Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
The Young Yagers A Narrative of Hunting Adventures in Southern Africa By Captain Mayne Reid Published by Ticknor and Fields, Boston, USA This edition dated 1857
The Young Yagers, by Captain Mayne Reid.
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________________________________________________________________________ THE YOUNG YAGERS, BY CAPTAIN MAYNE REID.
CHAPTER ONE.
THE CAMP OF THE YOUNG YAGERS.
Near the confluence of the two great rivers of Southern Africa--the _Yellow_ and _Orange_--behold the camp of the "young yagers!"
It stands upon the southern bank of the latter stream, in a grove of Babylonian willows, whose silvery foliage, drooping gracefully to the water's edge, fringes both shores of the noble river as far as the eye can reach.
A tree of rare beauty is this _Salix Babylonica_--in gracefulness of form scarce surpassed even by the palms, the "princes of the forest." In our land, as we look upon it, a tinge of sadness steals over our reflections. We have grown to regard it as the emblem of sorrow. We have named it the "weeping willow," and draped the tomb with its soft pale fronds, as with a winding-sheet of silver.
Far different are the feelings inspired by the sight of this beautiful tree amid the _karoos_ of Southern Africa. That is a land where springs and streams are "few and far between;" and the _weeping_ willow--sure sign of the presence of water--is no longer the emblem of sorrow, but the symbol of joy.
Joy reigns in the camp under its shade by the banks of the noble Orange River, as is proved by the continuous peals of laughter that ring clear and loud upon the air, and echo from the opposite shores of the stream.
Who are they that laugh so loudly and cheerfully? _The young yagers_.
And who are the young yagers?
Let us approach their camp and see for ourselves. It is night, but the blaze of the camp-fire will enable us to distinguish all of them, as they are all seated around it. By its light we can take their portraits.
There are six of them--a full "set of six," and not one appears to be yet twenty years of age. They are all boys between the ages of ten and twenty--though two or three of them, and, maybe, more than that number, think themselves quite men.
Three of the party you will recognise at a glance as old acquaintances. They are no other than Hans, Hendrik, and Jan, our _ci-devant_ "Bush-boys."
It is several years since we saw them last, and they have grown a good deal since then; but none of them has yet reached the full stature of manhood. Though no longer "Bush-boys," they are yet only boys; and Jan, who used to be called "little Jan," still merits and receives that distinctive appellation. It would stretch Jan to his utmost to square off against a four-foot measuring-stick; and he could only manage it by standing upon the very tips of his toes.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: The Young Yagers by Mayne Reid
- 2: The three sons of Diedrik Van Wyk
- 3: Groot Willem is a mighty hunter
- 4: Now the portrait of Klaas in pen and ink
- 5: There is no visible change observable in Swartboy
- 6: The former was desirous of jaging the elephant
- 7: There chanced to be a freshet in the river
- 8: Hendrik and Groot Willem acknowledged this
- 9: But Swartboy was doomed to disappointment and humiliation
- 10: When the voice of Swartboy was heard exclaiming De leuw
- 11: But it was that of the reitbok
- 12: Which were as sharp as steel spits
- 13: Was a steak of gemsbok venison for dinner
- 14: They were turned towards the gemsboks
- 15: The gemsboks advanced steadily towards the ant hill
- 16: And he lay embracing the carcass of the bull gemsbok
- 17: Would have manfully battled with the lioness
- 18: Mynheeren soon all see see how Congo kill lion
- 19: The huge carapace on his left arm
- 20: The lioness turned with redoubled fury
- 21: The yagers held their bridles firm
- 22: The oryx had been unable to extricate them
- 23: The yagers sat down to supper around the camp fire
- 24: Of the oryx Congo knew very little
- 25: The oryx is a desert dwelling antelope
- 26: The colour of the addax is greyish white over the body
- 27: Outspanned in a grove of mokhala trees
- 28: And had not seen the ostriches
- 29: While the fennecs are diurnal
- 30: The smallest of the whole tribe either of fennecs or foxes
- 31: But what had become of our fennec poor little fellow
- 32: Neither Klaas nor Jan would have so much cared
- 33: The male takes part in the incubation
- 34: Who hunt the ostrich as a profession
- 35: The nandu resembles the African bird in form
- 36: The cassowary differs from the ostriches in many respects
- 37: Hendrik was particularly out of temper
- 38: The fennec was no stranger to him
- 39: Now what was the little fennec doing
- 40: Swartboy showed them how to cook the eggs to perfection
- 41: If it were only a brush after springboks
- 42: Or blauw boks in the language of the boors
- 43: But Arend cared but little for hunting
- 44: And even Groot Willem acknowledged it
- 45: Each dog following the antelope that seemed nearest him
- 46: Hendrik now lost sight of the chase
- 47: And the leaves prevented Hendrik from seeing either of them
- 48: It was a moment of peril for Hendrik
- 49: Groot Willem was not so badly hurt as Hendrik himself
- 50: And all through the voracity of the aard vark
- 51: But how was Swartboy to capture the cock
- 52: Or that of various species of naja
- 53: Since Klaas and Jan were so interested about it
- 54: And taking the fennec under his army and his bow in his hand
- 55: Let us record his movements in the words of Klaas and Jan
- 56: And with their nest half plundered
- 57: They are coming towards Swartboy
- 58: While in the dauw the legs are white
- 59: But generally accompanied by droves of the dauw
- 60: The dauws galloped off in a clump
- 61: Hendrik and Groot Willem spurred after
- 62: With a fierce borele rushing up to them
- 63: Should the borele overtake them
- 64: Penetrating the skull of the huge borele
- 65: As also the common wildebeests
- 66: They could not wait for Swartboy
- 67: Where a spur of the desert plain ran into the timber
- 68: But the movements of these now puzzled Congo not a little
- 69: But turned when they saw Hendrik and Groot Willem
- 70: Even the yagers themselves required as much
- 71: Such is the colour of the bontebok
- 72: They are fleeter than springboks
- 73: Were they going to approach the blesboks
- 74: Klaas and Jan were sent to one side
- 75: But springboks are not blesboks
- 76: And ride tail on end upon the blesboks
- 77: The blesboks seemed to run lightly as ever
- 78: Hendrik was gratified with this discovery
- 79: Hendrik could not climb up on either side
- 80: Hendrik glided silently up to the cliff
- 81: Hendrik began to think he was lost for ever
- 82: Hendrik's assailant was the keitloa
- 83: Until the keitloa should leave the spot
- 84: Fixing his eye upon the keitloa
- 85: This time he was not followed by the keitloa
- 86: No keitloa followed in pursuit
- 87: For it is a curious habit of the blesboks and bonteboks
- 88: That on the day when they jaged the bontebok
- 89: Leaving the wagons to trek on across the plain
- 90: Hans maintained that it was five
- 91: Hans did not carry a viameter
- 92: The party commenced the ascent
- 93: And was a species of Santalum
- 94: The sandal wood of the Sandwich Islands
- 95: Groot Willem was about to try it
- 96: They are Hyrax Syriacus and Capensis
- 97: The sandal wood threw its protecting shadow
- 98: The klipspringer is not gregarious
- 99: The talons sunk deeply into the flesh
- 100: By the act the klipspringers had been avenged
- 101: The klipspringers took to flight again
- 102: And upon this stood the klipspringer
- 103: Klaas had certainly killed the klipspringer
- 104: Belonging to that section of it distinguished as Milvus
- 105: Klaas and Jan were the more astonished
- 106: One of them seeing Hans engaged with the pigeon
- 107: And the elegant upright bearing of this antelope
- 108: The waterbuck had no intention of crossing
- 109: The boys expected to see the waterbuck rear back
- 110: Cut from the buttocks of the waterbuck
- 111: They now perceived the carcass of the waterbuck itself
- 112: Both these appendages are wanting in the Numida cristata
- 113: And although differing from our cuckoo in some respects
- 114: Both Hendrik and Groot Willem cried out Rooyebok
- 115: Where the pallahs were feeding
- 116: The pallahs were driven completely out of their mind
- 117: At short intervals one trotted to the edge of the bosch
- 118: Not one of the beautiful antelopes
- 119: The oxen refused to trek up the declivity
- 120: And as both Klaas and Jan were out of wadding
- 121: Known among naturalists by the name Vidua
- 122: There are two species of Whidah birds known to naturalists
- 123: Stamp the Pique Boeufs as a distinct genus of birds
- 124: One is the Buphaga erythrorhyncha
- 125: Whereas that of the muchocho is erect
- 126: Knowing the general disposition of the muchochos
- 127: Will usually put the muchocho to flight
- 128: When the muchochos first appeared
- 129: The calf of the muchocho regularly butchered
- 130: Choosing a pretty grove of willow leafed olean wood trees
- 131: Looking askance at Klaas as he passed out from camp
- 132: Recognised this antelope to be the steenbok
- 133: Groot Willem was at length within range
- 134: All at once the steenbok was forgotten
- 135: If Groot Willem allowed it an inch
- 136: Groot Willem now broke off a sapling
- 137: But neither did Arend care about that
- 138: But here euphorbias of different species predominated
- 139: The animal which our yagers saw
- 140: As the young yagers travelled homewards
