The Elephant God eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 338 pages of information about The Elephant God.

The Elephant God eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 338 pages of information about The Elephant God.

Then the jungle closed round them again, as Badshah plunged into the high grass bordering the far side of the river-bed, its feathery plumes sixteen feet from the ground.  On through low thorny trees and scrub to the huge bulks and thick, leafy canopy of the giant simal and teak once more.  The further they went from the hills the denser, more tropical became the undergrowth.  The soil was damper and supported a richer, more luxuriant vegetation.  Cane brakes through which even elephants and bison would find it hard to push a way, tree ferns of every kind, feathery bushes set thick with cruel hooked thorns, mingled with the great trees, between which the creepers rioted in wilder confusion than ever.

The heat was intense.  The air grew moist and steamy, and the sweat trickled down Dermot’s face.  The earth underfoot was sodden and slushy.  Little streams began to trickle, for the water from the mountains ten miles away that sinks into the soil at the foot of the hills and flows to the south underground, here rises to the surface and gives the whole forest its name—­Terai, that is, “wet.”

Slimy pools lurked in the undergrowth.  In one the ugly snout of a small crocodile protruded from the muddy, noisome water, and the cold, unwinking eyes stared at elephant and man as they passed.  The rank abundant foliage overhung the track and brushed or broke against Badshah’s sides, as he shouldered his way through it.

Suddenly, without warning, Badshah came out on a stretch of forest clear of undergrowth between the great tree-trunks, and to his amazement Dermot saw that it was filled with wild elephants.  Everywhere, as far as the eye could range between the trees, they were massed, not in tens or scores, but in hundreds.  On every side were vistas of multitudes of great heads with gleaming white tusks and restless-moving trunks, of huge bodies supported on ponderous legs.  And with an unwonted fear clutching at his heart Dermot realised that all their eyes were turned in his direction.

Did they see him?  Were they aware that Badshah carried a man?  Dermot knew that beasts do not quickly realise a man’s presence on the neck or back of a tame elephant.  He had seen in a kheddah, when the mahouts and noosers had gone on their trained elephants in among the host of terrified or angry captured wild ones, that the latter seemed not to observe the humans.

So he hoped now that if he succeeded in turning his animal round and getting him away quickly, his presence would remain unnoticed.  Grasping his rifle ready to fire if necessary, he tried with foot and hand to swing Badshah about.  But his elephant absolutely ignored his efforts and for the first time in their acquaintance disobeyed him.  Slowing down to a stately and deliberate pace the Gunesh advanced to meet the others.

Then, to Dermot’s amazement, from the vast herd that now encompassed them on every side came the low purring that in an elephant denotes pleasure.  Almost inaudible from one throat, it sounded from these many hundreds like the rumble of distant thunder.  And in answer to it there came from Badshah’s trunk a low sound, indicative of his pleasure.  Then it dawned on Dermot that it was to meet this vast gathering of his kind that the animal had broken loose from captivity.

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The Elephant God from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.