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+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Rifle and Hound in Ceylon, by Sir Samuel White Baker
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
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+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+Project Gutenberg's The Rifle and The Hound in Ceylon, by Samuel White Baker
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Rifle and The Hound in Ceylon
+
+Author: Samuel White Baker
+
+Release Date: February 22, 2009 [EBook #3231]
+Last Updated: February 1, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RIFLE AND THE HOUND IN CEYLON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Garry Gill, Charles Franks, the Distributed
+Proofreading Team, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE RIFLE AND HOUND IN CEYLON
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Sir Samuel White Baker
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_INTR"> INTRODUCTION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_TOC"> DETAILED CONTENTS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <br />
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> <b>THE RIFLE AND HOUND.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_CONC"> CONCLUSION. </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have found great convenience in the following equipment for hunting
+ every species of game in wild tropical countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One single-barrel rifle to carry a half-pound projectile, or a four ounce,
+ according to strength of hunter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three double-barrelled No. 10 rifles, to carry ten drachms No. 6 powder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One double-barrelled small-bore rifle, sighted most accurately for
+ deer-shooting. Express to carry five or six drachms, but with hardened
+ solid bullet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two double-barrelled No. 10 smooth-bores to carry shot or ball; the latter
+ to be the exact size for the No. 10 rifles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to my experience, such a battery is irresistible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The best cartridges will never miss fire. This is an invaluable quality in
+ the pursuit of dangerous game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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, &amp;c.; 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,&mdash;and of course it becomes
+ worthless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many years I have been supplied with firstrate No. 10 rifles by
+ Messrs. Reilly &amp; 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The long interval that has elapsed since I was in Ceylon, has caused a
+ great diminution in the wild animals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ S. W. BAKER. <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 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?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;who shun
+ cruelty to an animal, and are easily moved by a tale of distress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One fact I wish to impress upon all&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_TOC" id="link2H_TOC">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ DETAILED CONTENTS.
+ </h2>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER 1. <br /> Wild Country&mdash;Dealings in the Marvellous&mdash;Enchanting
+ Moments&mdash;The <br /> Wild Elephant of Ceylon&mdash;'Rogues'&mdash;Elephant
+ Slaughter&mdash;Thick <br /> Jungles&mdash;Character of the Country&mdash;Varieties
+ of Game in Ceylon&mdash;'Battery <br /> for Ceylon Sport'&mdash;The Elk
+ or 'Samber Deer'&mdash;Deer-coursing <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER II. <br /> Newera Ellia&mdash;The Turn-out for Elk-hunting&mdash;Elk-hunting&mdash;Elk
+ turned to <br /> Bay&mdash;The Boar <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER III. <br /> Minneria Lake&mdash;Brush with a Bull&mdash;An
+ Awkward Vis-a-vis&mdash;A Bright <br /> Thought&mdash;Bull Buffalo
+ Receives his Small Change&mdash;What is Man?&mdash;Long Shot <br /> with
+ the Four-ounce&mdash;Charged by a Herd of Buffaloes&mdash;The Four-ounce
+ <br /> does Service&mdash;The 'Lola'&mdash;A Woman killed by a Crocodile&mdash;Crocodile
+ at <br /> Bolgodde Lake&mdash;A Monster Crocodile&mdash;Death of a
+ Crocodile <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER IV. <br /> Equipment for a Hunting Trip&mdash;In Chase of a Herd
+ of Elephants&mdash;Hard <br /> Work&mdash;Close Quarters&mdash;Six Feet
+ from the Muzzle&mdash;A Black with a Devil <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER V. <br /> The Four-ounce again&mdash;Tidings of a Rogue&mdash;Approaching
+ a Tank Rogue&mdash;An <br /> Exciting Moment&mdash;Ruins of Pollanarua&mdash;Ancient
+ Ruins&mdash;Rogues at <br /> Doolana&mdash;B. Charged by a Rogue&mdash;Planning
+ an Attack&mdash;A Check&mdash;Narrow <br /> Escape&mdash;Rogue-stalking&mdash;A
+ Bad Rogue&mdash;Dangers of Elephant-shooting&mdash;The <br />
+ Phatamahatmeya's Tale <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER VI. <br /> Character of the Veddahs&mdash;Description of the
+ Veddahs&mdash;A Monampitya <br /> Rogue&mdash;Attacking the Rogue&mdash;Breathless
+ Excitement&mdash;Death of a Large <br /> Rogue&mdash;Utility of the
+ Four-ounce&mdash;A Curious Shot&mdash;Fury of a Bull <br /> Buffalo&mdash;Character
+ of the Wild Buffalo&mdash;Buffalo-shooting at Minneria <br /> Lake&mdash;Charge
+ in High Reeds&mdash;Close of a Good Day's Sport&mdash;Last Day at <br />
+ Minneria&mdash;A Large Snake&mdash;An Unpleasant Bedfellow <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER VII. <br /> Capabilities of Ceylon&mdash;Deer at Illepecadewe&mdash;Sagacity
+ of a Pariah <br /> Dog&mdash;Two Deer at One Shot&mdash;Deer-stalking&mdash;Hambantotte
+ Country&mdash;Kattregam <br /> Festival&mdash;Sitrawelle&mdash;Ruins of
+ Ancient Mahagam&mdash;Wiharewelle&mdash;A Night <br /> Attack upon
+ Elephants&mdash;Shooting by Moonlight&mdash;Yalle River&mdash;Another
+ <br /> Rogue&mdash;A Stroll before Breakfast&mdash;A Curious Shot&mdash;A
+ Good Day's Sport <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER VIII. <br /> Best Hounds for Elk-hunting&mdash;Smut&mdash;Killbuck&mdash;The
+ Horton Plains&mdash;A Second <br /> Soyer&mdash;The Find&mdash;The Buck
+ at Bay&mdash;The Bay&mdash;The Death&mdash;Return of Lost <br /> Dogs&mdash;Comparative
+ Speed of Deer&mdash;Veddah Ripped by a Boar&mdash;A Melee&mdash;Buck
+ <br /> at Black Pool&mdash;Old Smut's Ruse&mdash;Margosse Oil <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER IX. <br /> A Morning's Deer-coursing&mdash;Kondawataweny&mdash;Rogue
+ at Kondawataweny&mdash;A <br /> Close Shave&mdash;Preparations for
+ Catching an Elephant&mdash;Catching <br /> an Elephant&mdash;Taming Him&mdash;Flying
+ Shot at a Buck&mdash;Cave at <br /> Dimbooldene&mdash;Awkward Ground&mdash;A
+ Charmed Life <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER X. <br /> Another Trip to the Park&mdash;A Hard Day's Work&mdash;Discover
+ a Herd&mdash;Death of <br /> the Herd&mdash;A Furious Charge&mdash;Caught
+ at Last&mdash;The Consequences&mdash;A Thorough <br /> Rogue&mdash;Another
+ Herd in High Lemon Grass&mdash;Bears&mdash;A Fight between a <br />
+ Moorman and a Bear&mdash;A Musical Herd&mdash;Herd Escape&mdash;A Plucky
+ Buck&mdash;Death of <br /> 'Killbuck'&mdash;Good Sport with a Herd&mdash;End
+ of the Trip <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XI. <br /> Excitement of Elephant-shooting&mdash;An Unexpected
+ Visitor&mdash;A Long Run <br /> with a Buck&mdash;Hard Work Rewarded&mdash;A
+ Glorious Bay&mdash;End of a Hard Day's <br /> Work&mdash;Bee-hunters&mdash;Disasters
+ of Elk-hunting&mdash;Bran Wounded&mdash;'Old Smut's' <br /> Buck&mdash;Boar
+ at Hackgalla&mdash;Death of 'Old Smut'&mdash;Scenery from the Perewelle
+ <br /> Mountains&mdash;Diabolical Death of 'Merriman'&mdash;Scene of the
+ Murder <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XII. <br /> A Jungle Trip <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XIII. <br /> Conclusion <br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE RIFLE AND HOUND.
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Wild Country-Dealings in the Marvellous-Enchanting Moments The Wild
+ Elephant of Ceylon&mdash;'Rogues'-Elephant Slaughter-Thick
+ Jungles-Character of the Country-Varieties of Game in Ceylon&mdash;'Battery
+ for Ceylon Sport'-The Elk or 'Samber Deer'-Deer-coursing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is one great drawback to the publication of sporting adventures&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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,&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have even heard people exclaim, upon hearing anecdotes of
+ elephant-hunting, 'Poor things!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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&mdash;there surely must be sport there, he thinks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He reaches Kandy, a civilised town surrounded by hills of jungle&mdash;that
+ interminable jungle!&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shall now proceed to give a description of the various sports in Ceylon&mdash;a
+ task for which the constant practice of many years has afforded ample
+ incident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next to the 'Rifle' in the order of description comes the 'Hound.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Newera Ellia&mdash;The Turn-out for Elk-Hunting&mdash;Elk-Hunting&mdash;Elk
+ turned to Bay&mdash;The Boar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is something peculiarly inspiriting in the early hour of sunrise
+ upon these mountains&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;was it the wind? No;
+ there it is&mdash;it is old Smut's voice&mdash;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&mdash;thorns, or clothes, or flesh must go&mdash;something
+ must give way as he bursts through them and stands upon the plain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;they hear their master's well-known shout&mdash;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!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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&mdash;he dies&mdash;it
+ is all over. The hounds are called off, and are carefully examined for
+ wounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The foregoing may be considered a general description of elk-hunting,
+ although the incidents of the sport necessarily vary considerably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A scene of real warfare meets his view&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Minneria Lake&mdash;Brush with a Bull&mdash;An Awkward Vis-a-vis&mdash;A
+ Bright Thought&mdash;Bull Buffalo Receives his Small Change&mdash;What is
+ Man?&mdash;Long Shot with the Four-ounce&mdash;Charged by a Herd of
+ Buffaloes&mdash;the Four-ounce does Service&mdash;The 'Lola'&mdash;A Woman
+ Killed by a Crocodile&mdash;Crocodile at Bolgodde Lake&mdash;A Monster
+ Crocodile&mdash;Death of a Crocodile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a lovely scene which we enjoyed in silence, while our ponies
+ feasted upon the rich grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;not
+ a breath of air moved the leaves of the trees which shaded us&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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;&mdash;there
+ he stood&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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;&mdash;an increased flow of blood
+ from the wound and additional lustre in his eye were the only signs of his
+ being struck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, a lord of the creation does not appear in much majesty when
+ running for his life from an infuriated buffalo;&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;he was gone, and we never saw him again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A short cough, accompanied by a rush of blood from his mouth, seemed to
+ cause him great uneasiness, and he halted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had thus commenced a revenge for the insult of yesterday; I had proved
+ the wonderful power of the four-ounce rifle&mdash;a weapon destined to
+ make great havoc amongst the heavy game of Ceylon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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 had
+ just 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In those days Minneria was not spoiled by visitors, and supplies were
+ accordingly at a cheap rate&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bolgodde is a very large lake of many miles in circumference, abounding
+ with crocodiles, widgeon, teal, and ducks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Equipment for a Hunting Trip&mdash;In Chase of a Herd of Buffaloes&mdash;Hard
+ Work&mdash;Close Quarters&mdash;Six Feet from the Muzzle&mdash;A Black
+ with a Devil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clothes must always be packed in tin boxes, or the whole case will most
+ likely be devoured by white ants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were hardly dressed before a native came running to tell us that
+ several elephants were devouring his crop of korrakan&mdash;a grain
+ something like clover-seed, upon which the people in this part almost
+ entirely subsist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The havoc committed by a large herd of elephants can well be imagined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this instance there were only three elephants&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poonchy and the bull elephant, having both separated from the female,
+ escaped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I once saw a sample of heathen conversion in Ceylon that was enough to
+ dishearten a missionary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Four-ounce again&mdash;Tidings of a Rogue&mdash;Approaching a Tank
+ Rogue&mdash;An Exciting Moment&mdash;Ruins of Pollanarua&mdash;Ancient
+ Ruins&mdash;Rogues at Doolana&mdash;B. Charged by a Rogue&mdash;Planning
+ an Attack&mdash;A Check&mdash;Narrow Escape&mdash;Rogue-stalking&mdash;A
+ Bad Rogue&mdash;Dangers of Elephant-shooting&mdash;The Rhatamahatmeya's
+ Tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;'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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was of course a chance shot, and, even with this acknowledgment, it
+ must appear rather like the 'marvellous' to a stranger;&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;a dull splash!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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, &amp;c., 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE RHATAMAHATMEYA'S TALE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The women rushed to the village with the news of this unnatural carnage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A few days after this act, a hundred men assembled at Doolana, determined
+ upon his destruction. They were all picked elephant-hunters&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '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.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Character of the Veddahs&mdash;Description of the Veddahs&mdash;A
+ Monampitya Rogue&mdash;Attacking the Rogue&mdash;Breathless Excitement&mdash;Death
+ of a Large Rogue&mdash;Utility of the Four-ounce&mdash;A Curious Shot&mdash;Fury
+ of a Bull Buffalo&mdash;Character of the Wild Buffalo&mdash;Buffalo-shooting
+ at Minneria Lake&mdash;Charge in High Reeds&mdash;Close of a Good Day's
+ Sport&mdash;Last Day at Minneria&mdash;A Large Snake&mdash;An Unpleasant
+ Bedfellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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
+ description of one day's work at Minneria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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!&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Capabilities of Ceylon&mdash;Deer at Illepecadewe&mdash;Sagacity of a
+ Pariah Dog&mdash;Two Deer at One Shot&mdash;Deer-stalking&mdash;Hambantotte
+ Country&mdash;Kattregam Festival&mdash;Sitrawelle&mdash;Ruins of Ancient
+ Mahagam&mdash;Wiharewelle&mdash;A Night Attack upon Elephants&mdash;Shooting
+ by Moonlight&mdash;Yalle River&mdash;Another Rogue&mdash;A Stroll before
+ Breakfast&mdash;A Curious Shot&mdash;A Good Day's Sport.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The features of Ceylon scenery may, therefore, be divided as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Natural forest, extending over the greater portion. Thorny jungle,
+ extending over a large portion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Flat plains and thorny jungles, in the vicinity of the coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Open down country, extending over a small portion of the interior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Open park country, extending over the greater portion of the Veddah
+ district.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mountains, forming the centre of the island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Beat-hounds for Elk-hunting&mdash;Smut&mdash;Killbuck&mdash;The Horton
+ Plains&mdash;A Second Soyer&mdash;The Find&mdash;The Buck at Bay&mdash;The
+ Bay&mdash;The Death&mdash;Return of Lost Dogs&mdash;Comparative Speed of
+ Deer&mdash;Veddah Ripped by a Boar&mdash;A Melee&mdash;Buck at Black Pool&mdash;Old
+ Smut's Ruse&mdash;Margosse Oil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Bran,' a perfect model of a greyhound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Lucifer,' combining the beauty, speed, and courage of his parents, 'Bran'
+ and ' Lena,' in a superlative degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.'&mdash;'Well, mulligatawny
+ soup.' 'Yes, sar.'&mdash;'Calves' head with tongue and brain sauce.' 'Yes,
+ sar.'&mdash;' Gravy omelette.' 'Yes, sar.'&mdash;'Mutton chops.' 'Yes,
+ sar.'&mdash;'Fowl cotelets.' 'Yes, sar.'&mdash;'Beefsteaks.' 'Yes, sar.'&mdash;'Marrow-bones.'
+ 'Yes, sar.'&mdash;'Rissoles.' 'Yes, sar.' All these various dishes he
+ literally imitated uncommonly well, the different portions of an elk being
+ their only foundation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 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&mdash;28 Elk (11 Bucks, 17 Does), and 4 Hogs.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A Morning's Deer-coursing&mdash;Kondawataweny&mdash;Rogue at Kondawa
+ taweny&mdash;A Close Shave&mdash;Preparations for Catching an Elephant&mdash;Catching
+ an Elephant&mdash;Taming Him&mdash;Flying Shot at a Buck&mdash;Cave at
+ Dimbooldene&mdash;Awkward Ground&mdash;A Charmed Life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question was, how to dislodge him; the jungle was so dense that it was
+ impossible to enter, and driving was the only chance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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 distinguish 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of an hour, we were comfortably seated at our table, with
+ venison steaks, and chops smoking before us&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had bagged nine elephants, and only one had escaped from the herd; this
+ was the female who had forsaken her young one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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!&mdash;an
+ elephant's coming!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On arrival at the tent we found Banda and the trackers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Excitement of Elephant-shooting&mdash;An Unexpected Visitor&mdash;A Long
+ Run with a Buck&mdash;Hard Work Rewarded&mdash;A Glorious Bay&mdash;End of
+ a Hard Day's Work&mdash;Bee-hunters&mdash;Disasters of Elk-hunting&mdash;Bran
+ Wounded&mdash;'Old Smut's' Buck&mdash;Boar at Hackgalla&mdash;Death of
+ 'Old Smut'&mdash;Scenery from the Perewelle Mountains&mdash;Diabolical
+ Death of 'Merriman'&mdash;Scene of the Murder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;Smut borne in his litter by
+ four men&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ A JUNGLE TRIP.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;dirt
+ and darkness is the necessary consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Wortley. . 1 single barrel rifle. 3-ounce
+ " . . 1 double " rifle . No. 12.
+ " . . 2 double " guns . No. 12.
+ Palliser.. 1 single " rifle . No. 8 (my old 2-ounce)
+ " .. 1 double " rifle . No. 12.
+ " .. 2 double " guns . No. 12.
+ V. Baker 3 double " " . No. 14.
+ " . . 1 double " " . No. 12.
+ " . . 1 single " rifle . No. 14.
+ S. W. Baker. 1 single " rifle . 4-ounce.
+ " . . 3 double " rifles No. 10.
+ " . . 1 double " gun. No. 16.
+ 18 guns.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But how changed was this country since I had visited it in former years,
+ not only in appearance but in the quantity of game!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nov. 18.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nov. 19.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;Palliser
+ and V. Baker, and Wortley and myself&mdash;and taking different
+ directions, we scoured the country, agreeing to meet at the tent at dusk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wallace, with the Rhatamahatmeya and the trackers, had arrived, and we
+ resolved to start for Cowdelle at daybreak on the following morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nov. 21.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;five elephants within thirty seconds from the first shot
+ fired. Wortley had commenced well, having killed his first elephant with
+ one shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was convinced that we could expect no sport in this neighbourhood; we
+ therefore held a consultation as to our line of country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nov. 22.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NOV. 23.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some miles were passed; fresh tracks of elephants and all kinds of game
+ were very numerous, and the country was perfection for shooting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus all this beautiful country, abounding with every kind of game, was
+ actually passed over without firing a single shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nov. 24&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;W. and P., and V. B. and I. We strolled off with our guns in
+ different directions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country was perfectly level, being a succession of glades of fine low
+ grass divided into a thousand natural paddocks by belts of jungle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nov. 25.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nov. 26.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nov. 27.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nov. 28.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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, &amp;c., for the present, we arrived at our place of
+ encampment at three P.M., after a delightful ride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nov. 30.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Banda approved of this plan, as we should then be driving the borders of
+ the 'Park,' instead of commencing in the centre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dec. 1.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;all
+ this concentrating with great rapidity upon the very spot upon which we
+ were standing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was an exciting moment, especially to nerves unaccustomed to the
+ sport.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A jungle lay about two hundred yards in front of the herd, and they
+ increased their speed to arrive at this place of refuge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was bad, thorny jungle, interspersed with numerous small glades of fine
+ turf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;the gun-bearers
+ bolted,&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;at which time he had
+ separated from us to cut off the three elephants that we had just seen
+ among the rocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Look out! look out! an elephant's coming! Look out!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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 us. 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dec. 2.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dec. 3.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had thus only killed three elephants out of the herd, and, without
+ seeing more, we returned to the horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We returned to the horses, and moved to the 'Cave,' meeting with no
+ farther incidents that day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dec. 4&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dec. 5&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During our meal a heavy shower of rain came down, and continued for about
+ two hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were just stalking towards the deer when we came upon a herd of wild
+ buffaloes in a small hollow, within a close shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ December 7.&mdash;This, being Sunday, was passed in quiet; but a general
+ cleaning of guns took place, to be ready for the morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dec. 8.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carefully ascending some slightly rising ground, and keeping close to the
+ edge of the jungle, we peered over the high grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only effect produced was a furious charge right into us!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gun-bearers were in such a fright that they never stopped till they
+ got out on the patina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dec. 9.&mdash;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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 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 knees, but, immediately recovering himself, he ran round
+ a large rock. I ran round the other side, and killed him dead within four
+ paces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon descending the opposite side of the pass, we arrived in flat country,
+ and on the left of the road we saw another elephant, a 'rogue', in high
+ lemon grass. We tried to get a shot at him, but it was of no use; the
+ grass was so high and thick, that after trying several experiments, we
+ declined following him in such ground. We arrived at Nielgalla in the
+ evening without farther sport: here we killed a few couple of snipe in the
+ paddy-fields, which added to our dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dec. 10.&mdash;Having beaten several miles of country without seeing any
+ signs of elephants, we came unexpectedly upon a herd of wild buffaloes;
+ they were standing in beautiful open ground, interspersed with trees,
+ about a hundred and ten paces from us. I gave Palliser my heavy rifle, as
+ he was very anxious to get a pair of good horns, and with the pleasure of
+ a spectator I watched the sport. He made a good shot with the four-ounce,
+ and dropped the foremost buffalo; the herd galloped off but he broke the
+ hind leg of another buffalo with one of the No. 10 rifles, and, after a
+ chase of a couple of hundred yards, he came up with the wounded beast, who
+ could not extricate himself from a deep gully of water, as he could not
+ ascend the steep bank on three legs. A few more shots settled him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We gave up all ideas of elephants for this day after so much firing; but,
+ curious enough, just as we were mounting our horses, we heard the roar of
+ an elephant in a jungle on the hillside about half a mile distant. There
+ was no mistaking the sound, and we were soon at the spot. This jungle was
+ very extensive, and the rocky bed of a mountain-torrent divided it into
+ two portions; on the right hand was fine open forest, and on the left
+ thorny chenar. The elephants were in the open forest, close to the edge of
+ the torrent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The herd winded us just as we were approaching up the steep ascent of the
+ rocky stream, and they made a rush across the bed of the torrent to gain
+ the thick jungle on the opposite bank. Banda immediately beckoned to me to
+ come into the jungle with the intention of meeting the elephants as they
+ entered, while Palliser was to command the narrow passage, in which there
+ was only space for one person to shoot, without confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the mean time, Palliser knocked over three elephants as they crossed
+ the stream, while we, on reaching the thick jungle, found it so dense that
+ we could see nothing. Just as we were thinking of returning again to the
+ spot that we had left, we heard a tremendous rush in the bush, coming
+ straight towards us. In another instant I saw a mass of twisted and matted
+ thorns crashing in a heap upon me. I had barely time to jump on one side,
+ as the elephant nearly grazed me, and I fired both barrels into the
+ tangled mass that he bore upon his head. I then bolted, and took up a good
+ position at a few yards' distance. The shots in the head had so completely
+ stunned the elephant that she could not move. She now stood in a piece of
+ jungle so dense that we could not see her, and Palliser creeping up to
+ her, while we stood ready to back him, fired three shots without the least
+ effect. She did not even move, being senseless with the wound. One of my
+ men then gave him my four-ounce rifle. A loud report from the old gun
+ sounded the elephant's knell, and closed the sport for that trip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We returned to Nielgalla, the whole of that day's bag belonging to
+ Palliser&mdash;four elephants and two buffaloes. We packed up our traps,
+ and early the next morning we started direct for Newera Ellia, having in
+ three weeks from the day of our departure from Kandy bagged fifty
+ elephants, five deer, and two buffaloes; of which, Wortley had killed to
+ his bag, ten elephants and two deer; Palliser sixteen elephants and two
+ buffaloes; V. Baker, up to the time of his leaving us, two elephants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_CONC" id="link2H_CONC">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CONCLUSION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Thus ended a trip, which exhibited the habits and character of elephants
+ in a most perfect manner. From the simple experience of these three weeks'
+ shooting a novice might claim some knowledge of the elephant; and the
+ journal of this tour must at once explain, even to the most uninitiated,
+ the exact proportion of risk with which this sport is attended, when
+ followed up in a sportsmanlike manner. These days will always be looked
+ back to by me with the greatest pleasure. The moments of sport lose none
+ of their brightness by age, and when the limbs become enfeebled by time,
+ the mind can still cling to scenes long past, with the pleasure of youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One great addition to the enjoyment of wild sport is the companionship of
+ thorough sportsmen. A confidence in each other is absolutely necessary;
+ without this, I would not remain a day in the jungle. An even temper, not
+ easily disturbed by the little annoyances inseparable from a trip in a
+ wild country, is also indispensable; without this, a man would be
+ insufferable. Our party was an emblem of contentment. The day's sport
+ concluded, the evenings were most enjoyable, and will never be forgotten.
+ The well arranged tent, the neatly-spread table, the beds forming a
+ triangle around the walls, and the clean guns piled in a long row against
+ the gun-rack, will often recall a tableau in after years, in countries far
+ from this land of independence. The acknowledged sports of England will
+ appear child's play; the exciting thrill will be wanting, when a sudden
+ rush in the jungle brings the rifle on full cock; and the heavy guns will
+ become useless mementoes of past days, like the dusty helmets of yore,
+ hanging up in an old hall. The belt and the hunting-knife will alike share
+ the fate of the good rifle, and the blade, now so keen, will blunt from
+ sheer neglect. The slips, which have held the necks of dogs of such
+ staunch natures, will hang neglected from the wall; and all these
+ souvenirs of wild sports, contrasted with the puny implements of the
+ English chase, will awaken once more the longing desire, for the 'Rifle
+ and Hound in Ceylon'.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
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+Project Gutenberg's The Rifle and The Hound in Ceylon, by Samuel White Baker
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+
+
+Title: The Rifle and The Hound in Ceylon
+
+Author: Samuel White Baker
+
+Posting Date: February 22, 2009 [EBook #3231]
+Release Date: May, 2002
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RIFLE AND THE HOUND IN CEYLON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Garry Gill, Charles Franks, and the Distributed
+Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE RIFLE AND HOUND IN CEYLON
+
+
+By Sir Samuel White Baker
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+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, &c.; 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.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+CHAPTER 1.
+
+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
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Newera Ellia--The Turn-out for Elk-hunting--Elk-hunting--Elk turned to
+Bay--The Boar
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+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
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Equipment for a Hunting Trip--In Chase of a Herd of Elephants--Hard
+Work--Close Quarters--Six Feet from the Muzzle--A Black with a Devil
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+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
+Phatamahatmeya's Tale
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+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
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+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
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+Best 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
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+A Morning's Deer-coursing--Kondawataweny--Rogue at Kondawataweny--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
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+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
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+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
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+A Jungle Trip
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+Conclusion
+
+
+
+
+THE RIFLE AND HOUND.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+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 had just 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.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+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, &c., 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.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+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 description 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.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+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.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+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 distinguish 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.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+A JUNGLE TRIP.
+
+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:--
+
+ Wortley. . 1 single barrel rifle. 3-ounce
+ " . . 1 double " rifle . No. 12.
+ " . . 2 double " guns . No. 12.
+ Palliser.. 1 single " rifle . No. 8 (my old 2-ounce)
+ " .. 1 double " rifle . No. 12.
+ " .. 2 double " guns . No. 12.
+ V. Baker 3 double " " . No. 14.
+ " . . 1 double " " . No. 12.
+ " . . 1 single " rifle . No. 14.
+ S. W. Baker. 1 single " rifle . 4-ounce.
+ " . . 3 double " rifles No. 10.
+ " . . 1 double " gun. No. 16.
+ 18 guns.
+
+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, &c., 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 us. 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 knees, but, immediately recovering himself, he
+ran round a large rock. I ran round the other side, and killed him dead
+within four paces.
+
+Upon descending the opposite side of the pass, we arrived in flat
+country, and on the left of the road we saw another elephant, a 'rogue',
+in high lemon grass. We tried to get a shot at him, but it was of
+no use; the grass was so high and thick, that after trying several
+experiments, we declined following him in such ground. We arrived at
+Nielgalla in the evening without farther sport: here we killed a few
+couple of snipe in the paddy-fields, which added to our dinner.
+
+Dec. 10.--Having beaten several miles of country without seeing any
+signs of elephants, we came unexpectedly upon a herd of wild buffaloes;
+they were standing in beautiful open ground, interspersed with trees,
+about a hundred and ten paces from us. I gave Palliser my heavy rifle,
+as he was very anxious to get a pair of good horns, and with the
+pleasure of a spectator I watched the sport. He made a good shot with
+the four-ounce, and dropped the foremost buffalo; the herd galloped
+off but he broke the hind leg of another buffalo with one of the No. 10
+rifles, and, after a chase of a couple of hundred yards, he came up with
+the wounded beast, who could not extricate himself from a deep gully of
+water, as he could not ascend the steep bank on three legs. A few more
+shots settled him.
+
+We gave up all ideas of elephants for this day after so much firing;
+but, curious enough, just as we were mounting our horses, we heard
+the roar of an elephant in a jungle on the hillside about half a mile
+distant. There was no mistaking the sound, and we were soon at the spot.
+This jungle was very extensive, and the rocky bed of a mountain-torrent
+divided it into two portions; on the right hand was fine open forest,
+and on the left thorny chenar. The elephants were in the open forest,
+close to the edge of the torrent.
+
+The herd winded us just as we were approaching up the steep ascent of
+the rocky stream, and they made a rush across the bed of the torrent to
+gain the thick jungle on the opposite bank. Banda immediately beckoned
+to me to come into the jungle with the intention of meeting the
+elephants as they entered, while Palliser was to command the narrow
+passage, in which there was only space for one person to shoot, without
+confusion.
+
+In the mean time, Palliser knocked over three elephants as they crossed
+the stream, while we, on reaching the thick jungle, found it so dense
+that we could see nothing. Just as we were thinking of returning again
+to the spot that we had left, we heard a tremendous rush in the bush,
+coming straight towards us. In another instant I saw a mass of twisted
+and matted thorns crashing in a heap upon me. I had barely time to jump
+on one side, as the elephant nearly grazed me, and I fired both barrels
+into the tangled mass that he bore upon his head. I then bolted, and
+took up a good position at a few yards' distance. The shots in the head
+had so completely stunned the elephant that she could not move. She
+now stood in a piece of jungle so dense that we could not see her, and
+Palliser creeping up to her, while we stood ready to back him, fired
+three shots without the least effect. She did not even move, being
+senseless with the wound. One of my men then gave him my four-ounce
+rifle. A loud report from the old gun sounded the elephant's knell, and
+closed the sport for that trip.
+
+We returned to Nielgalla, the whole of that day's bag belonging to
+Palliser--four elephants and two buffaloes. We packed up our traps, and
+early the next morning we started direct for Newera Ellia, having
+in three weeks from the day of our departure from Kandy bagged fifty
+elephants, five deer, and two buffaloes; of which, Wortley had killed to
+his bag, ten elephants and two deer; Palliser sixteen elephants and two
+buffaloes; V. Baker, up to the time of his leaving us, two elephants.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+Thus ended a trip, which exhibited the habits and character of elephants
+in a most perfect manner. From the simple experience of these three
+weeks' shooting a novice might claim some knowledge of the elephant;
+and the journal of this tour must at once explain, even to the most
+uninitiated, the exact proportion of risk with which this sport is
+attended, when followed up in a sportsmanlike manner. These days will
+always be looked back to by me with the greatest pleasure. The moments
+of sport lose none of their brightness by age, and when the limbs become
+enfeebled by time, the mind can still cling to scenes long past, with
+the pleasure of youth.
+
+One great addition to the enjoyment of wild sport is the companionship
+of thorough sportsmen. A confidence in each other is absolutely
+necessary; without this, I would not remain a day in the jungle. An even
+temper, not easily disturbed by the little annoyances inseparable from a
+trip in a wild country, is also indispensable; without this, a man would
+be insufferable. Our party was an emblem of contentment. The day's
+sport concluded, the evenings were most enjoyable, and will never be
+forgotten. The well arranged tent, the neatly-spread table, the beds
+forming a triangle around the walls, and the clean guns piled in a long
+row against the gun-rack, will often recall a tableau in after years, in
+countries far from this land of independence. The acknowledged sports of
+England will appear child's play; the exciting thrill will be wanting,
+when a sudden rush in the jungle brings the rifle on full cock; and the
+heavy guns will become useless mementoes of past days, like the
+dusty helmets of yore, hanging up in an old hall. The belt and the
+hunting-knife will alike share the fate of the good rifle, and the
+blade, now so keen, will blunt from sheer neglect. The slips, which have
+held the necks of dogs of such staunch natures, will hang neglected from
+the wall; and all these souvenirs of wild sports, contrasted with the
+puny implements of the English chase, will awaken once more the longing
+desire, for the 'Rifle and Hound in Ceylon'.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Rifle and The Hound in Ceylon, by
+Samuel White Baker
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+Project Gutenberg's The Rifle and The Hound in Ceylon, by Baker
+#3 in our series by Sir Samuel White Baker.
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+Title: The Rifle and The Hound in Ceylon
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+Author: Sir Samuel White Baker
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+Release Date: May, 2002 [Etext #3231]
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+
+The Rifle and Hound in Ceylon
+
+Sir Samuel White Baker
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+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, &c.; 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.
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 1.
+
+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
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Newera Ellia--The Turn-out for Elk-hunting--Elk-hunting--
+Elk turned to Bay--The Boar
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+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
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Equipment for a Hunting Trip--In Chase of a Herd of Elephants--Hard
+Work--Close Quarters--Six Feet from the Muzzle--A Black with a Devil
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+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 Phatamahatmeya's Tale
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+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
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+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
+--Wiharewel1e--A Night Attack upon Elephants--Shooting by Moonlight
+--Yalle River--Another Rogue--A Stroll before Breakfast--A Curious
+Shot--A Good Day's Sport
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+Best 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
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+A Morning's Deer-coursing--Kondawataweny--Rogue at Kondawataweny--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
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+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
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+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
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+A Jungle Trip
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+Conclusion
+
+
+
+
+THE RIFLE AND HOUND.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+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, &c., 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.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+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.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+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.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+A JUNGLE TRIP.
+
+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 :--
+
+Wortley . . 1 single barrel rifle . 3-ounce
+ " . . 1 double " rifle . No. 12.
+ " . . 2 double " guns . No. 12.
+Palliser . . 1 single " rifle . No. 8 (my old 2-ounce)
+ " . . 1 double " rifle . No. 12.
+ " . . 2 double " guns . No. 12.
+V. Baker . 3 double " " . No. 14.
+ " . . 1 double " " . No. 12.
+ " . . 1 single " rifle . No. 14.
+S. W. Baker . 1 single " rifle . 4-ounce.
+ " . . 3 double " rifles No. 10.
+ " . . 1 double " gun . No. 16.
+ 18 guns.
+
+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, &c., 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 knees, but, immediately recovering himself, he ran
+round a large rock. I ran round the other side, and killed him dead
+within four paces.
+
+Upon descending the opposite side of the pass, we arrived in flat
+country, and on the left of the road we saw another elephant, a 'rogue',
+in high lemon grass. We tried to get a shot at him, but it was of no
+use; the grass was so high and thick, that after trying several
+experiments, we declined following him in such ground. We arrived at
+Nielgalla in the evening without farther sport: here we killed a few
+couple of snipe in the paddy-fields, which added to our dinner.
+
+Dec. 10.--Having beaten several miles of country without seeing any
+signs of elephants, we came unexpectedly upon a herd of wild buffaloes;
+they were standing in beautiful open ground, interspersed with trees,
+about a hundred and ten paces from us. I gave Palliser my heavy rifle,
+as he was very anxious to get a pair of good horns, and with the
+pleasure of a spectator I watched the sport. He made a good shot with
+the four-ounce, and dropped the foremost buffalo; the herd galloped off
+but he broke the hind leg of another buffalo with one of the No. 10
+rifles, and, after a chase of a couple of hundred yards, he came up with
+the wounded beast, who could not extricate himself from a deep gully of
+water, as he could not ascend the steep bank on three legs. A few more
+shots settled him.
+
+We gave up all ideas of elephants for this day after so much firing;
+but, curious enough, just as we were mounting our horses, we heard the
+roar of an elephant in a jungle on the hillside about half a mile
+distant. There was no mistaking the sound, and we were soon at the spot.
+This jungle was very extensive, and the rocky bed of a mountain-torrent
+divided it into two portions; on the right hand was fine open forest,
+and on the left thorny chenar. The elephants were in the open forest,
+close to the edge of the torrent.
+
+The herd winded us just as we were approaching up the steep ascent of
+the rocky stream, and they made a rush across the bed of the torrent to
+gain the thick jungle on the opposite bank. Banda immediately beckoned
+to me to come into the jungle with the intention of meeting the
+elephants as they entered, while Palliser was to command the narrow
+passage, in which there was only space for one person to shoot, without
+confusion.
+
+In the mean time, Palliser knocked over three elephants as they crossed
+the stream, while we, on reaching the thick jungle, found it so dense
+that we could see nothing. Just as we were thinking of returning again
+to the spot that we had left, we heard a tremendous rush in the bush,
+coming straight towards us. In another instant I saw a mass of twisted
+and matted thorns crashing in a heap upon me. I had barely time to jump
+on one side, as the elephant nearly grazed me, and I fired both barrels
+into the tangled mass that he bore upon his head. I then bolted, and
+took up a good position at a few yards' distance. The shots in the head
+had so completely stunned the elephant that she could not move. She now
+stood in a piece of jungle so dense that we could not see her, and
+Palliser creeping up to her, while we stood ready to back him, fired
+three shots without the least effect. She did not even move, being
+senseless with the wound. One of my men then gave him my four-ounce
+rifle. A loud report from the old gun sounded the elephant's knell, and
+closed the sport for that trip.
+
+We returned to Nielgalla, the whole of that day's bag belonging to
+Palliser--four elephants and two buffaloes. We packed up our traps, and
+early the next morning we started direct for Newera Ellia, having in
+three weeks from the day of our departure from Kandy bagged fifty
+elephants, five deer, and two buffaloes; of which, Wortley had killed to
+his bag, ten elephants and two deer; Palliser sixteen elephants and two
+buffaloes; V. Baker, up to the time of his leaving us, two elephants.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+Thus ended a trip, which exhibited the habits and character of elephants
+in a most perfect manner. From the simple experience of these three
+weeks' shooting a novice might claim some knowledge of the elephant; and
+the journal of this tour must at once explain, even to the most
+uninitiated, the exact proportion of risk with which this sport is
+attended, when followed up in a sportsmanlike manner. These days will
+always be looked back to by me with the greatest pleasure. The moments
+of sport lose none of their brightness by age, and when the limbs become
+enfeebled by time, the mind can still cling to scenes long past, with
+the pleasure of youth.
+
+One great addition to the enjoyment of wild sport is the companionship
+of thorough sportsmen. A confidence in each other is absolutely
+necessary; without this, I would not remain a day in the jungle. An even
+temper, not easily disturbed by the little annoyances inseparable from a
+trip in a wild country, is also indispensable; without this, a man would
+be insufferable. Our party was an emblem of contentment. The day's sport
+concluded, the evenings were most enjoyable, and will never be
+forgotten. The well arranged tent, the neatly-spread table, the beds
+forming a triangle around the walls, and the clean guns piled in a long
+row against the gun-rack, will often recall a tableau in after years, in
+countries far from this land of independence. The acknowledged sports of
+England will appear child's play; the exciting thrill will be wanting,
+when a sudden rush in the jungle brings the rifle on full cock; and the
+heavy guns will become useless mementoes of past days, like the dusty
+helmets of yore, hanging up in an old hall. The belt and the
+hunting-knife will alike share the fate of the good rifle, and the
+blade, now so keen, will blunt from sheer neglect. The slips, which have
+held the necks of dogs of such staunch natures, will hang neglected from
+the wall; and all these souvenirs of wild sports, contrasted with the
+puny implements of the English chase, will awaken once more the longing
+desire, for the 'Rifle and Hound in Ceylon'.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Rifle and The Hound in Ceylon, by Baker
+
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