The Man-Eaters of Tsavo

Unknown

CHAPTER XXVI WORK AT NAIROBI 293

CHAPTER XXVII THE FINDING OF THE NEW ELAND 300

APPENDIX 323

 

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

 

Heads of Eight Lions shot by the Author in British East Africa Frontispiece Mombasa, from the Harbour 1

The Native Quarter, Mombasa 2

“Well-wooded hills and slopes on the mainland” 3

Vasco da Gama Street and Pillar 5

“The best way to get three … was by gharri 6

“I pitched my tent under some shady palms” 7

“Kilindini is on the opposite side of the island” 10

“The Place of Deep Waters” 11

“A lucky shot brought down the huge bird” 14

“I slept that night in a little palm hut” 15

“This interminable nyika” 17

“The river crossed by means of a temporary bridge” 18

Women of Uganda 19

The tent from which jemadar Ungan Singh was carried off 23

“My own tent was pitched in an open clearing” 29

“We shared a hut of palm leaves and boughs” 30

“The camps of the workmen had also been surrounded by thorn fences” 31

“Railhead Camp, with its two or three thousand workmen” 33

“The two wounded coolies were left where they lay, a piece of torn tent having fallen over them” 35

“A luncheon served in the wilds, with occasionally a friend to share it” 43

“It very soon became a great pet” 46

“Heera Singh made a wild spring into the water to get clear of the falling stone” 47

“The door which was to admit the lion” 62

“When the trap was ready, I pitched a tent over it” 64

“They found him stuck fast in the bushes of the boma” 70

“Perched on the top of water-tanks” 73

“I took up my position in a crib made of sleepers” 77

Whitehead on a Trolley at the exact spot where the Lion jumped upon him 79

Abdullah and his two Wives 80

A party of Wa Jamousi 83

“His length from tip of nose to tip of tail was nine feet eight inches” 92

Head of the first Man-Eater 93

“The following evening I took up my position in this same tree” 100

“He measured nine feet six inches from tip of nose to tip of tail, and stood three feet eleven and a half inches high”103

“The bridge over the Tsavo rapidly neared completion” 108

“The heavy stones were swung into position” 109

“The girder was run over its exact place” 110

“And finally lowered gently into position” 111

“Very soon I had the satisfaction of seeing the first train cross the finished work” 112

The completed Tsavo bridge 113

One of the Trolley Lines after the Flood 114

Swahili Caravan Porters 120

“Such was my cook, Mabruki” 122

The women … wear a long, brightly-coloured cloth” 123

“The women attire themselves only in a short kilt” 125

“We arrived at M’Gogo’s capital” 126

“Making pombe in the hollowed-out stump of a tree” 127

Wa Taita Men 129

M’Kamba Woman 131

“Until it joins the Athi River” 136

“The banks of the Sabaki are lined with trees” 138

“I caught sight of a fine waterbuck and successfully bowled him over” 146

“A young one was lying down in the grass quite close to me” 147

A crocodile on the Sabaki 153

“Beyond all doubt, the man-eaters’ den!” 158

“Watch the animals come down to drink” 161

“The antelope swinging by his feet” 165

Hippo Head 167

“Slaves chained neck to neck as was the custom” 174

Hospital Tent at Voi where Mrs. O’Hara rested 178

In the Bazaar at Kampala 181

“The great Athi Plains” 182

“First the earth surface has to be prepared” 184

“Cuttings have to be made and hollows banked up” 185

“Another gang drops the rails in their places” 187

“It never moved again” 190

“The trophy was well worth the pains I had taken to add it to my collection” 191

Jackson’s Hartebeeste, and Zebra 194

Waterbuck 195

“Fortunately the brute fell dead after this final effort” 201

“We managed to bring them in triumph to the camp” 214

“I got near enough for a safe shot, which bowled the antelope over stone-dead” 218

Wart-hog 220

“A successful snapshot of an impala just after it had been shot” 228

A Masai Chief 232

Masai Warriors 233

Masai Woman 234

Masai Girls 235

Masai Women 237

N’derobbo Boy 239

N’derobbo Boy, with Collabus Monkey 240

N’derobbo Girl 241

Wa Kikuyu 244

“The women of the Wa Kikuyu carry the heavy loads” 245

“Spooner’s plucky servant, Imam Din” 281

A Collection of Trophies 285

He was kept on view for several days, and then shot 291

Impala 292

“I took a photograph of him standing reside his fine trophy” 295

“Succeeded in finishing him off without further trouble” 297

Steamer unloading at Kisumu, on Lake Victoria Nyanza 299

The Grand Falls, Tana River 300

Shimone, “The Place of Falling Water” (Eldama Ravine) 301

Oryx 302

Roan Antelope 303

“An excellent, cheery fellow … named Landaalu” 304

Crossing a Stream on the Cook’s Box 305

Crossing the Angarua River 307

Reedbuck 309

The New Eland — T. oryx pattersonianus 316

Thomson’s Gazelle 321

War Canoe on Lake Victoria Nyanza, near the Ripon Falls 325

Preparing Breakfast in Camp 326

View in the Kenya Province 331

“A flying visit in a rickshaw to Kampala” 332

“Clad in long flowing cotton garments” 333

Jinja 334

“Rushing over the Ripon Falls” 335

“The mighty river stretching away to the north amid enchanting scenery” 337

Wa Kikuyu Warriors 346

Map of British East Africa 347

Facsimile of address presented to the author on his departure from East Africa in 1899 348-351

 

THE MAN-EATERS OF TSAVO

Table of contents

previous page start next page