fine open country, which was full of game, miles behind us, and we
were in a close jungle country, where a rifle was not worth a bodkin.
It was too annoying. I voted for turning back to the lovely
hunting-ground that we had deserted; but after a long consultation, we
came to the conclusion that every day was of such importance to V.
Baker that we could not afford to retrace a single step.
Thus all this beautiful country, abounding with every kind of game,
was actually passed over without firing a single shot.
I killed a few couple of snipe in a neighbouring swamp to pass the
time until the coolies arrived with the baggage; they were not up
until four o'clock P.M., therefore the whole day was wasted, and we
were obliged to sleep here.
Nov. 24--This being Sunday, the guns were at rest. The whole of
this country was dense chenar jungle; we therefore pushed on, and,
after a ride of fourteen miles, we arrived at the Rhatamahatmeya's
residence at Doolana. He insisted upon our taking breakfast with him,
and he accordingly commenced his preparations. Borrowing one of our
hunting-knives, two of his men gave chase to a kid and cut its head
off. Half an hour afterwards we were eating it in various forms, all
of which were excellent.
We had thus travelled over forty-four miles of country from
Minneria without killing a single head of game. Had we remained a week
in the district through which we had passed so rapidly, we must have
had most excellent sport. All this was the effect of being hurried for
time.
In the neighbourhood of Doolana I had killed many elephants some
years ago, and I have no doubt we could have had good sport at this
time; but V. Baker's leave was so fast expiring, and the natives'
accounts of the distance through the Veddah country were so vague,
that we had no choice except to push straight through as fast as we
could travel, until we should arrive on the Batticaloa path.
We took leave of our friend the Rhatamahatmeya; he had provided us
with good trackers, who were to accompany us through the Veddah
country to the 'Park'; but I now began to have my doubts as to their
knowledge of the ground. However, we started, and after skirting the
Doolana tank for some distance, we rode five miles through fine
forest, and then arrived on the banks of the Mahawelle river. The
stream teas at this time very rapid, and was a quarter of a mile in
width, rolling along between its steep banks through a forest of
magnificent trees. Some hours were consumed in transporting the
coolies and baggage across the river, as the canoe belonging to the
village of Monampitya, on the opposite bank, would only hold four
coolies and their loads at one voyage.
We swam the horses across, and attending carefully to the safety of
the cook before any other individual, we breakfasted on the opposite
bank, while the coolies were crossing the river.
After breakfast, a grave question arose, viz., which way were we to
go? The trackers that the headman had given us, now confessed that
they did not know an inch of the Veddah country, into which we had
arrived by crossing the river, and they refused to go a step farther.
Here, was a 'regular fix!' as the Americans would express it.
The village of Monampitya consists of about six small huts; and we
now found that there was no other village within forty miles in the
direction that we wished to steer. Not a soul could we obtain as a
guide--no offer of reward would induce a man to start, as they
declared that no one knew the country, and that the distance was so
great that the people would be starved, as they could get nothing to
eat. We looked hopelessly at the country before us. We had a compass,
certainly, which might be useful enough on a desert or a prairie, but
in a jungle country it was of little value.
Just as we were in the greatest despair, and we were gazing
wistfully in the direction which the needle pointed out as the
position of the 'Park,' now separated from us by an untravelled
district of an unknown distance, we saw two figures with bows and
arrows coming from the jungle. One of these creatures bolted back
again into the bushes the moment he perceived us; the other one had a
fish in his hand, of about four pounds weight, which he had shot with
his bow and arrow; while he was hesitating whether he should run or
stand still, we caught him.
Of all the ugly little devils I ever saw, he was superlative. He
squinted terribly; his hair was greyish and matted with filth; he was
certainly not more than four feet and a half high, and he carried a
bow two feet longer than himself. He could speak no language but his
own, which throughout the Veddah country is much the same, intermixed
with so many words resembling Cingalese that a native can generally
understand their meaning. By proper management, and some little
presents of rice and tobacco, we got the animal into a good humour,
and we gathered the following in formation.
He knew nothing of any place except the northern portion of the
Veddah country. This was his world; but his knowledge of it was
extremely limited, as he could not undertake to guide us farther than
Oomanoo, a Veddah village, which he described as three days' journey
from where we then stood. We made him point out the direction in which
it lay. This he did, after looking for some moments at the sun; and,
upon comparing the position with the compass, we were glad to see it
at south-south-east, being pretty close to the course that we wished
to steer. From Oomanoo, he said, we could procure another Veddah to
guide us still farther; but he himself knew nothing more.
Now this was all satisfactory enough so far, but I had been
completely wrong in my idea of the distance from Doolana to the
'Park.' We now heard of three days' journey to Oomanoo, which was
certainly some where in the very centre of the Veddah country; and our
quaint little guide had never even heard of the Batticaloa road. There
was no doubt, therefore, that it was a long way from Oomanoo, which
village might be any distance from us, as a Veddah's description of a
day's journey might vary from ten to thirty miles.
I certainly looked forward to a short allowance of food both for
ourselves and coolies. We had been hurrying through the country at
such a rate that we had killed no deer; we had, therefore, been living
upon our tins of preserved provisions, of which we had now only four
remaining.
At the village of Monampitya there was no rice procurable, as the
natives lived entirely upon korrakan* (*A small seed, which they make
into hard, uneatable cakes.), at which our coolies turned up their
noses when I advised them to lay in a stock before starting.
There was no time to be lost, and we determined to push on as fast
as the coolies could follow, as they had only two days' provisions; we
had precisely the same, and those could not be days of feasting. We
were, in fact, like sailors going to sea with a ship only
half-victualled; and, as we followed our little guide, and lost sight
of the village behind us, I foresaw that our stomachs would suffer
unless game was plentiful on the path.
We passed through beautiful open country for about eight miles,
during which we saw several herds of deer; but we could not get a
shot. At length we pitched the tent, at four o'clock P.M., at the foot
of 'Gunner's Coin,' a solitary rocky mountain of about two thousand
feet in height, which rises precipitously from the level country. We
then divided into two parties--W. and P., and V. B. and I. We strolled
off with our guns in different directions.
The country was perfectly level, being a succession of glades of
fine low grass divided into a thousand natural paddocks by belts of
jungle.
We were afraid to stroll more than a mile from the tent, lest we
should lose our way; and we took a good survey of the most prominent
points of the mountain, that we might know our direction by their
position.
After an hour's walk, and just as the sun was setting, a sudden
crash in a jungle a few yards from us brought the rifles upon full
cock. The next moment out came an elephant's head, and I knocked him
over by a front shot. He had held his head in such a peculiar position
that a ball could not reach the brain, and he immediately re covered
himself, and, wheeling suddenly round, he retreated into the jungle,
through which we could not follow.
We continued to stroll on from glade to glade, expecting to find
him; and, in about a quarter of an hour, we heard the trumpet of an
elephant. Fully convinced that this was the wounded animal, we pushed
on towards the spot; but, on turning a corner of the jungle, we came
suddenly upon a herd of seven of the largest elephants that I ever saw
together; they must have been all bulls. Unfortunately, they had our
wind, and, being close to the edge of a thick thorny jungle, they
disappeared like magic. We gave chase for a short distance, but were
soon stopped by the thorns. We had no chance with them.
It was now dusk, and we therefore hastened towards the tent, seeing
three herds of deer and one of hogs on our way; but it was too dark to
get a shot. The deer were barking in every direction, and the country
was evidently alive with game.
On arrival at the tent, we found that W. and P. had met with no
better luck than ourselves. Two of. our tins of provisions were
consumed at dinner, leaving us only two remaining. Not a moment was to
be lost in pushing forward; and we determined upon a long march on the
following day.
Nov. 25.--Sunrise saw us in the saddles. The coolies, with the
tents and baggage, kept close up with the horses, being afraid to lag
behind, as there was not a semblance of a path, and we depended
entirely upon our small guide, who appeared to have an intimate
knowledge of the whole country. The little Veddah trotted along
through the winding glades; and we travelled for about five miles
without a word being spoken by one of the party, as we were in hopes
of coming upon deer. Unfortunately, we were travelling down wind; we
accordingly did not see a single head of game, as they of course
winded us long before we came in view.
We had ridden about eight miles, when we suddenly came upon the
fresh tracks of elephants, and, immediately dismounting, we began to
track up. The ground being very dry, and the grass short and parched,
the tracks were very indistinct, and it was tedious work. We had
followed for about half a mile through alternate glades and belts of
jungle, when we suddenly spied a Veddah hiding behind a tree about
sixty yards from us. The moment that he saw he was discovered, he set
off at full speed, but two of our coolies, who acted as gunbearers,
started after him. These fellows were splendid runners, and, after a
fine course, they ran him down; but when caught, instead of expressing
any fear, he seemed to think it a good joke. He was a rather short but
stout-built fellow, and he was immediately recognised by our little
guide, as one of the best hunters among the Northern Veddahs. He soon
understood our object; and, putting down his bow and arrows and a
little pipkin of sour curd (his sole provision on his hunting trip),
he started at once upon the track.
Without any exception he was the best tracker I have ever seen:
although the ground was as hard as a stone, and the footprints
constantly invisible, he went like a hound upon a scent, at a pace
that kept us in an occasional jog-trot. After half an hour's tracking,
and doubling backward and forward in thick jungle, we came up with
three elephants. V. B. killed one, and I killed another at the same
moment. V. B. also fired at the third; but, instead of falling, he
rushed towards us, and I killed him with my remaining barrel, Palliser
joining in the shot. They were all killed in about three seconds. The
remaining portion of the herd were at a distance, and we heard them
crashing through the thick jungle. We followed them for about a mile,
but they had evidently gone off to some other country. The jungle was
very thick, and we had a long journey to accomplish; we therefore
returned to the horses and rode on, our party being now increased by
the Veddah tracker.
After having ridden about twenty miles, the last tight of which had
been through alternate forest and jungle, we arrived at a small plain
of rich grass of about a hundred acres: this was surrounded by forest.
Unfortunately, the nights were not moonlight, or we could have killed
a deer, as they came out in immense herds just at dusk. We luckily
bagged a good supply of snipe, upon which we dined, and we reserved
our tins. of meat for some more urgent occasion.
Nov. 26.--All vestiges of open country had long ceased. We now rode
for seventeen miles through magnificent forest, containing the most
stupendous banian trees that I have ever beheld. The ebony trees were
also very numerous, and grew to an immense size. This forest was
perfectly open. There was not a sign of either underwood or grass
beneath the trees, and no track was discernible beyond the notches in
the trees made at some former time by the Veddah's axe. In one part of
this forest a rocky mountain appeared at some period to have burst
into fragments; and for the distance of about a mile it formed the
apparent ruins of a city of giants. Rocks as large as churches lay
piled one upon the other. forming long dark alleys and caves that
would have housed some hundreds of men.
The effect was perfectly fairylike, as the faint silver light of
the sun, mellowed by the screen of tree tops, half-lighted up ,these
silent caves. The giant stems of the trees sprang like tall columns
from the foundations of the rocks that shadowed them with their dense
foliage. Two or three families of 'Cyclops' would not have been out of
place in this spot; they were just the class of people that one would
expect to meet.
Late in the afternoon we arrived at the long-talked-of village of
Oomanoo, about eighteen miles from our last encampment. It was a
squalid, miserable place, of course, and nothing was obtainable. Our
coolies had not tasted food since the preceding evening; but, by good
luck, we met a travelling Moorman, who had just arrived at the village
with a little rice to exchange with the Veddahs for dried venison. As
the villagers did not happen to have any meat to barter, we purchased
all the rice at an exorbitant price; but it was only sufficient for
half a meal for each servant and coolie, when equally divided.
Fortunately, we killed four snipe and two doves these were added to
our last two tins of provisions, which were 'hotch potch,' and stewed
altogether. This made a good dinner. We had now nothing left but our
biscuits and groceries. All our hams and preserved meats were gone,
and we only had one meal on that day.
Nov. 27.--Our horses had eaten nothing but grass for many days;
this, however, was excellent, and old Jack looked fat, and was as
hardy as ever. We now discharged our Veddah guides, and took on others
from Oomanoo. These men told us that we were only four miles from the
Batticaloa road, and with great glee we started at break of day,
determined to breakfast on arrival at the road.
The old adage of 'Many a slip `twixt the cup and the lip' was here
fully exemplified. Four miles! We rode twenty-five miles without
drawing the rein once! and at length we then did reach the road; that
is to say, a narrow track of grass, which is the track to Batticaloa
for which we had been steering during our journey. A native but in
this wilderness rendered the place worthy of a name; it is therefore
known upon the Government maps as 'Pyeley.'
From this place we were directed on to 'Curhellulai,' a village
represented to us as a small London, abounding with every luxury. We
obtained a guide and started, as they assured us it was only two miles
distant.
After riding three miles through a country of open glades and thick
jungle, the same guide who had at first told us it was two miles from
'Pyeley,' now said it was only 'three miles farther on.' We knew these
fellows' ideas of distance too well to proceed any farther. We had
quitted the Batticaloa track, and we immediately dismounted,
unsaddled, and turned the horses loose upon the grass.
Having had only one meal the day before, and no breakfast this
morning, we looked forward with impatience to the arrival of the
coolies, although I confess I did not expect them, as they were too
weak from want of food to travel far. They had only half a meal the
day before, and nothing at all the day before that.
We had halted in a grassy glade surrounded by thick jungle. There
were numerous fresh tracks of deer and elk, but the animals themselves
would not show.
As evening approached, we collected a quantity of dead timber and
lighted a good fire, before which we piled the rifles, three and
three, about ten feet apart. Across these we laid a pole, and then
piled branches from the ground to the pole in a horizontal position.
This made a shed to protect us from the dew, and, with our saddles for
pillows, we all lay down together and slept soundly till morning.
Nov. 28.--We woke hungry, and accordingly tightened our belts by
two or three holes. V. Baker had to be in Kandy by the evening of the
30th, and he was now determined to push on. His pony had thrown all
his shoes, and had eaten nothing but grass for many days.
I knew our position well, as I had been lost near this spot about
two years ago. We were fifty-three miles from Badulla. Nevertheless,
V. B. started off, and arrived in Badulla that evening. On the same
pony he pushed on to Newera Ellia, thirty-six miles, the next day; and
then taking a fresh horse, he rode into Kandy, forty-seven miles,
arriving in good time on the evening of the 30th November.
Having parted with V. B., we saddled and mounted, and, following
our guide through a forest-path, we arrived at Curhellulai after a
ride of four miles. Nothing could exceed the wretchedness of this
place, from which we had been led to expect so much. We could not even
procure a grain of rice from the few small huts which composed the
village. The headman, who himself looked half-starved, made some cakes
of korrakan; but as they appeared to be composed of two parts of sand,
one of dirt and one of grain, I preferred a prolonged abstinence to
such filth. The abject poverty of the whole of this country is beyond
description.
Our coolies arrived at eight A.M., faint and tired; they no longer
turned up their noses at korrakan, as they did at Monampitya, but they
filled themselves almost to bursting.
I started off V. B.'s coolies after him, also eight men whose loads
had been consumed, and, with a diminished party, we started for
Bibille, which the natives assured us was only nineteen miles from
this spot. For once they were about correct in their ideas of
distance. The beautiful 'Park' country commenced about four miles from
Curhellulai, and, after a lovely ride through this scenery for sixteen
miles, we arrived at the luxurious and pretty village of Bibille,
which had so often been my quarters.
We had ridden a hundred and forty miles from Minneria, through a
country abounding with game of all kinds, sixty miles of which had
never been shot over, and yet the whole bag in this lovely country
consisted of only three elephants. So much for hurrying through our
ground. If we had remained for a week at the foot of the Gunner's Coin
we could have obtained supplies of all kinds from Doolana, and we
should have enjoyed excellent sport through the whole country. Our
total bag was now wretchedly small, considering the quantity of ground
that we had passed over. We had killed nine elephants and two deer. V.
Baker had a miserable time of it, having only killed two elephants
when he was obliged to return. The trip might, in fact, be said to
commence from Bibille.
This is a very pretty, civilized village, in the midst of a wild
country. It is the residence of a Rhatamahatmeya, and he and his
family were well known to me. They were perfectly astonished when they
heard by which route we had arrived, and upon hearing of our
forty-eight hours of fasting, they lost no time in preparing dinner.
We were now in a land of plenty, and we shortly fell to at a glorious
dinner of fowls in various shapes, curries, good coffee, rice cakes.
plantains, and sweet potatoes. After our recent abstinence and poor
fare, it seemed a perfect banquet. Nov. 29.--The coolies did not
arrive till early this morning; they were soon hard at work at curry
and rice, and, after a few hours of rest, we packed up and started for
a spot in the 'Park' (upon which I had often encamped) about ten miles
from Bibille.
The horses had enjoyed their paddy as much as we had relished our
change of diet, and the coolies were perfectly refreshed. I sent
orders to Kotoboya (about twenty miles from Bibille) for several
bullock-loads of paddy and rice to meet us at an appointed spot, and
with a good supply of fowls and rice, for the present, we arrived at
our place of encampment at three P.M., after a delightful ride.
The grass was beautifully green; a few large trees shaded the
tents, which were pitched near a stream, and the undulations of the
ground, interspersed with clumps of trees and ornamented by rocky
mountains, formed a most lovely scene. We sent a messenger to
Nielgalla for Banda, and another to Dimbooldene for old Medima and the
trackers, with orders to meet us at our present encampment. We then
took our rifles and strolled out to get a deer. We shortly found a
herd, and Wortley got a shot at about sixty yards, and killed a doe.
We could have killed other deer shortly afterwards, but we did not
wish to disturb the country by firing unnecessary shots, as we had
observed fresh tracks of elephants.
We carried the deer to the tent, and rejoiced our coolies with the
sight of venison; the doe was soon divided among them, one haunch only
being reserved for our own use.
Nov. 30.--This, being Sunday, was a day of rest for man and beast
after our recent wanderings, and we patiently awaited the arrival of
Banda and the trackers. The guns were all in beautiful order, and
stood arranged against a temporary rack, in readiness for the
anticipated sport on the following day.
Banda and the trackers arrived in the afternoon. His accounts were
very favourable as to the number of elephants, and we soon laid down a
plan for beating the 'Park' in a systematic manner.
Upon this arrangement the duration of sport in this country
materially depends. If the shooting is conducted thoughtlessly here
and there, without reference to the localities, the whole 'Park'
becomes alarmed at once, and the elephants quit the open country and
retire to the dense chenar jungles.
I proposed that we should commence shooting at our present
encampment, then beat towards the Cave, shoot over that country
towards Pattapalaar, from thence to cross the river and make a circuit
of the whole of that portion of the 'Park,' and finish off in the
environs of Nielgalla.
Banda approved of this plan, as we should then be driving the
borders of the `Park,' instead of commencing in the centre.
Dec. 1.--The scouts were sent out at daybreak. At two o'clock P.M.
they returned: they had found elephants, but they were four miles from
the tent, and two men had been left to watch them.
Upon questioning them as to their position, we discovered that they
were in total ignorance of the number in the herd, as they had merely
heard them roaring in the distance. They could not approach nearer, as
a notoriously vicious rogue elephant was consorting with the herd.
This elephant was well known to the natives from a peculiarity in
having only one tusk, which was about eighteen inches long.
In November and December elephant-shooting requires more than
ordinary caution at the 'Park,' as the rogue elephants, who are always
bulls, are in the habit of attending upon the herds. The danger lies
in their cunning. They are seldom seen in the herd itself, but they
are generally within a few hundred paces; and just as the guns may
have been discharged at the herd, the rogue will, perhaps, appear in
full charge from his ambush. This is exquisitely dangerous, and is the
manner in which I was caught near this spot in 1850.
Banda was very anxious that this rogue should be killed before we
attacked the herd, and he begged me to give him a shoulder-shot with
the four-ounce rifle, while Wortley and Palliser were to fire at his
head! A shot through the shoulder with the heavy rifle would be
certain death, although he might not drop immediately; but the object
of the natives was simply to get him killed, on account of his
mischievous habits.
We therefore agreed to make our first attack upon the rogue: if we
should kill him on the spot, so much the better; if not, we knew that
a four-ounce ball through his lungs would kill him eventually, and, at
all events, he would not be in a humour to interrupt our pursuit of
the herd, which we were to push for the moment we had put the rogue
out of the way.
These arrangements being made, we started. After a ride of about
four miles through beautiful country, we saw a man in the distance,
who was beckoning to us. This was one of the watchers, who pointed to
a jungle into which the elephant had that moment entered. From the
extreme caution of the trackers, I could see that this rogue was
worthy of his name.
The jungle into which he had entered was a long but narrow belt,
about a hundred yards in width; it was tolerably good, but still it
was so close that we could not see more than six paces in advance. I
fully expected that he was lying in wait for us, and would charge when
least expected. We therefore cautiously entered the jungle, and,
sending Banda on in advance, with instructions to retreat upon the
guns if charged, we followed him at about twenty paces distance.
Banda immediately untied his long hair, which fell to his hips, and
divesting himself of all clothing except a cloth round his loins, he
crept on in advance as stealthily as a cat. So noiselessly did he move
that we presently saw him gliding back to us without a sound. He
whispered that he had found the elephant, who was standing on the
patina, a few yards beyond the jungle. We immediately advanced, and
upon emerging from the jungle we saw him within thirty paces on our
right, standing with his broadside exposed. Crack went the four-ounce
through his shoulder, and the three-ounce and No. 8, with a similar
good intention, into his head. Nevertheless he did not fall, but
started off at a great pace, though stumbling nearly on his knees, his
head and tail both hanging down, his trunk hanging listlessly upon the
ground; and his ears, instead of being cocked, were pressed tightly
back against his neck. He did not look much like a rogue at that
moment, with upwards of half a pound of lead in his carcass. Still we
could not get another shot at him before he reached a jungle about
seventy paces distant; and here we stopped to load before we followed
him, thinking that he was in dense chenar. This was a great mistake,
for, on following him a minute later, we found the jungle was
perfectly open, being merely a fringe of forest on the banks of a
broad river; in crossing this we must have killed him had we not
stopped to load.
On the sandy bed of this river we found the fresh tracks of several
elephants, who had evidently, only just retreated, being disturbed by
the shots fired; these were a portion of the herd; and the old rogue
having got his quietus, we pushed on as fast as we could upon the
tracks through fine open forest.
For about an hour we pressed on through forests, plains, rivers,
and thick jungles alternately, till at length upon arriving on some
rising ground, we heard the trumpet of an elephant.
It was fine country, but overgrown with lemon grass ten feet high.
Clumps of trees were scattered here and there among numerous small
dells. Exactly opposite lay several large masses of rock, shaded by a
few trees, and on our left lay a small hollow of high lemon grass,
bordered by jungle.
In this hollow we counted seven elephants: their heads and backs
were just discernible above the grass, as we looked over them from
some rising ground at about seventy yards distance. Three more
elephants were among the rocks, browsing upon the long grass.
We now heard unmistakable sounds of a large number of elephants in
the jungle below us, from which the seven elephants in the hollow had
only just emerged, and we quietly waited for the appearance of the
whole herd, this being their usual feeding-time.
One by one they majestically stalked from the jungle. We were
speculating on the probable number of this large herd, when one of
them suddenly winded us, and, with magical quickness, they all wheeled
round and rushed back into the jungle.
Calling upon my little troop of gun-bearers to keep close up, away
we dashed after them at full speed; down the steep hollow and through
the high lemon grass, now trampled into lanes by the retreating
elephants.
In one instant the jungle seemed alive; there were upwards of fifty
elephants in the herd. The trumpets rang through the forest, the young
trees and underwood crashed in all directions with an overpowering
noise, as this mighty herd, bearing everything before it, crashed in
one united troop through the jungle.
At the extreme end of the grassy hollow there was a snug corner
formed by an angle in the jungle. A glade of fine short turf stretched
for a small distance into the forest, and, as the herd seemed to be
bearing down in this direction, Wortley and I posted off as hard as we
could go, hoping to intercept them if they crossed the glade. We
arrived there in a few moments, and taking our position on this fine
level sward, about ten paces from the forest, we awaited the
apparently irresistible storm that was bursting exactly upon us.
No pen, nor tongue can describe the magnificence of the scene; the
tremendous roaring of the herd, mingled with the shrill screams of
other elephants; the bursting stems of the broken trees; the rushing
sound of the leafy branches as though a tempest were howling through
them--all this concentrating with great rapidity upon the very spot
upon which we were standing
This was an exciting moment, especially to nerves unaccustomed to
the sport.
The whole edge of the forest was faced with a dense network of
creepers; from the highest tree-tops to the ground they formed a leafy
screen like a green curtain, which clothed the forest as ivy covers
the walls of a house. Behind this opaque mass the great actors in the
scene were at work, and the whole body would evidently in a few
seconds burst through this leafy veil and be right upon us.
On they came, the forest trembling with the onset. The leafy
curtain burst into tatters; the jungle ropes and snaky stems, tearing
the branches from the treetops, were in a few moments heaped in a
tangled and confused ruin. One dense mass of elephants' heads, in full
career, presented themselves through the shattered barrier of
creepers.
Running towards them with a loud holloa, they were suddenly checked
by our unexpected apparition, but the confused mass of elephants made
the shooting very difficult. Two elephants rushed out to cross the
little nook within four yards of me, and I killed both by a right and
left shot. Wallace immediately pushed a spare rifle into my hand, just
as a large elephant, meaning mischief, came straight towards me, with
ears cocked, from the now staggered body of the herd. I killed her
with the front shot, both barrels having gone off at once, the heavy
charge of powder in the right-hand barrel having started the trigger
of the left barrel by the concussion. Round wheeled the herd, leaving
their three leaders dead; and now the race began.
It was a splendid forest, and the elephants rushed off at about ten
miles an hour, in such a compact troop that their sterns formed a
living barrier, and not a head could be seen. At length, after a burst
of about two hundred yards, the deep and dry bed of a torrent formed a
trench about ten feet in width.
Not hesitating at this obstacle, down went the herd without missing
a step; the banks crumbled and half-filled the trench as the leaders
scrambled across, and the main body rushed after them at an
extraordinary pace.
I killed a large elephant in the act of crossing; he rolled into
the trench, but struggling to rise, I gave him the other barrel in the
nape of the neck, which, breaking his spine, extinguished him. He made
a noble bridge, and, jumping upon his carcass, we cleared the ravine,
and again the chase continued, although the herd had now gained about
thirty paces.
Upon a fine meadow of grass, about four feet high, the herd now
rushed along in a compact mass extending in a broad line of massive
hind-quarters over a surface of half an acre. This space formed a
complete street in their wake, as they levelled everything before
them; and the high grass stood up on either side like a wail.
Along this level road we ran at full speed, and by great exertions
managed to keep within twenty yards of the game. Full a quarter of a
mile was passed at this pace without a shot being fired. At length one
elephant turned and faced about exactly in front of me. My three
double-barrelled rifles were now all empty, and I was carrying the
little No. 16 gun. I killed him with the right-hand barrel, but I lost
ground by stopping to fire.
A jungle lay about two hundred yards in front of the herd, and they
increased their speed to arrive at this place of refuge.
Giving the little gun, with one barrel still loaded, to Wallace, I
took the four-ounce rifle in exchange, as I knew I could not close up
with the herd before they reached the jungle, and a long shot would be
my last chance. With this heavy gun (21 lbs.) I had hard work to keep
my distance, which was about forty yards from the herd.
Palliser and Wortley were before me, and within twenty yards of the
elephants. They neared the jungle; I therefore ran off to my left as
fast as I could go, so as to ensure a side-shot. I was just in time to
command their flank as the herd reached the jungle. A narrow river,
with steep banks of twenty feet in height, bordered the edge, and I
got a shot at a large elephant just as he arrived upon the brink of
the chasm. He was fifty paces off, but I hit him in the temple with
the four-ounce, and rolled him down the precipitous bank into the
river. Here he lay groaning; so, taking the little gun, with one
barrel still loaded, I extinguished him from the top of the bank.
Oh, for half-a-dozen loaded guns! I was now unloaded, and the fun
began in real earnest. The herd pushed for a particular passage down
the steep bank. It was like a rush at the door of the Opera; they
jostled each other in a confused melee, and crossed the river with the
greatest difficulty. By some bad luck Palliser and Wortley only killed
one as the herd was crossing the river, but they immediately
disappeared in pursuit, as the elephants, having effected their
passage, retreated in thick jungle on the other side.
I was obliged to halt to load, which I did as quickly as possible.
While I was ramming the balls down, I heard several shots fired in
quick succession, and when loaded, I ran on with my gun-bearers
towards the spot.
It was bad, thorny jungle, interspersed with numerous small glades
of fine turf.
Upon arriving in one of these glades, about a quarter of a mile
beyond the river, I saw a crowd of gun-bearers standing around some
person lying upon the ground. Neither Palliser nor Wortley were to be
seen, and for an instant a chill ran through me, as I felt convinced
that some accident had happened. 'Where are masters?' I shouted to the
crowd of men, and the next moment I was quite relieved by seeing only
a coolie lying on the ground. On examining the man I found he was more
frightened than hurt, although he was cut in several places and much
bruised.
Upon giving a shout, Palliser and Wortley returned to the spot.
They now explained the mystery. They were running on the fresh tracks
in this glade, no elephants being then in sight, when they suddenly
heard a rush in the jungle, and in another instant two elephants
charged out upon them. Wortley and Palliser both fired, but without
effect--the gun-bearers bolted,--an elephant knocked one man over, and
tried to butt him against the ground; but two more shots from both
Palliser and Wortley turned him; they were immediately obliged to run
in their turn, as the other elephant charged, and just grazed Palliser
with his trunk behind. Fortunately, they doubled short round, instead
of continuing a straight course, and the elephants turned into the
jungle. They followed them for some little distance, but the jungles
were so bad that there was no chance, and they had returned when I had
shouted.
The man who was hurt was obliged to be supported home. Two of the
guns were lost, which the gun-bearers in their fright had thrown away.
After a long search we found them lying in the high bushes.
We now returned along the line of hunt to cut off the elephants'
tails. I had fired at six, all of which were bagged; these we
accordingly found in their various positions. One of them was a very
large female, with her udder full of milk. Being very thirsty, both
Wortley and I took a long pull at this, to the evident disgust of the
natives. It was very good, being exactly like cow's milk. This was the
elephant that I had killed doubly by the left-hand barrel exploding by
accident, and the two balls were only a few inches apart in the
forehead.
There had been very bad luck with this herd; the only dead
elephant, in addition to these six, was that which Wortley and
Palliser had both fired at in the river, and another which Palliser
had knocked down in the high grass when we had just commenced the
attack--at which time he had separated from us to cut off the three
elephants that we had just seen among the rocks.
On arrival at the spot where the elephants had first burst from the
jungle, a heavy shower came down, and the locks of the guns were
immediately covered each with a large leaf, and then tied up securely
with a handkerchief. A large banian tree afforded us an imaginary
shelter, but we were drenched to the skin in a few seconds. In the
meantime, Palliser walked through the high lemon grass to look for his
dead elephant.
On arriving at the spot, instead of finding a dead elephant, he
found him standing up, and only just recovered from the stunning
effect of his wound.
The elephant charged him immediately; and Palliser, having the lock
of his gun tied up, was perfectly defenceless, and he was obliged to
run as hard as his long legs would carry him.
`Look out! look out! an elephant's coming! Look out!'
This we heard shouted as we were standing beneath the tree, and the
next moment we saw Palliser's tall form of six feet four come flying
through the high grass. Luckily the elephant lost him, and turned off
in some other direction. If he had continued the chase, he would have
made a fine diversion, as the locks were so tightly tied up that we
could not have got a gun ready for some time. In a few minutes the
shower cleared off, and on examining the place where the elephant had
fallen, we found a large pool of clotted blood
We now rode homeward, but we had not gone a quarter of a mile
before we heard an elephant roaring loudly in a jungle close to as.
Thinking that it was the wounded brute who had just hunted Palliser,
we immediately dismounted and approached the spot. The roaring
continued until we were close to it, and we then saw a young elephant
standing in the bed of a river, and he it was who was making all the
noise, having been separated from the herd in the late melee. Wortley
shot him, this making eight killed.
When within a mile of the tent, as we were riding along a path
through a thick thorny jungle, an immense rogue elephant stalked
across our road. I fired the four-ounce through his shoulder, to the
great satisfaction of Banda and the natives, although we never had a
chance of proving what the effect had been, as he was soon lost in the
thick jungle. A short time after this we reached the tent, having had
the perfection of sport in elephant-shooting, although luck had been
against us in making a large bag.
Dec. 2.--The scouts having been sent out at daybreak, returned
early, having found another herd of elephants. On our way to the spot,
Palliser fired at a rogue, but without effect.
On arrival at the jungle in which the elephants were reported to
be, we heard from the watchers that a rogue was located in the same
jungle, in attendance upon the herd. This was now a regular thing to
expect, and compelled us to be exceedingly cautious.
Just as we were stalking through the jungle on the track of the
herd, we came upon the rogue himself. Wortley fired at him, but
without effect, and unfortunately the shot frightened the herd, which
was not a quarter of a mile distant, and the elephants retreated to a
large tract of thick jungle country, where pursuit was impracticable.
Our party was too large for shooting 'rogues' with any degree of
success. These brutes, being always on the alert, require the most
careful stalking. There is only one way to kill them with any
certainty. Two persons, at most, to attack; each person to be
accompanied by only one gunbearer, who should carry two spare guns.
One good tracker should lead this party of five people in single file.
With great caution and silence, being well to leeward of the
elephants, he can thus generally be approached till within twelve
paces, and he is then killed by one shot before he knows that danger
is near. What with our gun-bearers, trackers, watchers and ourselves,
we were a party of sixteen persons; it was therefore impossible to get
near a rogue unperceived.
On the way to the tent I got a shot at a deer at full gallop on
'old Jack.' It was a doe, who bounded over the plain at a speed that
soon out-distanced my horse, and I took a flying shot from the saddle
with one of my No. 10 rifles. I did not get the deer, although she was
badly wounded, as we followed the blood-tracks for some distance
through thick jungle without success.
This was altogether a blank day; and having thoroughly disturbed
this part of the 'Park,' we determined to up stick and move our
quarters on the following day towards the 'Cave,' according to the
plan that we had agreed upon for beating the country.
Dec. 3.--With the cook and the canteen in company we started at
break of day, leaving the servants to pack up and bring the coolies
and tents after us. By this arrangement we were sure of our breakfast
wherever we went, and we were free from the noise of our followers,
whose scent alone was enough to alarm miles of country down wind. We
had our guns all loaded, and carried by our respective gun-bearers
close to the horses, and, with Banda, old Medima, and a couple of
trackers, we were ready for anything.
We had ridden about six miles when we suddenly came upon fresh
elephant-tracks in a grassy hollow, surrounded by low rocky hills. We
immediately sent the men off upon the tracks, while we waited upon a
high plateau of rock for their return. They came back in about a
quarter of an hour, having found the elephants within half a mile.
They were in high lemon grass, and upon arrival at the spot we
could distinguish nothing, as the grass rose some feet above our
heads. It was like shooting in the dark, and we ascended some rising
ground to improve our position. Upon arrival on this spot we looked
over an undulating sea of this grass, interspersed with rocky hills
and small patches of forest. Across a valley we now distinguished the
herd, much scattered, going off in all directions. They had winded us,
and left us but a poor chance of catching them in such ground. Of
course we lost no time in giving chase. The sun was intensely hot--not
a breath of air was stirring, and the heat in the close, parched grass
was overpowering. With the length of start that the elephants had got,
we were obliged to follow at our best pace, which, over such tangled
ground, was very fatiguing; fortunately, however, the elephants had
not yet seen us, and they had accordingly halted now and then, instead
of going straight off.
There were only four elephants together, and, by a great chance we
came up with them just as they were entering a jungle. I got a shot at
the last elephant and killed him, but the others put on more steam,
and all separated, fairly beating us, as we were almost used up by the
heat.
This was very bad luck, and we returned in despair of finding the
scattered herd. We had proceeded some distance through the high grass,
having just descended a steep, rocky hill, when we suddenly observed
two elephants approaching along the side of the very hill that we had
just left. Had we remained in the centre of the hill, we should have
met them as they advanced. One was a large female, and the other was
most probably her calf, being little more than half-grown.
It was a beautiful sight to see the caution with which they
advanced, and we lay down to watch them without being seen. They were
about 200 yards from us, and, as they slowly advanced along the steep
hillside, they occasionally halted, and, with their trunks thrown up
in the air, they endeavoured, but in vain, to discover the enemy that
had so recently disturbed them. We had the wind all right, and we now
crept softly up the hill, so as to meet them at right angles. The
hillside was a mass of large rocks overgrown and concealed by the high
lemon grass, and it was difficult to move without making a noise, or
falling into the cavities between the rocks.
I happened to be at the head of our line, and, long before I
expected the arrival of the elephants, I heard a rustling in the
grass, and the next moment I saw the large female passing exactly
opposite me, within five or six paces. I was on half-cock at the time,
as the ground was dangerous to pass over with a gun on full cock, but
I was just quick enough to knock her over before the high grass should
conceal her at another step. She fell in a small chasm, nearly
upsetting the young elephant, who was close behind her. Wortley killed
him, while I took the last kick out of the old one by another shot, as
she was still moving.
We had thus only killed three elephants out of the herd, and,
without seeing more, we returned to the horses.
On finding them, we proceeded on our road towards the `Cave,' but
had not ridden above two miles farther when we again came upon fresh
tracks of elephants. Sending on our trackers like hounds upon their
path, we sat down and breakfasted under a tree. We had hardly finished
the last cup of coffee when the trackers returned, having found
another herd. They were not more than half a mile distant, and they
were reported to be in open forest. on the banks of a deep and broad
river.
Our party was altogether too large for elephant shooting, as we
never could get close up to them without being discovered. .As usual,
they winded us before we got near them, but by quick running we
overtook them just as they arrived on the banks of the river and took
to water. Wortley knocked over one fellow just as he thought he was
safe in running along the bottom of a deep gully; I floored his
companion at the same moment, thus choking up the gully, and six
elephants closely packed together forded the deep stream. The tops of
their backs and heads were alone above water. I fired the four-ounce
into the nape of one elephant's neck as the herd crossed, and he
immediately turned over and lay foundered in the middle of the river,
which was sixty or seventy yards across.
In the mean time Palliser and Wortley kept up a regular volley, but
no effects could be observed until the herd reached and began to
ascend the steep bank on the opposite side. I had reloaded the
four-ounce, and the heavy battery now began to open a concert with the
general volley, as the herd scrambled up the precipitous bank. Several
elephants fell, but recovered themselves and disappeared. At length
the volley ceased, and two were seen, one dead on the top of the bank,
and the other still struggling in the shallow water at the foot. Once
more a general battery opened; and he was extinguished. Five were
killed; and if noise and smoke add to the fun, there was certainly
plenty of it. Wortley and my man Wallace now swam across the river and
cut off the elephants' tails.
We returned to the horses, and moved to the 'Cave,' meeting with no
farther incidents that day.
Dec. 4--We saw nothing but deer the whole of the day, and they were
so wild that we could not get a shot. It was therefore a blank.
Dec. 5--We started early, and for five miles we tracked a large
herd of elephants through fine open country, until we were at length
stopped by impenetrable jungle of immense extent, forming the confines
of the 'Park' on this side. We therefore reluctantly left the tracks,
and directed our course towards Pattapalaar, about twelve miles
distant.
We had passed over a lovely country, and were within a mile of our
proposed resting-place, when Banda, who happened to be a hundred yards
in advance, came quickly back, saying that he saw a rogue elephant
feeding on the patina not far from us. Wortley had gone in another
direction with old Medima a few minutes previous to look for a deer;
and Palliser and I resolved to stalk him carefully. We therefore left
all the people behind, except two gun-bearers, each of whom carried
one of my double-barrelled rifles. I carried my four-ounce, and
Palliser took the two-ounce.
It was most difficult ground for stalking, being entirely open, on
a spot which had been high lemon grass but recently burnt, the long
reeds in many places still remaining.
We could not get nearer than fifty yards in such ground, and I
accordingly tried a shot at his temple with the four-ounce. The long
unburnt stalks of the lemon grass waving to and fro before the sights
of my rifle so bothered me that I missed the fatal spot, and fired
about two inches too high. Stumbling only for a moment from the blow,
he rushed down hill towards a jungle, but at the same instant Palliser
made a capital shot with the long two-ounce and knocked him over. I
never saw an elephant fall with such a crash: they generally sink
gently down; but this fellow was going at such speed down hill that he
fairly pitched upon his head.
We arrived at our resting-place, and having erected the tents, we
gave them up to Banda and the servants, while we took possession of a
large 'amblam', or open building, massively built by the late Major
Rodgers, which is about twenty-five feet square. This we arranged in a
most comfortable manner, and here we determined to remain for some
days, while we beat the whole country thoroughly.
Dec. 6.-We started at our usual early hour with Banda and the
trackers, and after a walk of about a mile, we found fresh tracks and
followed up. Crossing a small river upon the track, we entered a fine
open forest, through which the herd had only just passed, and upon
following them for about a quarter of a mile, we came to a barrier of
dense chenar jungle, into which the elephants had retreated.
There was a rogue with this herd, and we were rather doubtful of
his position. We stood in the open forest, within a few feet of the
thick jungle, to the edge of which the elephants were so close that we
could hear their deep breathing; and by stooping down we could
distinguish the tips of their trunks and feet, although the animals
themselves were invisible. We waited about half an hour in the hope
that some of the elephants might again enter the open forest; at
length two, neither of whom were above five feet high, came out and
faced us. My dress of elastic green tights had become so browned by
constant washing and exposure, that I matched exactly with the stem of
a tree against which I was leaning, and one of the elephants kept
advancing towards me until I could nearly touch him with my rifle;
still he did not see me, and I did not wish to fire, as I should alarm
the herd, which would then be lost for ever. Unfortunately, just at
this moment, the other elephant saw Palliser, and the alarm was given.
There was no help for it, and we were obliged to fire. Mine fell dead,
but the other fell, and, recovering himself immediately, he escaped in
the thick jungle.
This was bad luck, and we returned towards the 'amblam' to
breakfast. On our way there we found that the 'rogue' had concealed
himself in a piece of thick jungle, backed by hills of very high lemon
grass. From this stronghold we tried to drive him, and posted
ourselves in a fine position to receive him should he break cover; but
he was too cunning to come out, and the beaters were too knowing to go
in to drive such bad jungle; it was, therefore, a drawn game, and we
were obliged to leave him.
When within a short distance of the 'amblam', a fine black
partridge got up at about sixty yards. I was lucky enough to knock him
over with a rifle, and still more fortunate in not injuring him much
with the ball, which took his wing off close to his body. Half an hour
afterwards he formed part of our breakfast.
During our meal a heavy shower of rain came down, and continued for
about two hours.
In the afternoon we sallied out, determined to shoot at any large
game that we might meet. We had lately confined our sport to
elephants, as we did not wish to disturb the country by shooting at
other game; but having fired in this neighbourhood during the morning,
we were not very particular.
We walked through a lovely country for about five miles, seeing
nothing whatever in the shape of game, not even a track, as all the
old marks were washed out by the recent shower. At length we heard the
barking of deer in the distance, and, upon going in that direction, we
saw a fine herd of about thirty. They were standing in a beautiful
meadow of about a hundred acres in extent, perfectly level, and
interspersed with trees, giving it the appearance of an immense
orchard rather thinly planted. One side of this plain was bounded by a
rocky mountain, which rose precipitously from its base, the whole of
which was covered with fine open forest.
We were just stalking towards the deer when we came upon a herd of
wild buffaloes in a small hollow, within a close shot.
Palliser wanted a pair of horns, and he was just preparing for a
shot, when we suddenly heard the trumpet of an elephant in the forest
at the foot of the rocky mountains close to us.
Elephants, buffaloes, and deer were all within a hundred yards of
each other: we almost expected to see Noah's ark on the top of the
hill.
Of course the elephants claimed our immediate attention. It was
Palliser's turn to lead the way; and upon entering the forest at the
foot of the mountain, we found that the elephants were close to us.
The forest was a perfect place for elephant-shooting. Large rocks were
scattered here and there among the fine trees, free from underwood;
these rocks formed alleys of various widths, and upon such ground an
elephant had no chance.
There was a large rock the size of a small house lying within a few
yards from the entrance of the forest. This rock was split in two
pieces, forming a passage of two feet wide, but of several yards in
length. As good luck would have it, an elephant stood exactly on the
other side, and, Palliser leading the way, we advanced through this
secure fort to the attack.
On arrival at the extreme end, Palliser fired two quick shots, and,
taking a spare gun, he fired a third, before we could see what was
going on, we being behind him in this narrow passage. Upon passing
through we thought the fun was over. He had killed three elephants,
and no more were to be seen anywhere.
Hardly had he reloaded, however, when we heard a tremendous rushing
through the forest in the distance; and, upon quickly running to the
spot, we came upon a whole herd of elephants, who were coming to meet
us in full speed. Upon seeing us, however, they checked their speed
for a moment, and Palliser and Wortley both fired, which immediately
turned them. This was at rather too long a distance, and no elephants
were killed.
A fine chase now commenced through the open forest, the herd
rushing off pele mele. This pace soon took us out of it, and we burst
upon an open plain of high lemon grass. Here I got a shot at an
elephant, who separated from the main body, and I killed him.
The pace was now so great that the herd fairly distanced us in the
tangled lemon grass, which, though play to them, was very fatiguing to
us.
Upon reaching the top of some rising ground I noticed several
elephants, at about a quarter of a mile distant upon my left in high
grass, while the remaining portion of the herd (three elephants) were
about two hundred yards ahead, and were stepping out at full speed
straight before us.
Wortley had now had plenty of practice, and shot his elephants
well. He and Palliser followed the three elephants, while I parted
company and ran towards the other section of the herd, who were
standing on some rising ground, and were making a great roaring.
On arriving within a hundred yards of them, I found I had caught a
'Tartar'. It is a very different thing creeping up to an unsuspecting
herd and attacking them by surprise, to marching up upon sheer open
ground to a hunted one with wounded elephants among them, who have
regularly stood at bay. This was now the case. The ground was
perfectly open, and the lemon grass was above my head: thus I could
only see the exact position of the elephants every now and then, by
standing upon the numerous little rocks that were scattered here and
there. The elephants were standing upon some rising ground, from which
they watched every movement as I approached. They continued to growl
without a moment's intermission, being enraged not only from the noise
of the firing, but on account of two calves which they had with them,
and which I could not see in the high grass. There was a gentle rise
in the ground within thirty paces of the spot upon which they stood;
and to this place I directed my steps with great care, hiding in the
high grass as I crept towards them.
During the whole of this time, guns were firing without
intermission in the direction taken by Palliser and Wortley, thus
keeping my game terribly on the qui vive. What they were firing so
many shots at, I could not conceive.
At length I reached the rising ground. The moment that I was
discovered by them, the two largest elephants came towards me, with
their ears cocked and their trunks raised.
I waited for a second or two till they lowered their trunks, which
they presently did; and taking a steady shot with one of my
doubled-barrelled No. 10 rifles, I floored them both by a right and
left. One, however, immediately recovered, and, with the blood
streaming from his forehead, he turned and retreated with the
remainder of the herd at great speed through the high grass.
The chase required great caution. However, they fortunately took to
a part of the country where the grass was not higher than my
shoulders, and I could thus see well over it. Through this, I managed
to keep within fifty yards of the herd, and I carried the heavy
four-ounce rifle, which I knew would give one of them a benefit if he
turned to charge.
I was following the herd at this distance when they suddenly
halted, and the wounded elephant turned quickly round, and charged
with a right good intention. He carried his head thrown back in such a
position that I could not get a fair shot, but, nevertheless, the
four-ounce ball stopped him, and away he went again with the herd at
full speed, the blood gushing in streams from the wound in his head.
My four-ounce is a splendid rifle for loading quickly, it being so
thick in the metal that the deep groove catches the belt of the ball
immediately. I was loaded in a few seconds, and again set off in
pursuit; I saw the herd at about 200 yards distant; they had halted,
and they had again faced about.
I had no sooner approached within sixty paces of them, than the
wounded elephant gave a trumpet, and again rushed forward out of the
herd. His head was so covered with blood, and was still thrown back in
such a peculiar position, that I could not get a shot at the exact
mark. Again the four-ounce crashed through his skull, and, staggered
with the blow, he once more turned and retreated with the herd.
Loading quickly, I poured the powder down AD LIBITUN, and ran after
the herd, who had made a circuit to arrive in the same forest in which
we had first found them. A sharp run brought me up to them; but upon
seeing me they immediately stopped, and, without a moment's pause,
round came my old antagonist again, straight at me, with his head
still raised in the same knowing position. The charge of powder was so
great that it went off like a young fieldpiece, and the elephant fell
upon his knees; but, again recovering himself, he turned and went off
at such a pace that he left the herd behind, and in a few minutes I
was within twenty yards of them; I would not fire, as I was determined
to bag my wounded bird before I fired a single shot at another.
They now reached the forest, but, instead of retreating, the
wounded elephant turned short round upon the very edge of the jungle
and faced me; the remaining portion of the herd (consisting of two
large elephants and two calves) had passed on into the cover.
This was certainly a plucky elephant; his whole face was a mass of
blood, and he stood at the very spot where the herd had passed into
the forest, as though he was determined to guard the entrance. I was
now about twenty-five yards from him, when, gathering himself together
for a decisive charge, he once more came on.
I was on the point of pulling the trigger, when he reeled, and fell
without a shot, from sheer exhaustion; but recovering himself
immediately, he again faced me, but did not move. This was a fatal
pause. He forgot the secret of throwing his head back, and he now held
it in the natural position, offering a splendid shot at about twenty
yards. Once more the four-ounce buried itself in his skull, and he
fell dead.
Palliser and Wortley came up just as I was endeavouring to track up
the herd, which I had now lost sight of in the forest. Following upon
their tracks, we soon came in view of them. Away we went as fast as we
could run towards them, but I struck my shin against a fallen tree,
which cut me to the bone, and pitched me upon my head. The next
moment, however, we were up with the elephants: they were standing
upon a slope of rock facing us, but regularly dumbfounded at their
unremitting pursuit; they all rolled over to a volley as we came up,
two of them being calves. Palliser killed the two biggest right and
left, he being some paces in advance.
This was one of the best hunts that I have ever shared in. The
chase had lasted for nearly an hour. There had been thirteen elephants
originally in the herd, every one of which had been bagged by fair
running. Wortley had fired uncommonly well, as he had killed the three
elephants which he and Palliser had chased, one of which had given
them a splendid run and had proved restive. The elephant took fifteen
shots before she fell, and this accounted for the continual firing
which I had heard during my chase of the other section. We had killed
fourteen elephants during the day, and we returned to the 'amblam',
having had as fine sport as Ceylon can afford.
December 7.--This, being Sunday, was passed in quiet; but a general
cleaning of guns took place, to be ready for the morrow.
Dec. 8.--We went over many miles of ground without seeing a fresh
track. We had evidently disturbed the country on this side of the
river, and we returned towards the 'amblam', determined to cross the
river after breakfast and try the opposite side.
When within a mile of the 'amblam' we heard deer barking, and,
leaving all our gun-bearers and people behind, we carefully stalked to
the spot. The ground was very favourable, and, having the wind, we
reached an excellent position among some trees within sixty yards of
the herd of deer, who were standing in a little glade. Wortley and I
each killed a buck; Palliser wounded a doe, which we tracked for a
great distance by the blood, but at length lost altogether.
After breakfast we crossed the large river which flows near the
'amblam', and then entered a part of the 'Park' that we had not yet
beaten.
Keeping to our left, we entered a fine forest, and skirted the base
of a range of rocky mountains. In this forest we saw deer and wild
buffalo, but we would not fire a shot, as we had just discovered the
fresh track of a rogue elephant. We were following upon this, when we
heard a bear in some thick jungle. We tried to circumvent him, but in
vain; Bruin was too quick for us, and we did not get a sight of him.
We were walking quietly along the dry bed of a little brook
bordered by thick jungle upon either side, when we were suddenly
roused by a tremendous crash through the jungle, which was evidently
coming straight upon us.
We were in a most unfavourable position, but there was no time for
any farther arrangement than bringing the rifle on full cock, before
six elephants, including the 'rogue' whose tracks we were following,
burst through the jungle straight at us.
Banda was nearly run over, but with wonderful agility he ran up
some tangled creepers hanging from the trees, just as a spider would
climb his web. He was just in time, as the back of one of the
elephants grazed his feet as it passed below him.
In the meantime the guns were not idle. Wortley fired at the
leading elephant, which had passed under Banda's feet, just as he was
crossing the brook on our left. His shot did not produce any effect,
but I killed him by a temple-shot as he was passing on. Palliser, who
was on our right, killed two, and knocked down a third, who was about
half-grown. This fellow got up again, and Wortley and Palliser, both
firing at the same moment, extinguished him.
The herd had got themselves into a mess by rushing down upon our
scent in this heedless manner, as four of them lay dead within a few
paces of each other. The 'rogue', who knew how to take care of
himself, escaped with only one companion. Upon these tracks we now
followed without loss of time.
An hour was thus occupied. We tracked them through many glades and
jungles, till we at length discovered in a thick chenar the fresh
tracks of another herd, which the 'rogue' and his companion had
evidently joined, as his immense footprint was very conspicuous among
the numerous marks of the troop. Passing cautiously through a thick
jungle, we at length emerged upon an extensive tract of high lemon
grass. There was a small pool of water close to the edge of the
jungle, which was surrounded with the fresh dung of elephants, and the
muddy surface was still agitated by the recent visit of some of these
thirsty giants.
Carefully ascending some slightly rising ground, and keeping close
to the edge of the jungle, we peered over the high grass.
We were in the centre of the herd, who were much scattered. It was
very late, being nearly dusk, but we counted six elephants here and
there in the high grass within sixty paces of us, while the rustling
in the jungle to our left, warned us, that a portion of the herd had
not yet quitted this cover. We knew that the 'rogue' was somewhere
close at hand, and after his recent defeat he would be doubly on the
alert. Our plans therefore required the greatest vigilance.
There was no doubt as to the proper course to pursue, which was to
wait patiently until the whole herd should have left the jungle and
concentrated in the high grass; but the waning daylight did not permit
of such a steady method of proceeding. I then proposed that we should
choose our elephants, which were scattered in the high grass, and
advance separately to the attack. Palliser voted that we should creep
up to the elephants that were in the jungle close to us, instead of
going into the high grass.
I did not much like this plan, as I knew that it would be much
darker in the jungle than in the patina, and there was no light to
spare. However, Palliser crept into the jungle, towards the spot where
we heard the elephants crashing the bushes.
Instead of following behind him, I kept almost in a line, but a few
feet on one side, otherwise I knew that should he fire, I should see
nothing for the smoke of his shot. This precaution was not thrown
away. The elephants were about fifty yards from the entrance to the
jungle, and we were of course up to them in a few minutes. Palliser
took a steady shot at a fine elephant about eight yards from him, and
fired.
The only effect produced was a furious charge right into us!
Away went all the gun-bearers except Wallace as hard as they could
run, completely panic-stricken. Palliser and Wortley jumped to one
side to get clear of the smoke, which hung like a cloud before them;
and having taken my position with the expectation of something of this
kind, I had a fine clear forehead shot as the elephant came rushing
on; and I dropped him dead.
The gun-bearers were in such a fright that they never stopped till
they got out on the patina.
The herd had of course gone off at the alarm of the firing, and we
got a glimpse of the old 'rogue' as he was taking to the jungle.
Palliser fired an ineffectual shot at him at a long range, and the day
closed. It was moonlight when we reached the 'amblam': the bag for
that day being five elephants, and two bucks.
Dec. 9.--We had alarmed this part of the country; and after
spending a whole morning in wandering over a large extent of ground
without seeing a fresh track of an elephant, we determined to move on
to Nielgalla, eight miles from the 'amblam.' We accordingly packed up,
and started off our coolies by the direct path, while we made a long
circuit by another route, in the hope of meeting with heavy game.
After riding about four miles, our path lay through a dense forest
up the steep side of a hill. Over this was a narrow road, most
difficult for a horse to ascend, on account of the large masses of
rocks, which choked the path from the base to the summit. Leaving the
horse-keepers with the horses to scramble up as they best could, we
took our guns and went on in advance. We had nearly reached the summit
of this pass, when we came suddenly upon some fragments of chewed
leaves and branches, lying in the middle of the path. The saliva was
still warm upon them, and the dung of an elephant lay in the road in a
state which proved his close vicinity. There were no tracks, of
course, as the path was nothing but a line of piled rocks, from which
the forest had been lately cleared, and the elephants had just been
disturbed by the clattering of the horses' hoofs in ascending the
rugged pass.
Banda had run on in front about fifty yards before us, but we had
no sooner arrived on the summit of the hill, than we saw him returning
at a flying pace towards us, with an elephant chasing him in full
speed.
It was an exciting scene while it lasted: with the activity of a
deer, he sprang from rock to rock, while we of course ran to his
assistance, and arrived close to the elephant just as Banda had
reached a high block of stone, which furnished him an asylum. A shot
from Palliser brought the elephant upon his