Now Rann the Kite brings
home the night
That
Mang the Bat sets free—
The herds are shut in
byre and hut
For
loosed till dawn are we.
This is the hour of
pride and power,
Talon
and tush and claw.
Oh, hear the call!—Good
hunting all
That
keep the Jungle Law!
Night-Song in the Jungle
It was seven o’clock of a very
warm evening in the Seeonee hills when Father Wolf
woke up from his day’s rest, scratched himself,
yawned, and spread out his paws one after the other
to get rid of the sleepy feeling in their tips.
Mother Wolf lay with her big gray nose dropped across
her four tumbling, squealing cubs, and the moon shone
into the mouth of the cave where they all lived.
“Augrh!” said Father Wolf. “It
is time to hunt again.” He was going to
spring down hill when a little shadow with a bushy
tail crossed the threshold and whined: “Good
luck go with you, O Chief of the Wolves. And
good luck and strong white teeth go with noble children
that they may never forget the hungry in this world.”
It was the jackal—Tabaqui,
the Dish-licker—and the wolves of India
despise Tabaqui because he runs about making mischief,
and telling tales, and eating rags and pieces of leather
from the village rubbish-heaps. But they are
afraid of him too, because Tabaqui, more than anyone
else in the jungle, is apt to go mad, and then he forgets
that he was ever afraid of anyone, and runs through
the forest biting everything in his way. Even
the tiger runs and hides when little Tabaqui goes
mad, for madness is the most disgraceful thing that
can overtake a wild creature. We call it hydrophobia,
but they call it dewanee—the madness—and
run.
“Enter, then, and look,”
said Father Wolf stiffly, “but there is no food
here.”
“For a wolf, no,” said
Tabaqui, “but for so mean a person as myself
a dry bone is a good feast. Who are we, the Gidur-log
to pick and choose?” He
scuttled to the back of the cave, where he found the
bone of a buck with some meat on it, and sat cracking
the end merrily.
“All thanks for this good meal,”
he said, licking his lips. “How beautiful
are the noble children! How large are their eyes!
And so young too! Indeed, indeed, I might have
remembered that the children of kings are men from
the beginning.”
Now, Tabaqui knew as well as anyone
else that there is nothing so unlucky as to compliment
children to their faces. It pleased him to see
Mother and Father Wolf look uncomfortable.
Tabaqui sat still, rejoicing in the
mischief that he had made, and then he said spitefully:
“Shere Khan, the Big One, has
shifted his hunting grounds. He will hunt among
these hills for the next moon, so he has told me.”
Shere Khan was the tiger who lived
near the Waingunga River, twenty miles away.
“He has no right!” Father
Wolf began angrily—“By the Law of
the Jungle he has no right to change his quarters
without due warning. He will frighten every head
of game within ten miles, and I—I have to
kill for two, these days.”
“His mother did not call him
Lungri [the Lame One] for nothing,” said Mother
Wolf quietly. “He has been lame in one foot
from his birth. That is why he has only killed
cattle. Now the villagers of the Waingunga are
angry with him, and he has come here to make our villagers
angry. They will scour the jungle for him when
he is far away, and we and our children must run when
the grass is set alight. Indeed, we are very
grateful to Shere Khan!”
“Shall I tell him of your gratitude?”
said Tabaqui.
“Out!” snapped Father
Wolf. “Out and hunt with thy master.
Thou hast done harm enough for one night.”
“I go,” said Tabaqui quietly.
“Ye can hear Shere Khan below in the thickets.
I might have saved myself the message.”
Father Wolf listened, and below in
the valley that ran down to a little river he heard
the dry, angry, snarly, singsong whine of a tiger who
has caught nothing and does not care if all the jungle
knows it.
“The fool!” said Father
Wolf. “To begin a night’s work with
that noise! Does he think that our buck are like
his fat Waingunga bullocks?”
“H’sh. It is neither
bullock nor buck he hunts to-night,” said Mother
Wolf. “It is Man.”
The whine had changed to a sort of
humming purr that seemed to come from every quarter
of the compass. It was the noise that bewilders
woodcutters and gypsies sleeping in the open, and makes
them run sometimes into the very mouth of the tiger.
“Man!” said Father Wolf,
showing all his white teeth. “Faugh!
Are there not enough beetles and frogs in the tanks
that he must eat Man, and on our ground too!”
The Law of the Jungle, which never
orders anything without a reason, forbids every beast
to eat Man except when he is killing to show his children
how to kill, and then he must hunt outside the hunting
grounds of his pack or tribe. The real reason
for this is that man-killing means, sooner or later,
the arrival of white men on elephants, with guns,
and hundreds of brown men with gongs and rockets and
torches. Then everybody in the jungle suffers.
The reason the beasts give among themselves is that
Man is the weakest and most defenseless of all living
things, and it is unsportsmanlike to touch him.
They say too—and it is true—that
man-eaters become mangy, and lose their teeth.
The purr grew louder, and ended in
the full-throated “Aaarh!” of the tiger’s
charge.
Then there was a howl—an
untigerish howl—from Shere Khan. “He
has missed,” said Mother Wolf. “What
is it?”
Father Wolf ran out a few paces and
heard Shere Khan muttering and mumbling savagely as
he tumbled about in the scrub.
“The fool has had no more sense
than to jump at a woodcutter’s campfire, and
has burned his feet,” said Father Wolf with a
grunt. “Tabaqui is with him.”
“Something is coming uphill,”
said Mother Wolf, twitching one ear. “Get
ready.”
The bushes rustled a little in the
thicket, and Father Wolf dropped with his haunches
under him, ready for his leap. Then, if you had
been watching, you would have seen the most wonderful
thing in the world—the wolf checked in
mid-spring. He made his bound before he saw what
it was he was jumping at, and then he tried to stop
himself. The result was that he shot up straight
into the air for four or five feet, landing almost
where he left ground.
“Man!” he snapped. “A man’s
cub. Look!”
Directly in front of him, holding
on by a low branch, stood a naked brown baby who could
just walk—as soft and as dimpled a little
atom as ever came to a wolf’s cave at night.
He looked up into Father Wolf’s face, and laughed.
“Is that a man’s cub?”
said Mother Wolf. “I have never seen one.
Bring it here.”
A Wolf accustomed to moving his own
cubs can, if necessary, mouth an egg without breaking
it, and though Father Wolf’s jaws closed right
on the child’s back not a tooth even scratched
the skin as he laid it down among the cubs.
“How little! How naked,
and—how bold!” said Mother Wolf softly.
The baby was pushing his way between the cubs to get
close to the warm hide. “Ahai! He
is taking his meal with the others. And so this
is a man’s cub. Now, was there ever a wolf
that could boast of a man’s cub among her children?”
“I have heard now and again
of such a thing, but never in our Pack or in my time,”
said Father Wolf. “He is altogether without
hair, and I could kill him with a touch of my foot.
But see, he looks up and is not afraid.”
The moonlight was blocked out of the
mouth of the cave, for Shere Khan’s great square
head and shoulders were thrust into the entrance.
Tabaqui, behind him, was squeaking: “My
lord, my lord, it went in here!”
“Shere Khan does us great honor,”
said Father Wolf, but his eyes were very angry.
“What does Shere Khan need?”
“My quarry. A man’s
cub went this way,” said Shere Khan. “Its
parents have run off. Give it to me.”
Shere Khan had jumped at a woodcutter’s
campfire, as Father Wolf had said, and was furious
from the pain of his burned feet. But Father Wolf
knew that the mouth of the cave was too narrow for
a tiger to come in by. Even where he was, Shere
Khan’s shoulders and forepaws were cramped for
want of room, as a man’s would be if he tried
to fight in a barrel.
“The Wolves are a free people,”
said Father Wolf. “They take orders from
the Head of the Pack, and not from any striped cattle-killer.
The man’s cub is ours—to kill if
we choose.”
“Ye choose and ye do not choose!
What talk is this of choosing? By the bull that
I killed, am I to stand nosing into your dog’s
den for my fair dues? It is I, Shere Khan, who
speak!”
The tiger’s roar filled the
cave with thunder. Mother Wolf shook herself
clear of the cubs and sprang forward, her eyes, like
two green moons in the darkness, facing the blazing
eyes of Shere Khan.
“And it is I, Raksha [The Demon],
who answers. The man’s cub is mine, Lungri—mine
to me! He shall not be killed. He shall live
to run with the Pack and to hunt with the Pack; and
in the end, look you, hunter of little naked cubs—frog-eater—fish-killer—he
shall hunt thee! Now get hence, or by the Sambhur
that I killed (I eat no starved cattle), back thou
goest to thy mother, burned beast of the jungle, lamer
than ever thou camest into the world! Go!”
Father Wolf looked on amazed.
He had almost forgotten the days when he won Mother
Wolf in fair fight from five other wolves, when she
ran in the Pack and was not called The Demon for compliment’s
sake. Shere Khan might have faced Father Wolf,
but he could not stand up against Mother Wolf, for
he knew that where he was she had all the advantage
of the ground, and would fight to the death.
So he backed out of the cave mouth growling, and when
he was clear he shouted:
“Each dog barks in his own yard!
We will see what the Pack will say to this fostering
of man-cubs. The cub is mine, and to my teeth
he will come in the end, O bush-tailed thieves!”
Mother Wolf threw herself down panting
among the cubs, and Father Wolf said to her gravely:
“Shere Khan speaks this much
truth. The cub must be shown to the Pack.
Wilt thou still keep him, Mother?”
“Keep him!” she gasped.
“He came naked, by night, alone and very hungry;
yet he was not afraid! Look, he has pushed one
of my babes to one side already. And that lame
butcher would have killed him and would have run off
to the Waingunga while the villagers here hunted through
all our lairs in revenge! Keep him? Assuredly
I will keep him. Lie still, little frog.
O thou Mowgli—for Mowgli the Frog I will
call thee—the time will come when thou
wilt hunt Shere Khan as he has hunted thee.”
“But what will our Pack say?” said Father
Wolf.
The Law of the Jungle lays down very
clearly that any wolf may, when he marries, withdraw
from the Pack he belongs to. But as soon as his
cubs are old enough to stand on their feet he must
bring them to the Pack Council, which is generally
held once a month at full moon, in order that the
other wolves may identify them. After that inspection
the cubs are free to run where they please, and until
they have killed their first buck no excuse is accepted
if a grown wolf of the Pack kills one of them.
The punishment is death where the murderer can be found;
and if you think for a minute you will see that this
must be so.
Father Wolf waited till his cubs could
run a little, and then on the night of the Pack Meeting
took them and Mowgli and Mother Wolf to the Council
Rock—a hilltop covered with stones and boulders
where a hundred wolves could hide. Akela, the
great gray Lone Wolf, who led all the Pack by strength
and cunning, lay out at full length on his rock, and
below him sat forty or more wolves of every size and
color, from badger-colored veterans who could handle
a buck alone to young black three-year-olds who thought
they could. The Lone Wolf had led them for a
year now. He had fallen twice into a wolf trap
in his youth, and once he had been beaten and left
for dead; so he knew the manners and customs of men.
There was very little talking at the Rock. The
cubs tumbled over each other in the center of the
circle where their mothers and fathers sat, and now
and again a senior wolf would go quietly up to a cub,
look at him carefully, and return to his place on
noiseless feet. Sometimes a mother would push
her cub far out into the moonlight to be sure that
he had not been overlooked. Akela from his rock
would cry: “Ye know the Law—ye
know the Law. Look well, O Wolves!” And
the anxious mothers would take up the call: “Look—look
well, O Wolves!”
At last—and Mother Wolf’s
neck bristles lifted as the time came—Father
Wolf pushed “Mowgli the Frog,” as they
called him, into the center, where he sat laughing
and playing with some pebbles that glistened in the
moonlight.
Akela never raised his head from his
paws, but went on with the monotonous cry: “Look
well!” A muffled roar came up from behind the
rocks—the voice of Shere Khan crying:
“The cub is mine. Give him to me.
What have the Free People to do with a man’s
cub?” Akela never even twitched his ears.
All he said was: “Look well, O Wolves!
What have the Free People to do with the orders of
any save the Free People? Look well!”
There was a chorus of deep growls,
and a young wolf in his fourth year flung back Shere
Khan’s question to Akela: “What have
the Free People to do with a man’s cub?”
Now, the Law of the Jungle lays down that if there
is any dispute as to the right of a cub to be accepted
by the Pack, he must be spoken for by at least two
members of the Pack who are not his father and mother.
“Who speaks for this cub?”
said Akela. “Among the Free People who
speaks?” There was no answer and Mother Wolf
got ready for what she knew would be her last fight,
if things came to fighting.
Then the only other creature who is
allowed at the Pack Council—Baloo, the
sleepy brown bear who teaches the wolf cubs the Law
of the Jungle: old Baloo, who can come and go
where he pleases because he eats only nuts and roots
and honey—rose upon his hind quarters and
grunted.
“The man’s cub—the
man’s cub?” he said. “I speak
for the man’s cub. There is no harm in
a man’s cub. I have no gift of words, but
I speak the truth. Let him run with the Pack,
and be entered with the others. I myself will
teach him.”
“We need yet another,”
said Akela. “Baloo has spoken, and he is
our teacher for the young cubs. Who speaks besides
Baloo?”
A black shadow dropped down into the
circle. It was Bagheera the Black Panther, inky
black all over, but with the panther markings showing
up in certain lights like the pattern of watered silk.
Everybody knew Bagheera, and nobody cared to cross
his path; for he was as cunning as Tabaqui, as bold
as the wild buffalo, and as reckless as the wounded
elephant. But he had a voice as soft as wild honey
dripping from a tree, and a skin softer than down.
“O Akela, and ye the Free People,”
he purred, “I have no right in your assembly,
but the Law of the Jungle says that if there is a doubt
which is not a killing matter in regard to a new cub,
the life of that cub may be bought at a price.
And the Law does not say who may or may not pay that
price. Am I right?”
“Good! Good!” said
the young wolves, who are always hungry. “Listen
to Bagheera. The cub can be bought for a price.
It is the Law.”
“Knowing that I have no right
to speak here, I ask your leave.”
“Speak then,” cried twenty voices.
“To kill a naked cub is shame.
Besides, he may make better sport for you when he
is grown. Baloo has spoken in his behalf.
Now to Baloo’s word I will add one bull, and
a fat one, newly killed, not half a mile from here,
if ye will accept the man’s cub according to
the Law. Is it difficult?”
There was a clamor of scores of voices,
saying: “What matter? He will die
in the winter rains. He will scorch in the sun.
What harm can a naked frog do us? Let him run
with the Pack. Where is the bull, Bagheera?
Let him be accepted.” And then came Akela’s
deep bay, crying: “Look well—look
well, O Wolves!”
Mowgli was still deeply interested
in the pebbles, and he did not notice when the wolves
came and looked at him one by one. At last they
all went down the hill for the dead bull, and only
Akela, Bagheera, Baloo, and Mowgli’s own wolves
were left. Shere Khan roared still in the night,
for he was very angry that Mowgli had not been handed
over to him.
“Ay, roar well,” said
Bagheera, under his whiskers, “for the time will
come when this naked thing will make thee roar to another
tune, or I know nothing of man.”
“It was well done,” said
Akela. “Men and their cubs are very wise.
He may be a help in time.”
“Truly, a help in time of need;
for none can hope to lead the Pack forever,”
said Bagheera.
Akela said nothing. He was thinking
of the time that comes to every leader of every pack
when his strength goes from him and he gets feebler
and feebler, till at last he is killed by the wolves
and a new leader comes up—to be killed
in his turn.
“Take him away,” he said
to Father Wolf, “and train him as befits one
of the Free People.”
And that is how Mowgli was entered
into the Seeonee Wolf Pack for the price of a bull
and on Baloo’s good word.
Now you must be content to skip ten
or eleven whole years, and only guess at all the wonderful
life that Mowgli led among the wolves, because if
it were written out it would fill ever so many books.
He grew up with the cubs, though they, of course,
were grown wolves almost before he was a child.
And Father Wolf taught him his business, and the meaning
of things in the jungle, till every rustle in the grass,
every breath of the warm night air, every note of
the owls above his head, every scratch of a bat’s
claws as it roosted for a while in a tree, and every
splash of every little fish jumping in a pool meant
just as much to him as the work of his office means
to a business man. When he was not learning he
sat out in the sun and slept, and ate and went to sleep
again. When he felt dirty or hot he swam in the
forest pools; and when he wanted honey (Baloo told
him that honey and nuts were just as pleasant to eat
as raw meat) he climbed up for it, and that Bagheera
showed him how to do. Bagheera would lie out on
a branch and call, “Come along, Little Brother,”
and at first Mowgli would cling like the sloth, but
afterward he would fling himself through the branches
almost as boldly as the gray ape. He took his
place at the Council Rock, too, when the Pack met,
and there he discovered that if he stared hard at any
wolf, the wolf would be forced to drop his eyes, and
so he used to stare for fun. At other times he
would pick the long thorns out of the pads of his
friends, for wolves suffer terribly from thorns and
burs in their coats. He would go down the hillside
into the cultivated lands by night, and look very
curiously at the villagers in their huts, but he had
a mistrust of men because Bagheera showed him a square
box with a drop gate so cunningly hidden in the jungle
that he nearly walked into it, and told him that it
was a trap. He loved better than anything else
to go with Bagheera into the dark warm heart of the
forest, to sleep all through the drowsy day, and at
night see how Bagheera did his killing. Bagheera
killed right and left as he felt hungry, and so did
Mowgli—with one exception. As soon
as he was old enough to understand things, Bagheera
told him that he must never touch cattle because he
had been bought into the Pack at the price of a bull’s
life. “All the jungle is thine,”
said Bagheera, “and thou canst kill everything
that thou art strong enough to kill; but for the sake
of the bull that bought thee thou must never kill
or eat any cattle young or old. That is the Law
of the Jungle.” Mowgli obeyed faithfully.
And he grew and grew strong as a boy
must grow who does not know that he is learning any
lessons, and who has nothing in the world to think
of except things to eat.
Mother Wolf told him once or twice
that Shere Khan was not a creature to be trusted,
and that some day he must kill Shere Khan. But
though a young wolf would have remembered that advice
every hour, Mowgli forgot it because he was only a
boy—though he would have called himself
a wolf if he had been able to speak in any human tongue.
Shere Khan was always crossing his
path in the jungle, for as Akela grew older and feebler
the lame tiger had come to be great friends with the
younger wolves of the Pack, who followed him for scraps,
a thing Akela would never have allowed if he had dared
to push his authority to the proper bounds. Then
Shere Khan would flatter them and wonder that such
fine young hunters were content to be led by a dying
wolf and a man’s cub. “They tell
me,” Shere Khan would say, “that at Council
ye dare not look him between the eyes.”
And the young wolves would growl and bristle.
Bagheera, who had eyes and ears everywhere,
knew something of this, and once or twice he told
Mowgli in so many words that Shere Khan would kill
him some day. Mowgli would laugh and answer:
“I have the Pack and I have thee; and Baloo,
though he is so lazy, might strike a blow or two for
my sake. Why should I be afraid?”
It was one very warm day that a new
notion came to Bagheera—born of something
that he had heard. Perhaps Ikki the Porcupine
had told him; but he said to Mowgli when they were
deep in the jungle, as the boy lay with his head on
Bagheera’s beautiful black skin, “Little
Brother, how often have I told thee that Shere Khan
is thy enemy?”
“As many times as there are
nuts on that palm,” said Mowgli, who, naturally,
could not count. “What of it? I am
sleepy, Bagheera, and Shere Khan is all long tail
and loud talk—like Mao, the Peacock.”
“But this is no time for sleeping.
Baloo knows it; I know it; the Pack know it; and even
the foolish, foolish deer know. Tabaqui has told
thee too.”
“Ho! ho!” said Mowgli.
“Tabaqui came to me not long ago with some rude
talk that I was a naked man’s cub and not fit
to dig pig-nuts. But I caught Tabaqui by the
tail and swung him twice against a palm-tree to teach
him better manners.”
“That was foolishness, for though
Tabaqui is a mischief-maker, he would have told thee
of something that concerned thee closely. Open
those eyes, Little Brother. Shere Khan dare not
kill thee in the jungle. But remember, Akela
is very old, and soon the day comes when he cannot
kill his buck, and then he will be leader no more.
Many of the wolves that looked thee over when thou
wast brought to the Council first are old too, and
the young wolves believe, as Shere Khan has taught
them, that a man-cub has no place with the Pack.
In a little time thou wilt be a man.”
“And what is a man that he should
not run with his brothers?” said Mowgli.
“I was born in the jungle. I have obeyed
the Law of the Jungle, and there is no wolf of ours
from whose paws I have not pulled a thorn. Surely
they are my brothers!”
Bagheera stretched himself at full
length and half shut his eyes. “Little
Brother,” said he, “feel under my jaw.”
Mowgli put up his strong brown hand,
and just under Bagheera’s silky chin, where
the giant rolling muscles were all hid by the glossy
hair, he came upon a little bald spot.
“There is no one in the jungle
that knows that I, Bagheera, carry that mark—the
mark of the collar; and yet, Little Brother, I was
born among men, and it was among men that my mother
died—in the cages of the king’s palace
at Oodeypore. It was because of this that I paid
the price for thee at the Council when thou wast a
little naked cub. Yes, I too was born among men.
I had never seen the jungle. They fed me behind
bars from an iron pan till one night I felt that I
was Bagheera—the Panther—and
no man’s plaything, and I broke the silly lock
with one blow of my paw and came away. And because
I had learned the ways of men, I became more terrible
in the jungle than Shere Khan. Is it not so?”
“Yes,” said Mowgli, “all
the jungle fear Bagheera—all except Mowgli.”
“Oh, thou art a man’s
cub,” said the Black Panther very tenderly.
“And even as I returned to my jungle, so thou
must go back to men at last—to the men
who are thy brothers—if thou art not killed
in the Council.”
“But why—but why
should any wish to kill me?” said Mowgli.
“Look at me,” said Bagheera.
And Mowgli looked at him steadily between the eyes.
The big panther turned his head away in half a minute.
“That is why,” he said,
shifting his paw on the leaves. “Not even
I can look thee between the eyes, and I was born among
men, and I love thee, Little Brother. The others
they hate thee because their eyes cannot meet thine;
because thou art wise; because thou hast pulled out
thorns from their feet—because thou art
a man.”
“I did not know these things,”
said Mowgli sullenly, and he frowned under his heavy
black eyebrows.
“What is the Law of the Jungle?
Strike first and then give tongue. By thy very
carelessness they know that thou art a man. But
be wise. It is in my heart that when Akela misses
his next kill—and at each hunt it costs
him more to pin the buck—the Pack will turn
against him and against thee. They will hold
a jungle Council at the Rock, and then—and
then—I have it!” said Bagheera, leaping
up. “Go thou down quickly to the men’s
huts in the valley, and take some of the Red Flower
which they grow there, so that when the time comes
thou mayest have even a stronger friend than I or
Baloo or those of the Pack that love thee. Get
the Red Flower.”
By Red Flower Bagheera meant fire,
only no creature in the jungle will call fire by its
proper name. Every beast lives in deadly fear
of it, and invents a hundred ways of describing it.
“The Red Flower?” said
Mowgli. “That grows outside their huts in
the twilight. I will get some.”
“There speaks the man’s
cub,” said Bagheera proudly. “Remember
that it grows in little pots. Get one swiftly,
and keep it by thee for time of need.”
“Good!” said Mowgli.
“I go. But art thou sure, O my Bagheera”—he
slipped his arm around the splendid neck and looked
deep into the big eyes—“art thou
sure that all this is Shere Khan’s doing?”
“By the Broken Lock that freed
me, I am sure, Little Brother.”
“Then, by the Bull that bought
me, I will pay Shere Khan full tale for this, and
it may be a little over,” said Mowgli, and he
bounded away.
“That is a man. That is
all a man,” said Bagheera to himself, lying down
again. “Oh, Shere Khan, never was a blacker
hunting than that frog-hunt of thine ten years ago!”
Mowgli was far and far through the
forest, running hard, and his heart was hot in him.
He came to the cave as the evening mist rose, and drew
breath, and looked down the valley. The cubs were
out, but Mother Wolf, at the back of the cave, knew
by his breathing that something was troubling her
frog.
“What is it, Son?” she said.
“Some bat’s chatter of
Shere Khan,” he called back. “I hunt
among the plowed fields tonight,” and he plunged
downward through the bushes, to the stream at the
bottom of the valley. There he checked, for he
heard the yell of the Pack hunting, heard the bellow
of a hunted Sambhur, and the snort as the buck turned
at bay. Then there were wicked, bitter howls
from the young wolves: “Akela! Akela!
Let the Lone Wolf show his strength. Room for
the leader of the Pack! Spring, Akela!”
The Lone Wolf must have sprung and
missed his hold, for Mowgli heard the snap of his
teeth and then a yelp as the Sambhur knocked him over
with his forefoot.
He did not wait for anything more,
but dashed on; and the yells grew fainter behind him
as he ran into the croplands where the villagers lived.
“Bagheera spoke truth,”
he panted, as he nestled down in some cattle fodder
by the window of a hut. “To-morrow is one
day both for Akela and for me.”
Then he pressed his face close to
the window and watched the fire on the hearth.
He saw the husbandman’s wife get up and feed
it in the night with black lumps. And when the
morning came and the mists were all white and cold,
he saw the man’s child pick up a wicker pot plastered
inside with earth, fill it with lumps of red-hot charcoal,
put it under his blanket, and go out to tend the cows
in the byre.
“Is that all?” said Mowgli.
“If a cub can do it, there is nothing to fear.”
So he strode round the corner and met the boy, took
the pot from his hand, and disappeared into the mist
while the boy howled with fear.
“They are very like me,”
said Mowgli, blowing into the pot as he had seen the
woman do. “This thing will die if I do not
give it things to eat”; and he dropped twigs
and dried bark on the red stuff. Halfway up the
hill he met Bagheera with the morning dew shining like
moonstones on his coat.
“Akela has missed,” said
the Panther. “They would have killed him
last night, but they needed thee also. They were
looking for thee on the hill.”
“I was among the plowed lands.
I am ready. See!” Mowgli held up the fire-pot.
“Good! Now, I have seen
men thrust a dry branch into that stuff, and presently
the Red Flower blossomed at the end of it. Art
thou not afraid?”
“No. Why should I fear?
I remember now—if it is not a dream—how,
before I was a Wolf, I lay beside the Red Flower, and
it was warm and pleasant.”
All that day Mowgli sat in the cave
tending his fire pot and dipping dry branches into
it to see how they looked. He found a branch that
satisfied him, and in the evening when Tabaqui came
to the cave and told him rudely enough that he was
wanted at the Council Rock, he laughed till Tabaqui
ran away. Then Mowgli went to the Council, still
laughing.
Akela the Lone Wolf lay by the side
of his rock as a sign that the leadership of the Pack
was open, and Shere Khan with his following of scrap-fed
wolves walked to and fro openly being flattered.
Bagheera lay close to Mowgli, and the fire pot was
between Mowgli’s knees. When they were
all gathered together, Shere Khan began to speak—a
thing he would never have dared to do when Akela was
in his prime.
“He has no right,” whispered
Bagheera. “Say so. He is a dog’s
son. He will be frightened.”
Mowgli sprang to his feet. “Free
People,” he cried, “does Shere Khan lead
the Pack? What has a tiger to do with our leadership?”
“Seeing that the leadership
is yet open, and being asked to speak—”
Shere Khan began.
“By whom?” said Mowgli.
“Are we all jackals, to fawn on this cattle
butcher? The leadership of the Pack is with the
Pack alone.”
There were yells of “Silence,
thou man’s cub!” “Let him speak.
He has kept our Law”; and at last the seniors
of the Pack thundered: “Let the Dead Wolf
speak.” When a leader of the Pack has missed
his kill, he is called the Dead Wolf as long as he
lives, which is not long.
Akela raised his old head wearily:—
“Free People, and ye too, jackals
of Shere Khan, for twelve seasons I have led ye to
and from the kill, and in all that time not one has
been trapped or maimed. Now I have missed my
kill. Ye know how that plot was made. Ye
know how ye brought me up to an untried buck to make
my weakness known. It was cleverly done.
Your right is to kill me here on the Council Rock,
now. Therefore, I ask, who comes to make an end
of the Lone Wolf? For it is my right, by the
Law of the Jungle, that ye come one by one.”
There was a long hush, for no single
wolf cared to fight Akela to the death. Then
Shere Khan roared: “Bah! What have
we to do with this toothless fool? He is doomed
to die! It is the man-cub who has lived too long.
Free People, he was my meat from the first. Give
him to me. I am weary of this man-wolf folly.
He has troubled the jungle for ten seasons. Give
me the man-cub, or I will hunt here always, and not
give you one bone. He is a man, a man’s
child, and from the marrow of my bones I hate him!”
Then more than half the Pack yelled:
“A man! A man! What has a man to do
with us? Let him go to his own place.”
“And turn all the people of
the villages against us?” clamored Shere Khan.
“No, give him to me. He is a man, and none
of us can look him between the eyes.”
Akela lifted his head again and said,
“He has eaten our food. He has slept with
us. He has driven game for us. He has broken
no word of the Law of the Jungle.”
“Also, I paid for him with a
bull when he was accepted. The worth of a bull
is little, but Bagheera’s honor is something
that he will perhaps fight for,” said Bagheera
in his gentlest voice.
“A bull paid ten years ago!”
the Pack snarled. “What do we care for
bones ten years old?”
“Or for a pledge?” said
Bagheera, his white teeth bared under his lip.
“Well are ye called the Free People!”
“No man’s cub can run
with the people of the jungle,” howled Shere
Khan. “Give him to me!”
“He is our brother in all but
blood,” Akela went on, “and ye would kill
him here! In truth, I have lived too long.
Some of ye are eaters of cattle, and of others I have
heard that, under Shere Khan’s teaching, ye
go by dark night and snatch children from the villager’s
doorstep. Therefore I know ye to be cowards,
and it is to cowards I speak. It is certain that
I must die, and my life is of no worth, or I would
offer that in the man-cub’s place. But
for the sake of the Honor of the Pack,—a
little matter that by being without a leader ye have
forgotten,—I promise that if ye let the
man-cub go to his own place, I will not, when my time
comes to die, bare one tooth against ye. I will
die without fighting. That will at least save
the Pack three lives. More I cannot do; but if
ye will, I can save ye the shame that comes of killing
a brother against whom there is no fault—a
brother spoken for and bought into the Pack according
to the Law of the Jungle.”
“He is a man—a man—a
man!” snarled the Pack. And most of the
wolves began to gather round Shere Khan, whose tail
was beginning to switch.
“Now the business is in thy
hands,” said Bagheera to Mowgli. “We
can do no more except fight.”
Mowgli stood upright—the
fire pot in his hands. Then he stretched out
his arms, and yawned in the face of the Council; but
he was furious with rage and sorrow, for, wolflike,
the wolves had never told him how they hated him.
“Listen you!” he cried. “There
is no need for this dog’s jabber. Ye have
told me so often tonight that I am a man (and indeed
I would have been a wolf with you to my life’s
end) that I feel your words are true. So I do
not call ye my brothers any more, but sag [dogs], as
a man should. What ye will do, and what ye will
not do, is not yours to say. That matter is with
me; and that we may see the matter more plainly, I,
the man, have brought here a little of the Red Flower
which ye, dogs, fear.”
He flung the fire pot on the ground,
and some of the red coals lit a tuft of dried moss
that flared up, as all the Council drew back in terror
before the leaping flames.
Mowgli thrust his dead branch into
the fire till the twigs lit and crackled, and whirled
it above his head among the cowering wolves.
“Thou art the master,”
said Bagheera in an undertone. “Save Akela
from the death. He was ever thy friend.”
Akela, the grim old wolf who had never
asked for mercy in his life, gave one piteous look
at Mowgli as the boy stood all naked, his long black
hair tossing over his shoulders in the light of the
blazing branch that made the shadows jump and quiver.
“Good!” said Mowgli, staring
round slowly. “I see that ye are dogs.
I go from you to my own people—if they
be my own people. The jungle is shut to me, and
I must forget your talk and your companionship.
But I will be more merciful than ye are. Because
I was all but your brother in blood, I promise that
when I am a man among men I will not betray ye to men
as ye have betrayed me.” He kicked the
fire with his foot, and the sparks flew up. “There
shall be no war between any of us in the Pack.
But here is a debt to pay before I go.”
He strode forward to where Shere Khan sat blinking
stupidly at the flames, and caught him by the tuft
on his chin. Bagheera followed in case of accidents.
“Up, dog!” Mowgli cried. “Up,
when a man speaks, or I will set that coat ablaze!”
Shere Khan’s ears lay flat back
on his head, and he shut his eyes, for the blazing
branch was very near.
“This cattle-killer said he
would kill me in the Council because he had not killed
me when I was a cub. Thus and thus, then, do we
beat dogs when we are men. Stir a whisker, Lungri,
and I ram the Red Flower down thy gullet!” He
beat Shere Khan over the head with the branch, and
the tiger whimpered and whined in an agony of fear.
“Pah! Singed jungle cat—go
now! But remember when next I come to the Council
Rock, as a man should come, it will be with Shere Khan’s
hide on my head. For the rest, Akela goes free
to live as he pleases. Ye will not kill him,
because that is not my will. Nor do I think that
ye will sit here any longer, lolling out your tongues
as though ye were somebodies, instead of dogs whom
I drive out—thus! Go!” The fire
was burning furiously at the end of the branch, and
Mowgli struck right and left round the circle, and
the wolves ran howling with the sparks burning their
fur. At last there were only Akela, Bagheera,
and perhaps ten wolves that had taken Mowgli’s
part. Then something began to hurt Mowgli inside
him, as he had never been hurt in his life before,
and he caught his breath and sobbed, and the tears
ran down his face.
“What is it? What is it?”
he said. “I do not wish to leave the jungle,
and I do not know what this is. Am I dying, Bagheera?”
“No, Little Brother. That
is only tears such as men use,” said Bagheera.
“Now I know thou art a man, and a man’s
cub no longer. The jungle is shut indeed to thee
henceforward. Let them fall, Mowgli. They
are only tears.” So Mowgli sat and cried
as though his heart would break; and he had never
cried in all his life before.
“Now,” he said, “I
will go to men. But first I must say farewell
to my mother.” And he went to the cave
where she lived with Father Wolf, and he cried on
her coat, while the four cubs howled miserably.
“Ye will not forget me?” said Mowgli.
“Never while we can follow a
trail,” said the cubs. “Come to the
foot of the hill when thou art a man, and we will
talk to thee; and we will come into the croplands
to play with thee by night.”
“Come soon!” said Father
Wolf. “Oh, wise little frog, come again
soon; for we be old, thy mother and I.”
“Come soon,” said Mother
Wolf, “little naked son of mine. For, listen,
child of man, I loved thee more than ever I loved my
cubs.”
“I will surely come,”
said Mowgli. “And when I come it will be
to lay out Shere Khan’s hide upon the Council
Rock. Do not forget me! Tell them in the
jungle never to forget me!”
The dawn was beginning to break when
Mowgli went down the hillside alone, to meet those
mysterious things that are called men.