Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,077 pages of information about Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa.

Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,077 pages of information about Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa.

Both animals expanded their ears and listened, then left their bath as the crowd rushed toward them.  The little one ran forward toward the end of the valley, but, seeing the men there, returned to his dam.  She placed herself on the danger side of her calf, and passed her proboscis over it again and again, as if to assure it of safety.  She frequently looked back to the men, who kept up an incessant shouting, singing, and piping; then looked at her young one and ran after it, sometimes sideways, as if her feelings were divided between anxiety to protect her offspring and desire to revenge the temerity of her persecutors.  The men kept about a hundred yards in her rear, and some that distance from her flanks, and continued thus until she was obliged to cross a rivulet.  The time spent in descending and getting up the opposite bank allowed of their coming up to the edge, and discharging their spears at about twenty yards distance.  After the first discharge she appeared with her sides red with blood, and, beginning to flee for her own life, seemed to think no more of her young.  I had previously sent off Sekwebu with orders to spare the calf.  It ran very fast, but neither young nor old ever enter into a gallop; their quickest pace is only a sharp walk.  Before Sekwebu could reach them, the calf had taken refuge in the water, and was killed.  The pace of the dam gradually became slower.  She turned with a shriek of rage, and made a furious charge back among the men.  They vanished at right angles to her course, or sideways, and, as she ran straight on, she went through the whole party, but came near no one except a man who wore a piece of cloth on his shoulders.  Bright clothing is always dangerous in these cases.  She charged three or four times, and, except in the first instance, never went farther than 100 yards.  She often stood after she had crossed a rivulet, and faced the men, though she received fresh spears.  It was by this process of spearing and loss of blood that she was killed; for at last, making a short charge, she staggered round and sank down dead in a kneeling posture.  I did not see the whole hunt, having been tempted away by both sun and moon appearing unclouded.  I turned from the spectacle of the destruction of noble animals, which might be made so useful in Africa, with a feeling of sickness, and it was not relieved by the recollection that the ivory was mine, though that was the case.  I regretted to see them killed, and more especially the young one, the meat not being at all necessary at that time; but it is right to add that I did not feel sick when my own blood was up the day before.  We ought, perhaps, to judge those deeds more leniently in which we ourselves have no temptation to engage.  Had I not been previously guilty of doing the very same thing, I might have prided myself on superior humanity when I experienced the nausea in viewing my men kill these two.

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Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.