The Jungle Book
by Rudyard Kipling
Ch. 9:-10 Darzee's Chant
Give him the Thanks of
the Birds, Bowing with tail feathers spread! Praise him with nightingale
words-- Nay, I will praise him instead.
Hear! I will sing you
the praise of the bottle-tailed Rikki, with
eyeballs of red!
(Here Rikki-tikki
interrupted, and the rest of the song is
lost.)
The Jungle Book
by Rudyard Kipling
Ch. 10: Toomai of the
Elephants
"Wah!" said
Little Toomai, "thou art a big elephant," and he wagged his fluffy
head, quoting his father. "The Government may pay for elephants, but they
belong to us mahouts. When thou art old, Kala Nag, there will come some rich
rajah, and he will buy thee from the Government, on account of thy size and thy
manners, and then thou wilt have nothing to do but to carry gold earrings in
thy ears, and a gold howdah on thy back, and a red cloth covered with gold on
thy sides, and walk at the head of the processions of the King. Then I shall
sit on thy neck, O Kala Nag, with a silver ankus, and men will run before us
with golden sticks, crying, `Room for the King's elephant!' That will be good,
Kala Nag, but not so good as this hunting in the jungles."
"Umph!" said
Big Toomai. "Thou art a boy, and as wild as a buffalo-calf. This running
up and down among the hills is not the best Government service. I am getting
old, and I do not love wild elephants. Give me brick elephant lines, one stall
to each elephant, and big stumps to tie them to safely, and flat, broad roads
to exercise upon, instead of this come-and-go camping. Aha, the Cawnpore
barracks were good. There was a bazaar close by, and only three hours' work a
day."
Little Toomai
remembered the Cawnpore elephant-lines and said nothing. He very much preferred
the camp life, and hated those broad, flat roads, with the daily grubbing for
grass in the forage reserve, and the long hours when there was nothing to do
except to watch Kala Nag fidgeting in his pickets.
What Little Toomai
liked was to scramble up bridle paths that only an elephant could take; the dip
into the valley below; the glimpses of the wild elephants browsing miles away;
the rush of the frightened pig and peacock under Kala Nag's feet; the blinding
warm rains, when all the hills and valleys smoked; the beautiful misty mornings
when nobody knew where they would camp that night; the steady, cautious drive
of the wild elephants, and the mad rush and blaze and hullabaloo of the last
night's drive, when the elephants poured into the stockade like boulders in a
landslide, found that they could not get out, and flung themselves at the heavy
posts only to be driven back by yells and flaring torches and volleys of blank
cartridge.
Even a little boy
could be of use there, and Toomai was as useful as three boys. He would get his
torch and wave it, and yell with the best. But the really good time came when
the driving out began, and the Keddah--that is, the stockade-- looked like a
picture of the end of the world, and men had to make signs to one another,
because they could not hear themselves speak. Then Little Toomai would climb up
to the top of one of the quivering stockade posts, his sun-bleached brown hair
flying loose all over his shoulders, and he looking like a goblin in the
torch-light. And as soon as there was a lull you could hear his high-pitched
yells of encouragement to Kala Nag, above the trumpeting and crashing, and
snapping of ropes, and groans of the tethered elephants. "Mael, mael, Kala
Nag! (Go on, go on, Black Snake!) Dant do! (Give him the tusk!) Somalo! Somalo!
(Careful, careful!) Maro! Mar! (Hit him, hit him!) Mind the post! Arre! Arre!
Hai! Yai! Kya-a-ah!" he would shout, and the big fight between Kala Nag
and the wild elephant would sway to and fro across the Keddah, and the old
elephant catchers would wipe the sweat out of their eyes, and find time to nod
to Little Toomai wriggling with joy on the top of the posts.
He did more than
wriggle. One night he slid down from the post and slipped in between the
elephants and threw up the loose end of a rope, which had dropped, to a driver
who was trying to get a purchase on the leg of a kicking young calf (calves
always give more trouble than full-grown animals). Kala Nag saw him, caught him
in his trunk, and handed him up to Big Toomai, who slapped him then and there,
and put him back on the post.
Next morning he gave
him a scolding and said, "Are not good brick elephant lines and a little
tent carrying enough, that thou must needs go elephant catching on thy own
account, little worthless? Now those foolish hunters, whose pay is less than my
pay, have spoken to Petersen Sahib of the matter." Little Toomai was
frightened. He did not know much of white men, but Petersen Sahib was the
greatest white man in the world to him. He was the head of all the Keddah
operations--the man who caught all the elephants for the Government of India,
and who knew more about the ways of elephants than any living man.
"What--what will
happen?" said Little Toomai.
"Happen! The
worst that can happen. Petersen Sahib is a madman. Else why should he go
hunting these wild devils? He may even require thee to be an elephant catcher,
to sleep anywhere in these fever-filled jungles, and at last to be trampled to
death in the Keddah. It is well that this nonsense ends safely. Next week the
catching is over, and we of the plains are sent back to our stations. Then we
will march on smooth roads, and forget all this hunting. But, son, I am angry
that thou shouldst meddle in the business that belongs to these dirty Assamese
jungle folk. Kala Nag will obey none but me, so I must go with him into the
Keddah, but he is only a fighting elephant, and he does not help to rope them.
So I sit at my ease, as befits a mahout,--not a mere hunter,--a mahout, I say,
and a man who gets a pension at the end of his service. Is the family of Toomai
of the Elephants to be trodden underfoot in the dirt of a Keddah? Bad one!
Wicked one! Worthless son! Go and wash Kala Nag and attend to his ears, and see
that there are no thorns in his feet. Or else Petersen Sahib will surely catch
thee and make thee a wild hunter--a follower of elephant's foot tracks, a
jungle bear. Bah! Shame! Go!"
Little Toomai went off
without saying a word, but he told Kala Nag all his grievances while he was
examining his feet. "No matter," said Little Toomai, turning up the
fringe of Kala Nag's huge right ear. "They have said my name to Petersen
Sahib, and perhaps--and perhaps--and perhaps--who knows? Hai! That is a big
thorn that I have pulled out!"
The next few days were
spent in getting the elephants together, in walking the newly caught wild
elephants up and down between a couple of tame ones to prevent them giving too
much trouble on the downward march to the plains, and in taking stock of the
blankets and ropes and things that had been worn out or lost in the forest.
Petersen Sahib came in
on his clever she-elephant Pudmini; he had been paying off other camps among
the hills, for the season was coming to an end, and there was a native clerk
sitting at a table under a tree, to pay the drivers their wages. As each man
was paid he went back to his elephant, and joined the line that stood ready to
start. The catchers, and hunters, and beaters, the men of the regular Keddah,
who stayed in the jungle year in and year out, sat on the backs of the
elephants that belonged to Petersen Sahib's permanent force, or leaned against
the trees with their guns across their arms, and made fun of the drivers who
were going away, and laughed when the newly caught elephants broke the line and
ran about.
Big Toomai went up to
the clerk with Little Toomai behind him, and Machua Appa, the head tracker,
said in an undertone to a friend of his, "There goes one piece of good
elephant stuff at least. 'Tis a pity to send that young jungle-cock to molt in
the plains."
Now Petersen Sahib had
ears all over him, as a man must have who listens to the most silent of all
living things--the wild elephant. He turned where he was lying all along on
Pudmini's back and said, "What is that? I did not know of a man among the plains-drivers
who had wit enough to rope even a dead elephant."
"This is not a
man, but a boy. He went into the Keddah at the last drive, and threw Barmao
there the rope, when we were trying to get that young calf with the blotch on
his shoulder away from his mother."
Machua Appa pointed at
Little Toomai, and Petersen Sahib looked, and Little Toomai bowed to the earth.
"He throw a rope?
He is smaller than a picket-pin. Little one, what is thy name?" said
Petersen Sahib.
Little Toomai was too
frightened to speak, but Kala Nag was behind him, and Toomai made a sign with
his hand, and the elephant caught him up in his trunk and held him level with
Pudmini's forehead, in front of the great Petersen Sahib. Then Little Toomai
covered his face with his hands, for he was only a child, and except where
elephants were concerned, he was just as bashful as a child could be.
"Oho!" said
Petersen Sahib, smiling underneath his mustache, "and why didst thou teach
thy elephant that trick? Was it to help thee steal green corn from the roofs of
the houses when the ears are put out to dry?"
"Not green corn,
Protector of the Poor,--melons," said Little Toomai, and all the men
sitting about broke into a roar of laughter. Most of them had taught their
elephants that trick when they were boys. Little Toomai was hanging eight feet
up in the air, and he wished very much that he were eight feet underground.
"He is Toomai, my
son, Sahib," said Big Toomai, scowling. "He is a very bad boy, and he
will end in a jail, Sahib."
"Of that I have
my doubts," said Petersen Sahib. "A boy who can face a full Keddah at
his age does not end in jails. See, little one, here are four annas to spend in
sweetmeats because thou hast a little head under that great thatch of hair. In
time thou mayest become a hunter too." Big Toomai scowled more than ever.
"Remember, though, that Keddahs are not good for children to play
in," Petersen Sahib went on.
"Must I never go
there, Sahib?" asked Little Toomai with a big gasp.
"Yes."
Petersen Sahib smiled again. "When thou hast seen the elephants dance.
That is the proper time. Come to me when thou hast seen the elephants dance,
and then I will let thee go into all the Keddahs."
There was another roar
of laughter, for that is an old joke among elephant-catchers, and it means just
never. There are great cleared flat places hidden away in the forests that are
called elephants' ball-rooms, but even these are only found by accident, and no
man has ever seen the elephants dance. When a driver boasts of his skill and
bravery the other drivers say, "And when didst thou see the elephants
dance?"
Kala Nag put Little
Toomai down, and he bowed to the earth again and went away with his father, and
gave the silver four-anna piece to his mother, who was nursing his baby brother,
and they all were put up on Kala Nag's back, and the line of grunting,
squealing elephants rolled down the hill path to the plains. It was a very
lively march on account of the new elephants, who gave trouble at every ford,
and needed coaxing or beating every other minute.
Big Toomai prodded
Kala Nag spitefully, for he was very angry, but Little Toomai was too happy to
speak. Petersen Sahib had noticed him, and given him money, so he felt as a
private soldier would feel if he had been called out of the ranks and praised
by his commander-in-chief.
"What did
Petersen Sahib mean by the elephant dance?" he said, at last, softly to
his mother.
Big Toomai heard him
and grunted. "That thou shouldst never be one of these hill buffaloes of
trackers. That was what he meant. Oh, you in front, what is blocking the
way?"
An Assamese driver,
two or three elephants ahead, turned round angrily, crying: "Bring up Kala
Nag, and knock this youngster of mine into good behavior. Why should Petersen
Sahib have chosen me to go down with you donkeys of the rice fields? Lay your
beast alongside, Toomai, and let him prod with his tusks. By all the Gods of
the Hills, these new elephants are possessed, or else they can smell their
companions in the jungle." Kala Nag hit the new elephant in the ribs and
knocked the wind out of him, as Big Toomai said, "We have swept the hills
of wild elephants at the last catch. It is only your carelessness in driving.
Must I keep order along the whole line?"
"Hear him!"
said the other driver. "We have swept the hills! Ho! Ho! You are very
wise, you plains people. Anyone but a mud-head who never saw the jungle would
know that they know that the drives are ended for the season. Therefore all the
wild elephants to-night will--but why should I waste wisdom on a river-turtle?"
"What will they
do?" Little Toomai called out.
"Ohe, little one.
Art thou there? Well, I will tell thee, for thou hast a cool head. They will
dance, and it behooves thy father, who has swept all the hills of all the
elephants, to double-chain his pickets to-night."
"What talk is
this?" said Big Toomai. "For forty years, father and son, we have
tended elephants, and we have never heard such moonshine about dances."
"Yes; but a
plainsman who lives in a hut knows only the four walls of his hut. Well, leave
thy elephants unshackled tonight and see what comes. As for their dancing, I
have seen the place where--Bapree-bap! How many windings has the Dihang River?
Here is another ford, and we must swim the calves. Stop still, you behind
there."
And in this way,
talking and wrangling and splashing through the rivers, they made their first
march to a sort of receiving camp for the new elephants. But they lost their
tempers long before they got there.
Then the elephants
were chained by their hind legs to their big stumps of pickets, and extra ropes
were fitted to the new elephants, and the fodder was piled before them, and the
hill drivers went back to Petersen Sahib through the afternoon light, telling
the plains drivers to be extra careful that night, and laughing when the plains
drivers asked the reason.
Little Toomai attended
to Kala Nag's supper, and as evening fell, wandered through the camp,
unspeakably happy, in search of a tom-tom. When an Indian child's heart is
full, he does not run about and make a noise in an irregular fashion. He sits
down to a sort of revel all by himself. And Little Toomai had been spoken to by
Petersen Sahib! If he had not found what he wanted, I believe he would have
been ill. But the sweetmeat seller in the camp lent him a little tom-tom--a
drum beaten with the flat of the hand--and he sat down, cross-legged, before
Kala Nag as the stars began to come out, the tom-tom in his lap, and he thumped
and he thumped and he thumped, and the more he thought of the great honor that
had been done to him, the more he thumped, all alone among the elephant fodder.
There was no tune and no words, but the thumping made him happy.
The new elephants
strained at their ropes, and squealed and trumpeted from time to time, and he
could hear his mother in the camp hut putting his small brother to sleep with
an old, old song about the great God Shiv, who once told all the animals what
they should eat. It is a very soothing lullaby, and the first verse says:
Shiv, who poured the
harvest and made the winds to blow, Sitting at the doorways of a day of long
ago, Gave to each his portion, food and toil and fate, From the King upon the
guddee to the Beggar at the gate. All things made he--Shiva the Preserver. Mahadeo!
Mahadeo! He made all-- Thorn for the camel, fodder for the kine, And mother's
heart for sleepy head, O little son of mine!
Little Toomai came in
with a joyous tunk-a-tunk at the end of each verse, till he felt sleepy and
stretched himself on the fodder at Kala Nag's side. At last the elephants began
to lie down one after another as is their custom, till only Kala Nag at the
right of the line was left standing up; and he rocked slowly from side to side,
his ears put forward to listen to the night wind as it blew very slowly across
the hills. The air was full of all the night noises that, taken together, make
one big silence-- the click of one bamboo stem against the other, the rustle of
something alive in the undergrowth, the scratch and squawk of a half-waked bird
(birds are awake in the night much more often than we imagine), and the fall of
water ever so far away. Little Toomai slept for some time, and when he waked it
was brilliant moonlight, and Kala Nag was still standing up with his ears
cocked. Little Toomai turned, rustling in the fodder, and watched the curve of
his big back against half the stars in heaven, and while he watched he heard,
so far away that it sounded no more than a pinhole of noise pricked through the
stillness, the "hoot-toot" of a wild elephant.
All the elephants in
the lines jumped up as if they had been shot, and their grunts at last waked
the sleeping mahouts, and they came out and drove in the picket pegs with big
mallets, and tightened this rope and knotted that till all was quiet. One new
elephant had nearly grubbed up his picket, and Big Toomai took off Kala Nag's
leg chain and shackled that elephant fore-foot to hind-foot, but slipped a loop
of grass string round Kala Nag's leg, and told him to remember that he was tied
fast. He knew that he and his father and his grandfather had done the very same
thing hundreds of times before. Kala Nag did not answer to the order by
gurgling, as he usually did. He stood still, looking out across the moonlight,
his head a little raised and his ears spread like fans, up to the great folds
of the Garo hills.
"Tend to him if
he grows restless in the night," said Big Toomai to Little Toomai, and he
went into the hut and slept. Little Toomai was just going to sleep, too, when
he heard the coir string snap with a little "tang," and Kala Nag
rolled out of his pickets as slowly and as silently as a cloud rolls out of the
mouth of a valley. Little Toomai pattered after him, barefooted, down the road
in the moonlight, calling under his breath, "Kala Nag! Kala Nag! Take me
with you, O Kala Nag!" The elephant turned, without a sound, took three
strides back to the boy in the moonlight, put down his trunk, swung him up to
his neck, and almost before Little Toomai had settled his knees, slipped into
the forest.
There was one blast of
furious trumpeting from the lines, and then the silence shut down on
everything, and Kala Nag began to move. Sometimes a tuft of high grass washed
along his sides as a wave washes along the sides of a ship, and sometimes a cluster
of wild-pepper vines would scrape along his back, or a bamboo would creak where
his shoulder touched it. But between those times he moved absolutely without
any sound, drifting through the thick Garo forest as though it had been smoke.
He was going uphill, but though Little Toomai watched the stars in the rifts of
the trees, he could not tell in what direction.
Then Kala Nag reached
the crest of the ascent and stopped for a minute, and Little Toomai could see
the tops of the trees lying all speckled and furry under the moonlight for
miles and miles, and the blue-white mist over the river in the hollow. Toomai
leaned forward and looked, and he felt that the forest was awake below
him--awake and alive and crowded. A big brown fruit-eating bat brushed past his
ear; a porcupine's quills rattled in the thicket; and in the darkness between
the tree stems he heard a hog-bear digging hard in the moist warm earth, and
snuffing as it digged.
Then the branches
closed over his head again, and Kala Nag began to go down into the valley--not
quietly this time, but as a runaway gun goes down a steep bank--in one rush.
The huge limbs moved as steadily as pistons, eight feet to each stride, and the
wrinkled skin of the elbow points rustled. The undergrowth on either side of
him ripped with a noise like torn canvas, and the saplings that he heaved away
right and left with his shoulders sprang back again and banged him on the
flank, and great trails of creepers, all matted together, hung from his tusks
as he threw his head from side to side and plowed out his pathway. Then Little
Toomai laid himself down close to the great neck lest a swinging bough should
sweep him to the ground, and he wished that he were back in the lines again.
The grass began to get
squashy, and Kala Nag's feet sucked and squelched as he put them down, and the
night mist at the bottom of the valley chilled Little Toomai. There was a
splash and a trample, and the rush of running water, and Kala Nag strode
through the bed of a river, feeling his way at each step. Above the noise of
the water, as it swirled round the elephant's legs, Little Toomai could hear
more splashing and some trumpeting both upstream and down--great grunts and
angry snortings, and all the mist about him seemed to be full of rolling, wavy
shadows.
"Ai!" he
said, half aloud, his teeth chattering. "The elephant-folk are out
tonight. It is the dance, then!"
Kala Nag swashed out
of the water, blew his trunk clear, and began another climb. But this time he
was not alone, and he had not to make his path. That was made already, six feet
wide, in front of him, where the bent jungle-grass was trying to recover itself
and stand up. Many elephants must have gone that way only a few minutes before.
Little Toomai looked back, and behind him a great wild tusker with his little
pig's eyes glowing like hot coals was just lifting himself out of the misty
river. Then the trees closed up again, and they went on and up, with
trumpetings and crashings, and the sound of breaking branches on every side of
them.
At last Kala Nag stood
still between two tree-trunks at the very top of the hill. They were part of a
circle of trees that grew round an irregular space of some three or four acres,
and in all that space, as Little Toomai could see, the ground had been trampled
down as hard as a brick floor. Some trees grew in the center of the clearing,
but their bark was rubbed away, and the white wood beneath showed all shiny and
polished in the patches of moonlight. There were creepers hanging from the
upper branches, and the bells of the flowers of the creepers, great waxy white
things like convolvuluses, hung down fast asleep. But within the limits of the
clearing there was not a single blade of green-- nothing but the trampled
earth.
The moonlight showed
it all iron gray, except where some elephants stood upon it, and their shadows
were inky black. Little Toomai looked, holding his breath, with his eyes
starting out of his head, and as he looked, more and more and more elephants
swung out into the open from between the tree trunks. Little Toomai could only
count up to ten, and he counted again and again on his fingers till he lost
count of the tens, and his head began to swim. Outside the clearing he could
hear them crashing in the undergrowth as they worked their way up the hillside,
but as soon as they were within the circle of the tree trunks they moved like
ghosts.
There were
white-tusked wild males, with fallen leaves and nuts and twigs lying in the
wrinkles of their necks and the folds of their ears; fat, slow-footed
she-elephants, with restless, little pinky black calves only three or four feet
high running under their stomachs; young elephants with their tusks just
beginning to show, and very proud of them; lanky, scraggy old-maid elephants,
with their hollow anxious faces, and trunks like rough bark; savage old bull
elephants, scarred from shoulder to flank with great weals and cuts of bygone
fights, and the caked dirt of their solitary mud baths dropping from their
shoulders; and there was one with a broken tusk and the marks of the
full-stroke, the terrible drawing scrape, of a tiger's claws on his side.
They were standing
head to head, or walking to and fro across the ground in couples, or rocking
and swaying all by themselves-- scores and scores of elephants.
Toomai knew that so
long as he lay still on Kala Nag's neck nothing would happen to him, for even
in the rush and scramble of a Keddah drive a wild elephant does not reach up
with his trunk and drag a man off the neck of a tame elephant. And these elephants
were not thinking of men that night. Once they started and put their ears
forward when they heard the chinking of a leg iron in the forest, but it was
Pudmini, Petersen Sahib's pet elephant, her chain snapped short off, grunting,
snuffling up the hillside. She must have broken her pickets and come straight
from Petersen Sahib's camp; and Little Toomai saw another elephant, one that he
did not know, with deep rope galls on his back and breast. He, too, must have
run away from some camp in the hills about.
At last there was no
sound of any more elephants moving in the forest, and Kala Nag rolled out from
his station between the trees and went into the middle of the crowd, clucking
and gurgling, and all the elephants began to talk in their own tongue, and to
move about.
Still lying down,
Little Toomai looked down upon scores and scores of broad backs, and wagging
ears, and tossing trunks, and little rolling eyes. He heard the click of tusks
as they crossed other tusks by accident, and the dry rustle of trunks twined
together, and the chafing of enormous sides and shoulders in the crowd, and the
incessant flick and hissh of the great tails. Then a cloud came over the moon,
and he sat in black darkness. But the quiet, steady hustling and pushing and
gurgling went on just the same. He knew that there were elephants all round
Kala Nag, and that there was no chance of backing him out of the assembly; so
he set his teeth and shivered. In a Keddah at least there was torchlight and
shouting, but here he was all alone in the dark, and once a trunk came up and
touched him on the knee.
Then an elephant
trumpeted, and they all took it up for five or ten terrible seconds. The dew
from the trees above spattered down like rain on the unseen backs, and a dull
booming noise began, not very loud at first, and Little Toomai could not tell
what it was. But it grew and grew, and Kala Nag lifted up one forefoot and then
the other, and brought them down on the ground --one-two, one-two, as steadily
as trip-hammers. The elephants were stamping all together now, and it sounded
like a war drum beaten at the mouth of a cave. The dew fell from the trees till
there was no more left to fall, and the booming went on, and the ground rocked
and shivered, and Little Toomai put his hands up to his ears to shut out the
sound. But it was all one gigantic jar that ran through him--this stamp of
hundreds of heavy feet on the raw earth. Once or twice he could feel Kala Nag
and all the others surge forward a few strides, and the thumping would change
to the crushing sound of juicy green things being bruised, but in a minute or
two the boom of feet on hard earth began again. A tree was creaking and
groaning somewhere near him. He put out his arm and felt the bark, but Kala Nag
moved forward, still tramping, and he could not tell where he was in the
clearing. There was no sound from the elephants, except once, when two or three
little calves squeaked together. Then he heard a thump and a shuffle, and the
booming went on. It must have lasted fully two hours, and Little Toomai ached
in every nerve, but he knew by the smell of the night air that the dawn was
coming.
The morning broke in
one sheet of pale yellow behind the green hills, and the booming stopped with
the first ray, as though the light had been an order. Before Little Toomai had
got the ringing out of his head, before even he had shifted his position, there
was not an elephant in sight except Kala Nag, Pudmini, and the elephant with
the rope-galls, and there was neither sign nor rustle nor whisper down the
hillsides to show where the others had gone.
Little Toomai stared
again and again. The clearing, as he remembered it, had grown in the night.
More trees stood in the middle of it, but the undergrowth and the jungle grass
at the sides had been rolled back. Little Toomai stared once more. Now he
understood the trampling. The elephants had stamped out more room--had stamped
the thick grass and juicy cane to trash, the trash into slivers, the slivers
into tiny fibers, and the fibers into hard earth.
"Wah!" said
Little Toomai, and his eyes were very heavy. "Kala Nag, my lord, let us
keep by Pudmini and go to Petersen Sahib's camp, or I shall drop from thy
neck."
The third elephant
watched the two go away, snorted, wheeled round, and took his own path. He may
have belonged to some little native king's establishment, fifty or sixty or a
hundred miles away.
Two hours later, as
Petersen Sahib was eating early breakfast, his elephants, who had been double
chained that night, began to trumpet, and Pudmini, mired to the shoulders, with
Kala Nag, very footsore, shambled into the camp. Little Toomai's face was gray
and pinched, and his hair was full of leaves and drenched with dew, but he
tried to salute Petersen Sahib, and cried faintly: "The dance--the elephant
dance! I have seen it, and--I die!" As Kala Nag sat down, he slid off his
neck in a dead faint.
But, since native
children have no nerves worth speaking of, in two hours he was lying very
contentedly in Petersen Sahib's hammock with Petersen Sahib's shooting-coat
under his head, and a glass of warm milk, a little brandy, with a dash of
quinine, inside of him, and while the old hairy, scarred hunters of the jungles
sat three deep before him, looking at him as though he were a spirit, he told
his tale in short words, as a child will, and wound up with:
"Now, if I lie in
one word, send men to see, and they will find that the elephant folk have
trampled down more room in their dance-room, and they will find ten and ten,
and many times ten, tracks leading to that dance-room. They made more room with
their feet. I have seen it. Kala Nag took me, and I saw. Also Kala Nag is very
leg-weary!"
Little Toomai lay back
and slept all through the long afternoon and into the twilight, and while he
slept Petersen Sahib and Machua Appa followed the track of the two elephants
for fifteen miles across the hills. Petersen Sahib had spent eighteen years in
catching elephants, and he had only once before found such a dance-place.
Machua Appa had no need to look twice at the clearing to see what had been done
there, or to scratch with his toe in the packed, rammed earth.
"The child speaks
truth," said he. "All this was done last night, and I have counted
seventy tracks crossing the river. See, Sahib, where Pudmini's leg-iron cut the
bark of that tree! Yes; she was there too."
They looked at one
another and up and down, and they wondered. For the ways of elephants are
beyond the wit of any man, black or white, to fathom.
"Forty years and
five," said Machua Appa, "have I followed my lord, the elephant, but
never have I heard that any child of man had seen what this child has seen. By
all the Gods of the Hills, it is--what can we say?" and he shook his head.
When they got back to
camp it was time for the evening meal. Petersen Sahib ate alone in his tent,
but he gave orders that the camp should have two sheep and some fowls, as well
as a double ration of flour and rice and salt, for he knew that there would be
a feast.
Big Toomai had come up
hotfoot from the camp in the plains to search for his son and his elephant, and
now that he had found them he looked at them as though he were afraid of them
both. And there was a feast by the blazing campfires in front of the lines of
picketed elephants, and Little Toomai was the hero of it all. And the big brown
elephant catchers, the trackers and drivers and ropers, and the men who know
all the secrets of breaking the wildest elephants, passed him from one to the
other, and they marked his forehead with blood from the breast of a newly
killed jungle-cock, to show that he was a forester, initiated and free of all
the jungles.
And at last, when the
flames died down, and the red light of the logs made the elephants look as
though they had been dipped in blood too, Machua Appa, the head of all the
drivers of all the Keddahs--Machua Appa, Petersen Sahib's other self, who had
never seen a made road in forty years: Machua Appa, who was so great that he
had no other name than Machua Appa,--leaped to his feet, with Little Toomai
held high in the air above his head, and shouted: "Listen, my brothers. Listen,
too, you my lords in the lines there, for I, Machua Appa, am speaking! This
little one shall no more be called Little Toomai, but Toomai of the Elephants,
as his great-grandfather was called before him. What never man has seen he has
seen through the long night, and the favor of the elephant-folk and of the Gods
of the Jungles is with him. He shall become a great tracker. He shall become
greater than I, even I, Machua Appa! He shall follow the new trail, and the
stale trail, and the mixed trail, with a clear eye! He shall take no harm in
the Keddah when he runs under their bellies to rope the wild tuskers; and if he
slips before the feet of the charging bull elephant, the bull elephant shall
know who he is and shall not crush him. Aihai! my lords in the
chains,"--he whirled up the line of pickets--"here is the little one
that has seen your dances in your hidden places,--the sight that never man saw!
Give him honor, my lords! Salaam karo, my children. Make your salute to Toomai
of the Elephants! Gunga Pershad, ahaa! Hira Guj, Birchi Guj, Kuttar Guj, ahaa!
Pudmini,--thou hast seen him at the dance, and thou too, Kala Nag, my pearl
among elephants!--ahaa! Together! To Toomai of the Elephants. Barrao!"
And at that last wild
yell the whole line flung up their trunks till the tips touched their
foreheads, and broke out into the full salute--the crashing trumpet-peal that
only the Viceroy of India hears, the Salaamut of the Keddah.
But it was all for the
sake of Little Toomai, who had seen what never man had seen before--the dance
of the elephants at night and alone in the heart of the Garo hills!
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