Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
The Vee-Boers A Tale of Adventure in Southern Africa By Captain Mayne Reid Published by George Routledge and Sons Ltd, London This edition dated 1907
The Vee-Boers, by Captain Mayne Reid.
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________________________________________________________________________ THE VEE-BOERS, BY CAPTAIN MAYNE REID.
CHAPTER ONE.
ON THE KAROO.
A vast plain, seemingly bounded but by the horizon; treeless, save where a solitary _cameel-doorn_ [Note 1] spreads its feathered leaves, or a clump of arborescent aloes, mingled with rigid-stemmed euphorbias, breaks the continuity of its outline. These types of desert vegetation but proclaim its sterility, which is further evinced by tufts of whiteish withered grass, growing thinly between them.
Over it three waggons are moving; immense vehicles with bodies above four yards in length, surrounded by an arching of bamboo canes covered with canvas. To each is attached eight pairs of long-horned oxen, with a driver seated on the box, who flourishes a whip, in length like a fishing-rod; another on foot alongside, wielding the terrible _jambok_, while at the head of the extended team marches the "foreloper," _reim_ in hand, guiding the oxen along the track.
Half a score horsemen ride here and there upon the flanks, with three others in advance; and bringing up the rear is a drove of milch cows-- some with calves at the foot--and a flock of _fat-tailed_ sheep, their tails full fifty pounds in weight, and trailing on the ground.
The cows and sheep are in charge of ten or a dozen dark-skinned herdsmen, most of them all but naked; while a like number of large wolfish-looking dogs completes the list of living things visible outside the waggons. But, were the end curtains raised, under their tilts would be seen women with children--of both sexes and all ages--in each the members of a single family, its male head excepted.
Of the last there are three, corresponding to the number of the waggons, of which they are the respective proprietors--the three men riding in advance. Their names, Jan Van Dorn, Hans Blom, and Klaas Rynwald. All Dutch names, and Dutch are they who bear them, at least by descent, for the scene _is_ Southern Africa, and they are _Boers_.
Not of the ordinary class, though, as may be told by their large accompaniment of unattached cattle and sheep--over a hundred of the former, and three times as many of the latter. These, with other signs well-known to South Africans, proclaim them to be Vee-Boers [Note 2].
They are far away from any settlement of civilised or white men, the nearest being their own frontier town, Zoutpansberg, in the Transvaal, from which they are distant full three hundred miles northward. Nor are they in Transvaalian territory, but that of the Tebele, beyond the Limpopo river, and journeying on north.
Why they are there calls for explanation, and a word will suffice. The world has of late heard much of the Transvaal Republic and its brave people; how distasteful to them was annexation to the English Government; indeed, so repugnant, that many plucked up the rooftrees they had but lately planted, and were off again, scarce thinking or caring whither, so long as they got beyond the reach of British rule.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: The Vee-Boers by Mayne Reid
- 2: Hunted all over the Tebele country
- 3: The best jamboks are made of hippopotamus hide
- 4: And the shouts of the drivers urging their oxen on
- 5: On reaching the timber at the point where the vley was
- 6: As they went limping off among the mopanes
- 7: A plant it was which grew under the mopanes
- 8: For there was not a man of them but knew what the tulp was
- 9: The Caffres use them as milk pails
- 10: And perilous journey across the karoo
- 11: That all are madly impatient to partake of the morgen maal
- 12: The young Boers proceeded to the open veldt
- 13: Dancing about in their hopples
- 14: The cynical and satisfied smile on Andries Blom's face
- 15: But that signified little to Andries Blom
- 16: For some seconds Piet Van Dorn felt dismay
- 17: What could the animal be doing by the doorn boom
- 18: But it was also dangerously near the doorn boom
- 19: If night caught him upon the veldt
- 20: The young hunter saw the hyena roll over dead
- 21: All around the veldt was treeless
- 22: Piet Van Dorn was upon his feet
- 23: Piet Van Dorn was left no time for deliberation
- 24: They are sometimes called the hunting hyena Hyena venatica
- 25: Neither track of horse nor buffalo
- 26: The pair killed by Rynwald and Blom
- 27: Which striking the leeuw fair on the frontlet
- 28: The same for the morgen maal of this the next day
- 29: The tsetse Glossinia morsitans
- 30: In their belief there was tsetse all along the stream
- 31: Calling to the forelopers to lead off
- 32: Is being finished by the tsetse
- 33: All would have been shot ere this
- 34: Blom adding Nach Mynheer Jan
- 35: Harder than crossing the Kalahari Note 4 itself
- 36: The waggons alone remaining in the kloof
- 37: Those of the leopard and cheetah
- 38: Their work being the conversion of fresh meat into bultong
- 39: Each consisted of a single trunk of koker boom
- 40: Hartebeest houses are common throughout Southern Africa
- 41: Nor knew they much more of the Limpopo
- 42: And they were merry again over the morgen maal
- 43: Their lading had been already put ashore
- 44: After passing the point where the leit terminated
- 45: Nor were the rafters themselves without fear
- 46: For the solitary male elephant is vicious beyond conception
- 47: Pluck his proboscis out of the water
- 48: These are discovered to be but waggon tilts
- 49: And making slaughter among the pachyderms
- 50: With a score of Hottentots and Caffres to do the towing
- 51: Which came responsive out of the mimosa
- 52: Scarce anybody escaped without a sting
- 53: They allowed the raft to glide on
- 54: Was slaughter made among the zeekoes
- 55: Or the last zeekoe in that quarter be killed
- 56: Was the apprehensive thought of Jan Van Dorn
- 57: Once we've treked back to the Transvaal
