Robert Michael Ballantyne - The Settler and the Savage стр 10.

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Zee noise is great, growled Scholtz, as another burst of whip-musketry, human roars, and bovine bellows broke on their ears, ant zee confusion is indesgraibable.

The gentlemen whose business it is to keep order must have a hard time of it, said Mrs Scholtz; I cant ever understand how they does it, what between landing parties and locating em, and feeding, supplying, advising, and despatching of em, to say nothing of scolding and snubbing, in the midst of all this Babel of bubbledom, quite surpasses my understanding. Do you understand it, Mr Black?

Ay, replied Sandy, clearing his throat and speaking somewhat oracularly. Ee must know, Mrs Scholtz, that its the result of organisation and gineralship. A serjeant or corporal can kick or drive a few men in ony direction thats wanted, but it takes a gineral to move an army. If ee was to set a corporal to lead twunty thoosand men, hed gie them orders that wad thraw them into a deed lock, an than naethin short o a miracle could git them oot ot. Mony a battles been lost by brave men through bad gineralship, an mony a battles been won by puir enough bodies o men because of their leaders administrative abeelity, Mrs Scholtz.

Very true, Mr Black, replied Mrs Scholtz, with the assurance of one who thoroughly understands what she hears.

Noo, continued Sandy, with increased gravity, if thae Kawfir bodies we hear aboot only had chiefs wi powers of organisation, an was a united thegither, they wad drive the haul o this colony into the sea like chaff before the wind. But theyll niver do it; for, ee see, they want mindan body withoot mind is but a puir thing after a, Mrs Scholtz.

Im not so shure of zat, put in Scholtz, stretching his huge frame and regarding it complacently; it vould please me better to have body vidout mint, zan mint vidout body.

Hm! eeve reason to be pleased then, muttered Black, drily.

This compliment was either not appreciated by Scholtz, or he was prevented from acknowledging it by an interruption from without; for just at the moment a voice was heard asking a passer-by if he could tell where the tents of the Scotch party were pitched. Those in the tent rose at once, and Sandy Black, issuing out found that the questioner was a handsome young Englishman, who would have appeared, what he really was, both stout and tall, if he had not been dwarfed by his companion, a Cape-Dutchman of unusually gigantic proportions.

We are in search of the Scottish party, said the youth, turning to Sandy with a polite bow; can you direct us to its whereabouts?

Im no sure that I can, sir, though Im wan o the Scotch pairty mysel, for me an my freen hae lost oorsels, but doobtless Mister Dally here can help us. May I ask what ee want wi us?

Certainly, replied the Englishman, with a smile. Mr Marais and I have been commissioned to transport you to Baviaans river in bullock-waggons, and we wish to see Mr Pringle, the head of your party, to make arrangements.Can you guide us, Mr Dally?

Have you been to the deputy-quartermaster-generals office? asked Dally.

Yes, and they directed us to a spot said to be surrounded by evergreen bushes near this quarter of the camp.

I know itjust outside the ridge between the camp and the Government offices.Come along, sir, said Dally; Ill show you the way.

In a few minutes Dally led the party to a group of seven or eight tents which were surrounded by Scotch ploughs, cart-wheels, harrows, cooking utensils fire-arms, and various implements of husbandry and ironware.

Here come the lost ones! exclaimed Kenneth McTavish, who, with his active wife and sprightly daughter Jessie, was busy arranging the interior of his tent, and bringing strangers with them too!

While Sandy Black and his friend Jerry were explaining the cause of their absence to some of the Scotch party, the young Englishman introduced his friend and himself as Charles Considine and Hans Marais, to the leader, Mr Pringle, a gentleman who, besides being a good poet, afterwards took a prominent part in the first acts of that great dramathe colonisation of the eastern frontier of South Africa.

It is unnecessary to trouble the reader with all that was said and done. Suffice it to say that arrangements were soon made. The acting Governor, Sir Rufane Donkin, arrived on the 6th of June from a visit to Albany, the district near the sea on which a large number of the settlers were afterwards located, and from him Mr Pringle learned that the whole of the Scotch emigrants were to be located in the mountainous country watered by some of the eastern branches of the Great Fish River, close to the Kafir frontier. The upper part of the Baviaans, or Baboons, River had been fixed for the reception of his particular section. It was also intended by Government that a piece of unoccupied territory still farther to the eastward should be settled by a party of five hundred Highlanders, who, it was conjectured, would prove the most effective buffer available to meet the first shock of invasion, should the savages ever attempt another inroad.

Mr Pringle laid this proposed arrangement before a council of the heads of families under his charge; it was heartily agreed to, and preparations for an early start were actively begun.

On the day of his arrival Sir Rufane Donkin laid the foundation of the first house of the now wealthy and flourishing, though not very imposing, town of Port Elizabeth, so named after his deceased wife, to whose memory an obelisk was subsequently erected on the adjacent heights.

A week later, a train of seven waggons stood with the oxen inspanned, or yoked, ready to leave the camp, from which many similar trains had previously set out. The length of such a train may be conceived when it is told that each waggon was drawn by twelve or sixteen oxen. These were fastened in pairs to a single trace or trektow of twisted thongs of bullock or buffalo hide, strong enough for a ships cable. Each waggon had a canvas cover or till to protect its goods and occupants from the sun and rain, and each was driven by a tall Dutchman, who carried a bamboo whip like a salmon fishing-rod with a lash of thirty feet or more. A slave, Hottentot or Bushman, led the two front oxen of each span.

Like pistol-shots the formidable whips went off; the oxen pulled, tossed their unwieldy horns, and bellowed; the Dutchmen growled and shouted; the half-naked Totties and Bushmen flung their arms and legs about, glared and gasped like demons; the monstrous waggons moved; Settlers Town was slowly left behind, and our adventurers, heading for the thorny jungles of the Zwartkops River, began their toilsome journey into the land of hope and promise.

Its a queer beginning! remarked Sandy Black, as he trudged between Hans Marais and Charlie Considine.

I hope it will have a good ending, said Considine.

Whether that hope was fulfilled the reader shall find out in the sequel.

Meanwhile some of the English parties took their departure by the same route, and journeyed in company till points of divergence were reached, where many temporary friendships were brought to a close, though some there were which, although very recently formed, withstood firmly the damaging effects of time, trial, sorrow, and separation.

Chapter Five.

Adventures and Incidents of the First Night in the Bush

A Night-Bivouac under the mimosa-bushes of the Zwartkops River. The Cape-waggons are drawn up in various comfortable nooks; the oxen are turned loose to graze; camp-fires are kindled. Round these men and women group themselves very much as they do in ordinary society. Classes keep by themselves, not because one class wishes to exclude the other, but because habits, sympathies, interests, and circumstances draw like to like. The ruddy glare of the camp-fires contrasts pleasantly with the cold light of the moon, which casts into deepest shadow the wild recesses of bush and brake, inducing many a furtive glance from the more timid of the settlers, who see an elephant, a buffalo, or a Cape tiger in every bank and stump and stone. Their suspicions are not so wild as one might suppose, for the neighbouring jungle, called the Addo Bush, swarms with these and other wild animals.

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