Kaa’s Hunting
His spots are the joy
of the Leopard: his horns are the
Buffalo’s
pride.
Be clean, for the strength
of the hunter is known by the
gloss
of his hide.
If ye find that the
Bullock can toss you, or the heavy-browed
Sambhur
can gore;
Ye need not stop work
to inform us: we knew it ten seasons
before.
Oppress not the cubs
of the stranger, but hail them as Sister
and
Brother,
For though they are
little and fubsy, it may be the Bear is
their
mother.
“There is none
like to me!” says the Cub in the pride of his
earliest
kill;
But the jungle is large
and the Cub he is small. Let him
think
and be still.
Maxims
of Baloo
All that is told here happened some
time before Mowgli was turned out of the Seeonee Wolf
Pack, or revenged himself on Shere Khan the tiger.
It was in the days when Baloo was teaching him the
Law of the Jungle. The big, serious, old brown
bear was delighted to have so quick a pupil, for the
young wolves will only learn as much of the Law of
the Jungle as applies to their own pack and tribe,
and run away as soon as they can repeat the Hunting
Verse—“Feet that make no noise; eyes
that can see in the dark; ears that can hear the winds
in their lairs, and sharp white teeth, all these things
are the marks of our brothers except Tabaqui the Jackal
and the Hyaena whom we hate.” But Mowgli,
as a man-cub, had to learn a great deal more than
this. Sometimes Bagheera the Black Panther would
come lounging through the jungle to see how his pet
was getting on, and would purr with his head against
a tree while Mowgli recited the day’s lesson
to Baloo. The boy could climb almost as well as
he could swim, and swim almost as well as he could
run. So Baloo, the Teacher of the Law, taught
him the Wood and Water Laws: how to tell a rotten
branch from a sound one; how to speak politely to
the wild bees when he came upon a hive of them fifty
feet above ground; what to say to Mang the Bat when
he disturbed him in the branches at midday; and how
to warn the water-snakes in the pools before he splashed
down among them. None of the Jungle People like
being disturbed, and all are very ready to fly at
an intruder. Then, too, Mowgli was taught the
Strangers’ Hunting Call, which must be repeated
aloud till it is answered, whenever one of the Jungle-People
hunts outside his own grounds. It means, translated,
“Give me leave to hunt here because I am hungry.”
And the answer is, “Hunt then for food, but
not for pleasure.”
All this will show you how much Mowgli
had to learn by heart, and he grew very tired of saying
the same thing over a hundred times. But, as
Baloo said to Bagheera, one day when Mowgli had been
cuffed and run off in a temper, “A man’s
cub is a man’s cub, and he must learn all the
Law of the Jungle.”
“But think how small he is,”
said the Black Panther, who would have spoiled Mowgli
if he had had his own way. “How can his
little head carry all thy long talk?”
“Is there anything in the jungle
too little to be killed? No. That is why
I teach him these things, and that is why I hit him,
very softly, when he forgets.”
“Softly! What dost thou
know of softness, old Iron-feet?” Bagheera grunted.
“His face is all bruised today by thy—softness.
Ugh.”
“Better he should be bruised
from head to foot by me who love him than that he
should come to harm through ignorance,” Baloo
answered very earnestly. “I am now teaching
him the Master Words of the Jungle that shall protect
him with the birds and the Snake People, and all that
hunt on four feet, except his own pack. He can
now claim protection, if he will only remember the
words, from all in the jungle. Is not that worth
a little beating?”
“Well, look to it then that
thou dost not kill the man-cub. He is no tree
trunk to sharpen thy blunt claws upon. But what
are those Master Words? I am more likely to give
help than to ask it”—Bagheera stretched
out one paw and admired the steel-blue, ripping-chisel
talons at the end of it—“still I
should like to know.”
“I will call Mowgli and he shall
say them—if he will. Come, Little
Brother!”
“My head is ringing like a bee
tree,” said a sullen little voice over their
heads, and Mowgli slid down a tree trunk very angry
and indignant, adding as he reached the ground:
“I come for Bagheera and not for thee, fat old
Baloo!”
“That is all one to me,”
said Baloo, though he was hurt and grieved. “Tell
Bagheera, then, the Master Words of the Jungle that
I have taught thee this day.”
“Master Words for which people?”
said Mowgli, delighted to show off. “The
jungle has many tongues. I know them all.”
“A little thou knowest, but
not much. See, O Bagheera, they never thank their
teacher. Not one small wolfling has ever come
back to thank old Baloo for his teachings. Say
the word for the Hunting-People, then—great
scholar.”
“We be of one blood, ye and
I,” said Mowgli, giving the words the Bear accent
which all the Hunting People use.
“Good. Now for the birds.”
Mowgli repeated, with the Kite’s whistle at
the end of the sentence.
“Now for the Snake-People,” said Bagheera.
The answer was a perfectly indescribable
hiss, and Mowgli kicked up his feet behind, clapped
his hands together to applaud himself, and jumped
on to Bagheera’s back, where he sat sideways,
drumming with his heels on the glossy skin and making
the worst faces he could think of at Baloo.
“There—there!
That was worth a little bruise,” said the brown
bear tenderly. “Some day thou wilt remember
me.” Then he turned aside to tell Bagheera
how he had begged the Master Words from Hathi the Wild
Elephant, who knows all about these things, and how
Hathi had taken Mowgli down to a pool to get the Snake
Word from a water-snake, because Baloo could not pronounce
it, and how Mowgli was now reasonably safe against
all accidents in the jungle, because neither snake,
bird, nor beast would hurt him.
“No one then is to be feared,”
Baloo wound up, patting his big furry stomach with
pride.
“Except his own tribe,”
said Bagheera, under his breath; and then aloud to
Mowgli, “Have a care for my ribs, Little Brother!
What is all this dancing up and down?”
Mowgli had been trying to make himself
heard by pulling at Bagheera’s shoulder fur
and kicking hard. When the two listened to him
he was shouting at the top of his voice, “And
so I shall have a tribe of my own, and lead them through
the branches all day long.”
“What is this new folly, little
dreamer of dreams?” said Bagheera.
“Yes, and throw branches and
dirt at old Baloo,” Mowgli went on. “They
have promised me this. Ah!”
“Whoof!” Baloo’s
big paw scooped Mowgli off Bagheera’s back, and
as the boy lay between the big fore-paws he could
see the Bear was angry.
“Mowgli,” said Baloo,
“thou hast been talking with the Bandar-log—the
Monkey People.”
Mowgli looked at Bagheera to see if
the Panther was angry too, and Bagheera’s eyes
were as hard as jade stones.
“Thou hast been with the Monkey
People—the gray apes—the people
without a law—the eaters of everything.
That is great shame.”
“When Baloo hurt my head,”
said Mowgli (he was still on his back), “I went
away, and the gray apes came down from the trees and
had pity on me. No one else cared.”
He snuffled a little.
“The pity of the Monkey People!”
Baloo snorted. “The stillness of the mountain
stream! The cool of the summer sun! And then,
man-cub?”
“And then, and then, they gave
me nuts and pleasant things to eat, and they—they
carried me in their arms up to the top of the trees
and said I was their blood brother except that I had
no tail, and should be their leader some day.”
“They have no leader,”
said Bagheera. “They lie. They have
always lied.”
“They were very kind and bade
me come again. Why have I never been taken among
the Monkey People? They stand on their feet as
I do. They do not hit me with their hard paws.
They play all day. Let me get up! Bad Baloo,
let me up! I will play with them again.”
“Listen, man-cub,” said
the Bear, and his voice rumbled like thunder on a
hot night. “I have taught thee all the Law
of the Jungle for all the peoples of the jungle—except
the Monkey-Folk who live in the trees. They have
no law. They are outcasts. They have no speech
of their own, but use the stolen words which they
overhear when they listen, and peep, and wait up above
in the branches. Their way is not our way.
They are without leaders. They have no remembrance.
They boast and chatter and pretend that they are a
great people about to do great affairs in the jungle,
but the falling of a nut turns their minds to laughter
and all is forgotten. We of the jungle have no
dealings with them. We do not drink where the
monkeys drink; we do not go where the monkeys go; we
do not hunt where they hunt; we do not die where they
die. Hast thou ever heard me speak of the Bandar-log
till today?”
“No,” said Mowgli in a
whisper, for the forest was very still now Baloo had
finished.
“The Jungle-People put them
out of their mouths and out of their minds. They
are very many, evil, dirty, shameless, and they desire,
if they have any fixed desire, to be noticed by the
Jungle People. But we do not notice them even
when they throw nuts and filth on our heads.”
He had hardly spoken when a shower
of nuts and twigs spattered down through the branches;
and they could hear coughings and howlings and angry
jumpings high up in the air among the thin branches.
“The Monkey-People are forbidden,”
said Baloo, “forbidden to the Jungle-People.
Remember.”
“Forbidden,” said Bagheera,
“but I still think Baloo should have warned
thee against them.”
“I—I? How was
I to guess he would play with such dirt. The Monkey
People! Faugh!”
A fresh shower came down on their
heads and the two trotted away, taking Mowgli with
them. What Baloo had said about the monkeys was
perfectly true. They belonged to the tree-tops,
and as beasts very seldom look up, there was no occasion
for the monkeys and the Jungle-People to cross each
other’s path. But whenever they found a
sick wolf, or a wounded tiger, or bear, the monkeys
would torment him, and would throw sticks and nuts
at any beast for fun and in the hope of being noticed.
Then they would howl and shriek senseless songs, and
invite the Jungle-People to climb up their trees and
fight them, or would start furious battles over nothing
among themselves, and leave the dead monkeys where
the Jungle-People could see them. They were always
just going to have a leader, and laws and customs
of their own, but they never did, because their memories
would not hold over from day to day, and so they compromised
things by making up a saying, “What the Bandar-log
think now the jungle will think later,” and
that comforted them a great deal. None of the
beasts could reach them, but on the other hand none
of the beasts would notice them, and that was why
they were so pleased when Mowgli came to play with
them, and they heard how angry Baloo was.
They never meant to do any more—the
Bandar-log never mean anything at all; but one of
them invented what seemed to him a brilliant idea,
and he told all the others that Mowgli would be a
useful person to keep in the tribe, because he could
weave sticks together for protection from the wind;
so, if they caught him, they could make him teach them.
Of course Mowgli, as a woodcutter’s child, inherited
all sorts of instincts, and used to make little huts
of fallen branches without thinking how he came to
do it. The Monkey-People, watching in the trees,
considered his play most wonderful. This time,
they said, they were really going to have a leader
and become the wisest people in the jungle—so
wise that everyone else would notice and envy them.
Therefore they followed Baloo and Bagheera and Mowgli
through the jungle very quietly till it was time for
the midday nap, and Mowgli, who was very much ashamed
of himself, slept between the Panther and the Bear,
resolving to have no more to do with the Monkey People.
The next thing he remembered was feeling
hands on his legs and arms—hard, strong,
little hands—and then a swash of branches
in his face, and then he was staring down through
the swaying boughs as Baloo woke the jungle with his
deep cries and Bagheera bounded up the trunk with
every tooth bared. The Bandar-log howled with
triumph and scuffled away to the upper branches where
Bagheera dared not follow, shouting: “He
has noticed us! Bagheera has noticed us.
All the Jungle-People admire us for our skill and
our cunning.” Then they began their flight;
and the flight of the Monkey-People through tree-land
is one of the things nobody can describe. They
have their regular roads and crossroads, up hills
and down hills, all laid out from fifty to seventy
or a hundred feet above ground, and by these they can
travel even at night if necessary. Two of the
strongest monkeys caught Mowgli under the arms and
swung off with him through the treetops, twenty feet
at a bound. Had they been alone they could have
gone twice as fast, but the boy’s weight held
them back. Sick and giddy as Mowgli was he could
not help enjoying the wild rush, though the glimpses
of earth far down below frightened him, and the terrible
check and jerk at the end of the swing over nothing
but empty air brought his heart between his teeth.
His escort would rush him up a tree till he felt the
thinnest topmost branches crackle and bend under them,
and then with a cough and a whoop would fling themselves
into the air outward and downward, and bring up, hanging
by their hands or their feet to the lower limbs of
the next tree. Sometimes he could see for miles
and miles across the still green jungle, as a man
on the top of a mast can see for miles across the sea,
and then the branches and leaves would lash him across
the face, and he and his two guards would be almost
down to earth again. So, bounding and crashing
and whooping and yelling, the whole tribe of Bandar-log
swept along the tree-roads with Mowgli their prisoner.
For a time he was afraid of being
dropped. Then he grew angry but knew better than
to struggle, and then he began to think. The first
thing was to send back word to Baloo and Bagheera,
for, at the pace the monkeys were going, he knew his
friends would be left far behind. It was useless
to look down, for he could only see the topsides of
the branches, so he stared upward and saw, far away
in the blue, Rann the Kite balancing and wheeling
as he kept watch over the jungle waiting for things
to die. Rann saw that the monkeys were carrying
something, and dropped a few hundred yards to find
out whether their load was good to eat. He whistled
with surprise when he saw Mowgli being dragged up to
a treetop and heard him give the Kite call for—“We
be of one blood, thou and I.” The waves
of the branches closed over the boy, but Chil balanced
away to the next tree in time to see the little brown
face come up again. “Mark my trail!”
Mowgli shouted. “Tell Baloo of the Seeonee
Pack and Bagheera of the Council Rock.”
“In whose name, Brother?”
Rann had never seen Mowgli before, though of course
he had heard of him.
“Mowgli, the Frog. Man-cub they call me!
Mark my tra-il!”
The last words were shrieked as he
was being swung through the air, but Rann nodded and
rose up till he looked no bigger than a speck of dust,
and there he hung, watching with his telescope eyes
the swaying of the treetops as Mowgli’s escort
whirled along.
“They never go far,” he
said with a chuckle. “They never do what
they set out to do. Always pecking at new things
are the Bandar-log. This time, if I have any
eye-sight, they have pecked down trouble for themselves,
for Baloo is no fledgling and Bagheera can, as I know,
kill more than goats.”
So he rocked on his wings, his feet
gathered up under him, and waited.
Meantime, Baloo and Bagheera were
furious with rage and grief. Bagheera climbed
as he had never climbed before, but the thin branches
broke beneath his weight, and he slipped down, his
claws full of bark.
“Why didst thou not warn the
man-cub?” he roared to poor Baloo, who had set
off at a clumsy trot in the hope of overtaking the
monkeys. “What was the use of half slaying
him with blows if thou didst not warn him?”
“Haste! O haste! We—we
may catch them yet!” Baloo panted.
“At that speed! It would
not tire a wounded cow. Teacher of the Law—cub-beater—a
mile of that rolling to and fro would burst thee open.
Sit still and think! Make a plan. This is
no time for chasing. They may drop him if we
follow too close.”
“Arrula! Whoo! They
may have dropped him already, being tired of carrying
him. Who can trust the Bandar-log? Put dead
bats on my head! Give me black bones to eat!
Roll me into the hives of the wild bees that I may
be stung to death, and bury me with the Hyaena, for
I am most miserable of bears! Arulala! Wahooa!
O Mowgli, Mowgli! Why did I not warn thee against
the Monkey-Folk instead of breaking thy head?
Now perhaps I may have knocked the day’s lesson
out of his mind, and he will be alone in the jungle
without the Master Words.”
Baloo clasped his paws over his ears
and rolled to and fro moaning.
“At least he gave me all the
Words correctly a little time ago,” said Bagheera
impatiently. “Baloo, thou hast neither memory
nor respect. What would the jungle think if I,
the Black Panther, curled myself up like Ikki the
Porcupine, and howled?”
“What do I care what the jungle
thinks? He may be dead by now.”
“Unless and until they drop
him from the branches in sport, or kill him out of
idleness, I have no fear for the man-cub. He is
wise and well taught, and above all he has the eyes
that make the Jungle-People afraid. But (and
it is a great evil) he is in the power of the Bandar-log,
and they, because they live in trees, have no fear
of any of our people.” Bagheera licked
one forepaw thoughtfully.
“Fool that I am! Oh, fat,
brown, root-digging fool that I am,” said Baloo,
uncoiling himself with a jerk, “it is true what
Hathi the Wild Elephant says: `To each his own
fear’; and they, the Bandar-log, fear Kaa the
Rock Snake. He can climb as well as they can.
He steals the young monkeys in the night. The
whisper of his name makes their wicked tails cold.
Let us go to Kaa.”
“What will he do for us?
He is not of our tribe, being footless—and
with most evil eyes,” said Bagheera.
“He is very old and very cunning.
Above all, he is always hungry,” said Baloo
hopefully. “Promise him many goats.”
“He sleeps for a full month
after he has once eaten. He may be asleep now,
and even were he awake what if he would rather kill
his own goats?” Bagheera, who did not know much
about Kaa, was naturally suspicious.
“Then in that case, thou and
I together, old hunter, might make him see reason.”
Here Baloo rubbed his faded brown shoulder against
the Panther, and they went off to look for Kaa the
Rock Python.
They found him stretched out on a
warm ledge in the afternoon sun, admiring his beautiful
new coat, for he had been in retirement for the last
ten days changing his skin, and now he was very splendid—darting
his big blunt-nosed head along the ground, and twisting
the thirty feet of his body into fantastic knots and
curves, and licking his lips as he thought of his
dinner to come.
“He has not eaten,” said
Baloo, with a grunt of relief, as soon as he saw the
beautifully mottled brown and yellow jacket. “Be
careful, Bagheera! He is always a little blind
after he has changed his skin, and very quick to strike.”
Kaa was not a poison snake—in
fact he rather despised the poison snakes as cowards—but
his strength lay in his hug, and when he had once
lapped his huge coils round anybody there was no more
to be said. “Good hunting!” cried
Baloo, sitting up on his haunches. Like all snakes
of his breed Kaa was rather deaf, and did not hear
the call at first. Then he curled up ready for
any accident, his head lowered.
“Good hunting for us all,”
he answered. “Oho, Baloo, what dost thou
do here? Good hunting, Bagheera. One of
us at least needs food. Is there any news of
game afoot? A doe now, or even a young buck?
I am as empty as a dried well.”
“We are hunting,” said
Baloo carelessly. He knew that you must not hurry
Kaa. He is too big.
“Give me permission to come
with you,” said Kaa. “A blow more
or less is nothing to thee, Bagheera or Baloo, but
I—I have to wait and wait for days in a
wood-path and climb half a night on the mere chance
of a young ape. Psshaw! The branches are
not what they were when I was young. Rotten twigs
and dry boughs are they all.”
“Maybe thy great weight has
something to do with the matter,” said Baloo.
“I am a fair length—a
fair length,” said Kaa with a little pride.
“But for all that, it is the fault of this new-grown
timber. I came very near to falling on my last
hunt—very near indeed—and the
noise of my slipping, for my tail was not tight wrapped
around the tree, waked the Bandar-log, and they called
me most evil names.”
“Footless, yellow earth-worm,”
said Bagheera under his whiskers, as though he were
trying to remember something.
“Sssss! Have they ever called me that?”
said Kaa.
“Something of that kind it was
that they shouted to us last moon, but we never noticed
them. They will say anything—even that
thou hast lost all thy teeth, and wilt not face anything
bigger than a kid, because (they are indeed shameless,
these Bandar-log)—because thou art afraid
of the he-goat’s horns,” Bagheera went
on sweetly.
Now a snake, especially a wary old
python like Kaa, very seldom shows that he is angry,
but Baloo and Bagheera could see the big swallowing
muscles on either side of Kaa’s throat ripple
and bulge.
“The Bandar-log have shifted
their grounds,” he said quietly. “When
I came up into the sun today I heard them whooping
among the tree-tops.”
“It—it is the Bandar-log
that we follow now,” said Baloo, but the words
stuck in his throat, for that was the first time in
his memory that one of the Jungle-People had owned
to being interested in the doings of the monkeys.
“Beyond doubt then it is no
small thing that takes two such hunters—leaders
in their own jungle I am certain—on the
trail of the Bandar-log,” Kaa replied courteously,
as he swelled with curiosity.
“Indeed,” Baloo began,
“I am no more than the old and sometimes very
foolish Teacher of the Law to the Seeonee wolf-cubs,
and Bagheera here—”
“Is Bagheera,” said the
Black Panther, and his jaws shut with a snap, for
he did not believe in being humble. “The
trouble is this, Kaa. Those nut-stealers and
pickers of palm leaves have stolen away our man-cub
of whom thou hast perhaps heard.”
“I heard some news from Ikki
(his quills make him presumptuous) of a man-thing
that was entered into a wolf pack, but I did not believe.
Ikki is full of stories half heard and very badly
told.”
“But it is true. He is
such a man-cub as never was,” said Baloo.
“The best and wisest and boldest of man-cubs—my
own pupil, who shall make the name of Baloo famous
through all the jungles; and besides, I—we—love
him, Kaa.”
“Ts! Ts!” said Kaa,
weaving his head to and fro. “I also have
known what love is. There are tales I could tell
that—”
“That need a clear night when
we are all well fed to praise properly,” said
Bagheera quickly. “Our man-cub is in the
hands of the Bandar-log now, and we know that of all
the Jungle-People they fear Kaa alone.”
“They fear me alone. They
have good reason,” said Kaa. “Chattering,
foolish, vain—vain, foolish, and chattering,
are the monkeys. But a man-thing in their hands
is in no good luck. They grow tired of the nuts
they pick, and throw them down. They carry a branch
half a day, meaning to do great things with it, and
then they snap it in two. That man-thing is not
to be envied. They called me also—`yellow
fish’ was it not?”
“Worm—worm—earth-worm,”
said Bagheera, “as well as other things which
I cannot now say for shame.”
“We must remind them to speak
well of their master. Aaa-ssp! We must help
their wandering memories. Now, whither went they
with the cub?”
“The jungle alone knows.
Toward the sunset, I believe,” said Baloo.
“We had thought that thou wouldst know, Kaa.”
“I? How? I take them
when they come in my way, but I do not hunt the Bandar-log,
or frogs—or green scum on a water-hole,
for that matter.”
“Up, Up! Up, Up! Hillo!
Illo! Illo, look up, Baloo of the Seeonee Wolf
Pack!”
Baloo looked up to see where the voice
came from, and there was Rann the Kite, sweeping down
with the sun shining on the upturned flanges of his
wings. It was near Rann’s bedtime, but he
had ranged all over the jungle looking for the Bear
and had missed him in the thick foliage.
“What is it?” said Baloo.
“I have seen Mowgli among the
Bandar-log. He bade me tell you. I watched.
The Bandar-log have taken him beyond the river to the
monkey city—to the Cold Lairs. They
may stay there for a night, or ten nights, or an hour.
I have told the bats to watch through the dark time.
That is my message. Good hunting, all you below!”
“Full gorge and a deep sleep
to you, Rann,” cried Bagheera. “I
will remember thee in my next kill, and put aside
the head for thee alone, O best of kites!”
“It is nothing. It is nothing.
The boy held the Master Word. I could have done
no less,” and Rann circled up again to his roost.
“He has not forgotten to use
his tongue,” said Baloo with a chuckle of pride.
“To think of one so young remembering the Master
Word for the birds too while he was being pulled across
trees!”
“It was most firmly driven into
him,” said Bagheera. “But I am proud
of him, and now we must go to the Cold Lairs.”
They all knew where that place was,
but few of the Jungle People ever went there, because
what they called the Cold Lairs was an old deserted
city, lost and buried in the jungle, and beasts seldom
use a place that men have once used. The wild
boar will, but the hunting tribes do not. Besides,
the monkeys lived there as much as they could be said
to live anywhere, and no self-respecting animal would
come within eyeshot of it except in times of drought,
when the half-ruined tanks and reservoirs held a little
water.
“It is half a night’s
journey—at full speed,” said Bagheera,
and Baloo looked very serious. “I will
go as fast as I can,” he said anxiously.
“We dare not wait for thee.
Follow, Baloo. We must go on the quick-foot—Kaa
and I.”
“Feet or no feet, I can keep
abreast of all thy four,” said Kaa shortly.
Baloo made one effort to hurry, but had to sit down
panting, and so they left him to come on later, while
Bagheera hurried forward, at the quick panther-canter.
Kaa said nothing, but, strive as Bagheera might, the
huge Rock-python held level with him. When they
came to a hill stream, Bagheera gained, because he
bounded across while Kaa swam, his head and two feet
of his neck clearing the water, but on level ground
Kaa made up the distance.
“By the Broken Lock that freed
me,” said Bagheera, when twilight had fallen,
“thou art no slow goer!”
“I am hungry,” said Kaa.
“Besides, they called me speckled frog.”
“Worm—earth-worm, and yellow to boot.”
“All one. Let us go on,”
and Kaa seemed to pour himself along the ground, finding
the shortest road with his steady eyes, and keeping
to it.
In the Cold Lairs the Monkey-People
were not thinking of Mowgli’s friends at all.
They had brought the boy to the Lost City, and were
very much pleased with themselves for the time.
Mowgli had never seen an Indian city before, and though
this was almost a heap of ruins it seemed very wonderful
and splendid. Some king had built it long ago
on a little hill. You could still trace the stone
causeways that led up to the ruined gates where the
last splinters of wood hung to the worn, rusted hinges.
Trees had grown into and out of the walls; the battlements
were tumbled down and decayed, and wild creepers hung
out of the windows of the towers on the walls in bushy
hanging clumps.
A great roofless palace crowned the
hill, and the marble of the courtyards and the fountains
was split, and stained with red and green, and the
very cobblestones in the courtyard where the king’s
elephants used to live had been thrust up and apart
by grasses and young trees. From the palace you
could see the rows and rows of roofless houses that
made up the city looking like empty honeycombs filled
with blackness; the shapeless block of stone that
had been an idol in the square where four roads met;
the pits and dimples at street corners where the public
wells once stood, and the shattered domes of temples
with wild figs sprouting on their sides. The
monkeys called the place their city, and pretended
to despise the Jungle-People because they lived in
the forest. And yet they never knew what the
buildings were made for nor how to use them.
They would sit in circles on the hall of the king’s
council chamber, and scratch for fleas and pretend
to be men; or they would run in and out of the roofless
houses and collect pieces of plaster and old bricks
in a corner, and forget where they had hidden them,
and fight and cry in scuffling crowds, and then break
off to play up and down the terraces of the king’s
garden, where they would shake the rose trees and
the oranges in sport to see the fruit and flowers fall.
They explored all the passages and dark tunnels in
the palace and the hundreds of little dark rooms,
but they never remembered what they had seen and what
they had not; and so drifted about in ones and twos
or crowds telling each other that they were doing
as men did. They drank at the tanks and made
the water all muddy, and then they fought over it,
and then they would all rush together in mobs and
shout: “There is no one in the jungle so
wise and good and clever and strong and gentle as the
Bandar-log.” Then all would begin again
till they grew tired of the city and went back to
the tree-tops, hoping the Jungle-People would notice
them.
Mowgli, who had been trained under
the Law of the Jungle, did not like or understand
this kind of life. The monkeys dragged him into
the Cold Lairs late in the afternoon, and instead
of going to sleep, as Mowgli would have done after
a long journey, they joined hands and danced about
and sang their foolish songs. One of the monkeys
made a speech and told his companions that Mowgli’s
capture marked a new thing in the history of the Bandar-log,
for Mowgli was going to show them how to weave sticks
and canes together as a protection against rain and
cold. Mowgli picked up some creepers and began
to work them in and out, and the monkeys tried to
imitate; but in a very few minutes they lost interest
and began to pull their friends’ tails or jump
up and down on all fours, coughing.
“I wish to eat,” said
Mowgli. “I am a stranger in this part of
the jungle. Bring me food, or give me leave to
hunt here.”
Twenty or thirty monkeys bounded away
to bring him nuts and wild pawpaws. But they
fell to fighting on the road, and it was too much
trouble to go back with what was left of the fruit.
Mowgli was sore and angry as well as hungry, and he
roamed through the empty city giving the Strangers’
Hunting Call from time to time, but no one answered
him, and Mowgli felt that he had reached a very bad
place indeed. “All that Baloo has said
about the Bandar-log is true,” he thought to
himself. “They have no Law, no Hunting
Call, and no leaders—nothing but foolish
words and little picking thievish hands. So if
I am starved or killed here, it will be all my own
fault. But I must try to return to my own jungle.
Baloo will surely beat me, but that is better than
chasing silly rose leaves with the Bandar-log.”
No sooner had he walked to the city
wall than the monkeys pulled him back, telling him
that he did not know how happy he was, and pinching
him to make him grateful. He set his teeth and
said nothing, but went with the shouting monkeys to
a terrace above the red sandstone reservoirs that
were half-full of rain water. There was a ruined
summer-house of white marble in the center of the terrace,
built for queens dead a hundred years ago. The
domed roof had half fallen in and blocked up the underground
passage from the palace by which the queens used to
enter. But the walls were made of screens of marble
tracery—beautiful milk-white fretwork, set
with agates and cornelians and jasper and lapis lazuli,
and as the moon came up behind the hill it shone through
the open work, casting shadows on the ground like black
velvet embroidery. Sore, sleepy, and hungry as
he was, Mowgli could not help laughing when the Bandar-log
began, twenty at a time, to tell him how great and
wise and strong and gentle they were, and how foolish
he was to wish to leave them. “We are great.
We are free. We are wonderful. We are the
most wonderful people in all the jungle! We all
say so, and so it must be true,” they shouted.
“Now as you are a new listener and can carry
our words back to the Jungle-People so that they may
notice us in future, we will tell you all about our
most excellent selves.” Mowgli made no
objection, and the monkeys gathered by hundreds and
hundreds on the terrace to listen to their own speakers
singing the praises of the Bandar-log, and whenever
a speaker stopped for want of breath they would all
shout together: “This is true; we all say
so.” Mowgli nodded and blinked, and said
“Yes” when they asked him a question, and
his head spun with the noise. “Tabaqui
the Jackal must have bitten all these people,”
he said to himself, “and now they have madness.
Certainly this is dewanee, the madness. Do they
never go to sleep? Now there is a cloud coming
to cover that moon. If it were only a big enough
cloud I might try to run away in the darkness.
But I am tired.”
That same cloud was being watched
by two good friends in the ruined ditch below the
city wall, for Bagheera and Kaa, knowing well how
dangerous the Monkey-People were in large numbers,
did not wish to run any risks. The monkeys never
fight unless they are a hundred to one, and few in
the jungle care for those odds.
“I will go to the west wall,”
Kaa whispered, “and come down swiftly with the
slope of the ground in my favor. They will not
throw themselves upon my back in their hundreds, but—”
“I know it,” said Bagheera.
“Would that Baloo were here, but we must do
what we can. When that cloud covers the moon I
shall go to the terrace. They hold some sort
of council there over the boy.”
“Good hunting,” said Kaa
grimly, and glided away to the west wall. That
happened to be the least ruined of any, and the big
snake was delayed awhile before he could find a way
up the stones. The cloud hid the moon, and as
Mowgli wondered what would come next he heard Bagheera’s
light feet on the terrace. The Black Panther
had raced up the slope almost without a sound and
was striking—he knew better than to waste
time in biting—right and left among the
monkeys, who were seated round Mowgli in circles fifty
and sixty deep. There was a howl of fright and
rage, and then as Bagheera tripped on the rolling
kicking bodies beneath him, a monkey shouted:
“There is only one here! Kill him!
Kill.” A scuffling mass of monkeys, biting,
scratching, tearing, and pulling, closed over Bagheera,
while five or six laid hold of Mowgli, dragged him
up the wall of the summerhouse and pushed him through
the hole of the broken dome. A man-trained boy
would have been badly bruised, for the fall was a
good fifteen feet, but Mowgli fell as Baloo had taught
him to fall, and landed on his feet.
“Stay there,” shouted
the monkeys, “till we have killed thy friends,
and later we will play with thee—if the
Poison-People leave thee alive.”
“We be of one blood, ye and
I,” said Mowgli, quickly giving the Snake’s
Call. He could hear rustling and hissing in the
rubbish all round him and gave the Call a second time,
to make sure.
“Even ssso! Down hoods
all!” said half a dozen low voices (every ruin
in India becomes sooner or later a dwelling place of
snakes, and the old summerhouse was alive with cobras).
“Stand still, Little Brother, for thy feet may
do us harm.”
Mowgli stood as quietly as he could,
peering through the open work and listening to the
furious din of the fight round the Black Panther—the
yells and chatterings and scufflings, and Bagheera’s
deep, hoarse cough as he backed and bucked and twisted
and plunged under the heaps of his enemies. For
the first time since he was born, Bagheera was fighting
for his life.
“Baloo must be at hand; Bagheera
would not have come alone,” Mowgli thought.
And then he called aloud: “To the tank,
Bagheera. Roll to the water tanks. Roll
and plunge! Get to the water!”
Bagheera heard, and the cry that told
him Mowgli was safe gave him new courage. He
worked his way desperately, inch by inch, straight
for the reservoirs, halting in silence. Then
from the ruined wall nearest the jungle rose up the
rumbling war-shout of Baloo. The old Bear had
done his best, but he could not come before.
“Bagheera,” he shouted, “I am here.
I climb! I haste! Ahuwora! The stones
slip under my feet! Wait my coming, O most infamous
Bandar-log!” He panted up the terrace only to
disappear to the head in a wave of monkeys, but he
threw himself squarely on his haunches, and, spreading
out his forepaws, hugged as many as he could hold,
and then began to hit with a regular bat-bat-bat,
like the flipping strokes of a paddle wheel. A
crash and a splash told Mowgli that Bagheera had fought
his way to the tank where the monkeys could not follow.
The Panther lay gasping for breath, his head just
out of the water, while the monkeys stood three deep
on the red steps, dancing up and down with rage, ready
to spring upon him from all sides if he came out to
help Baloo. It was then that Bagheera lifted up
his dripping chin, and in despair gave the Snake’s
Call for protection—“We be of one
blood, ye and I”—for he believed that
Kaa had turned tail at the last minute. Even
Baloo, half smothered under the monkeys on the edge
of the terrace, could not help chuckling as he heard
the Black Panther asking for help.
Kaa had only just worked his way over
the west wall, landing with a wrench that dislodged
a coping stone into the ditch. He had no intention
of losing any advantage of the ground, and coiled and
uncoiled himself once or twice, to be sure that every
foot of his long body was in working order. All
that while the fight with Baloo went on, and the monkeys
yelled in the tank round Bagheera, and Mang the Bat,
flying to and fro, carried the news of the great battle
over the jungle, till even Hathi the Wild Elephant
trumpeted, and, far away, scattered bands of the Monkey-Folk
woke and came leaping along the tree-roads to help
their comrades in the Cold Lairs, and the noise of
the fight roused all the day birds for miles round.
Then Kaa came straight, quickly, and anxious to kill.
The fighting strength of a python is in the driving
blow of his head backed by all the strength and weight
of his body. If you can imagine a lance, or a
battering ram, or a hammer weighing nearly half a
ton driven by a cool, quiet mind living in the handle
of it, you can roughly imagine what Kaa was like when
he fought. A python four or five feet long can
knock a man down if he hits him fairly in the chest,
and Kaa was thirty feet long, as you know. His
first stroke was delivered into the heart of the crowd
round Baloo. It was sent home with shut mouth
in silence, and there was no need of a second.
The monkeys scattered with cries of—“Kaa!
It is Kaa! Run! Run!”
Generations of monkeys had been scared
into good behavior by the stories their elders told
them of Kaa, the night thief, who could slip along
the branches as quietly as moss grows, and steal away
the strongest monkey that ever lived; of old Kaa,
who could make himself look so like a dead branch
or a rotten stump that the wisest were deceived, till
the branch caught them. Kaa was everything that
the monkeys feared in the jungle, for none of them
knew the limits of his power, none of them could look
him in the face, and none had ever come alive out of
his hug. And so they ran, stammering with terror,
to the walls and the roofs of the houses, and Baloo
drew a deep breath of relief. His fur was much
thicker than Bagheera’s, but he had suffered
sorely in the fight. Then Kaa opened his mouth
for the first time and spoke one long hissing word,
and the far-away monkeys, hurrying to the defense
of the Cold Lairs, stayed where they were, cowering,
till the loaded branches bent and crackled under them.
The monkeys on the walls and the empty houses stopped
their cries, and in the stillness that fell upon the
city Mowgli heard Bagheera shaking his wet sides as
he came up from the tank. Then the clamor broke
out again. The monkeys leaped higher up the walls.
They clung around the necks of the big stone idols
and shrieked as they skipped along the battlements,
while Mowgli, dancing in the summerhouse, put his
eye to the screenwork and hooted owl-fashion between
his front teeth, to show his derision and contempt.
“Get the man-cub out of that
trap; I can do no more,” Bagheera gasped.
“Let us take the man-cub and go. They may
attack again.”
“They will not move till I order
them. Stay you sssso!” Kaa hissed, and
the city was silent once more. “I could
not come before, Brother, but I think I heard thee
call”—this was to Bagheera.
“I—I may have cried
out in the battle,” Bagheera answered. “Baloo,
art thou hurt?
“I am not sure that they did
not pull me into a hundred little bearlings,”
said Baloo, gravely shaking one leg after the other.
“Wow! I am sore. Kaa, we owe thee,
I think, our lives—Bagheera and I.”
“No matter. Where is the manling?”
“Here, in a trap. I cannot
climb out,” cried Mowgli. The curve of the
broken dome was above his head.
“Take him away. He dances
like Mao the Peacock. He will crush our young,”
said the cobras inside.
“Hah!” said Kaa with a
chuckle, “he has friends everywhere, this manling.
Stand back, manling. And hide you, O Poison People.
I break down the wall.”
Kaa looked carefully till he found
a discolored crack in the marble tracery showing a
weak spot, made two or three light taps with his head
to get the distance, and then lifting up six feet of
his body clear of the ground, sent home half a dozen
full-power smashing blows, nose-first. The screen-work
broke and fell away in a cloud of dust and rubbish,
and Mowgli leaped through the opening and flung himself
between Baloo and Bagheera—an arm around
each big neck.
“Art thou hurt?” said Baloo, hugging him
softly.
“I am sore, hungry, and not
a little bruised. But, oh, they have handled
ye grievously, my Brothers! Ye bleed.”
“Others also,” said Bagheera,
licking his lips and looking at the monkey-dead on
the terrace and round the tank.
“It is nothing, it is nothing,
if thou art safe, oh, my pride of all little frogs!”
whimpered Baloo.
“Of that we shall judge later,”
said Bagheera, in a dry voice that Mowgli did not
at all like. “But here is Kaa to whom we
owe the battle and thou owest thy life. Thank
him according to our customs, Mowgli.”
Mowgli turned and saw the great Python’s
head swaying a foot above his own.
“So this is the manling,”
said Kaa. “Very soft is his skin, and he
is not unlike the Bandar-log. Have a care, manling,
that I do not mistake thee for a monkey some twilight
when I have newly changed my coat.”
“We be one blood, thou and I,”
Mowgli answered. “I take my life from thee
tonight. My kill shall be thy kill if ever thou
art hungry, O Kaa.”
“All thanks, Little Brother,”
said Kaa, though his eyes twinkled. “And
what may so bold a hunter kill? I ask that I may
follow when next he goes abroad.”
“I kill nothing,—I
am too little,—but I drive goats toward
such as can use them. When thou art empty come
to me and see if I speak the truth. I have some
skill in these [he held out his hands], and if ever
thou art in a trap, I may pay the debt which I owe
to thee, to Bagheera, and to Baloo, here. Good
hunting to ye all, my masters.”
“Well said,” growled Baloo,
for Mowgli had returned thanks very prettily.
The Python dropped his head lightly for a minute on
Mowgli’s shoulder. “A brave heart
and a courteous tongue,” said he. “They
shall carry thee far through the jungle, manling.
But now go hence quickly with thy friends. Go
and sleep, for the moon sets, and what follows it
is not well that thou shouldst see.”
The moon was sinking behind the hills
and the lines of trembling monkeys huddled together
on the walls and battlements looked like ragged shaky
fringes of things. Baloo went down to the tank
for a drink and Bagheera began to put his fur in order,
as Kaa glided out into the center of the terrace and
brought his jaws together with a ringing snap that
drew all the monkeys’ eyes upon him.
“The moon sets,” he said.
“Is there yet light enough to see?”
From the walls came a moan like the
wind in the tree-tops—“We see, O
Kaa.”
“Good. Begins now the dance—the
Dance of the Hunger of Kaa. Sit still and watch.”
He turned twice or thrice in a big
circle, weaving his head from right to left.
Then he began making loops and figures of eight with
his body, and soft, oozy triangles that melted into
squares and five-sided figures, and coiled mounds,
never resting, never hurrying, and never stopping
his low humming song. It grew darker and darker,
till at last the dragging, shifting coils disappeared,
but they could hear the rustle of the scales.
Baloo and Bagheera stood still as
stone, growling in their throats, their neck hair
bristling, and Mowgli watched and wondered.
“Bandar-log,” said the
voice of Kaa at last, “can ye stir foot or hand
without my order? Speak!”
“Without thy order we cannot stir foot or hand,
O Kaa!”
“Good! Come all one pace nearer to me.”
The lines of the monkeys swayed forward
helplessly, and Baloo and Bagheera took one stiff
step forward with them.
“Nearer!” hissed Kaa, and they all moved
again.
Mowgli laid his hands on Baloo and
Bagheera to get them away, and the two great beasts
started as though they had been waked from a dream.
“Keep thy hand on my shoulder,”
Bagheera whispered. “Keep it there, or I
must go back—must go back to Kaa. Aah!”
“It is only old Kaa making circles
on the dust,” said Mowgli. “Let us
go.” And the three slipped off through a
gap in the walls to the jungle.
“Whoof!” said Baloo, when
he stood under the still trees again. “Never
more will I make an ally of Kaa,” and he shook
himself all over.
“He knows more than we,”
said Bagheera, trembling. “In a little time,
had I stayed, I should have walked down his throat.”
“Many will walk by that road
before the moon rises again,” said Baloo.
“He will have good hunting—after his
own fashion.”
“But what was the meaning of
it all?” said Mowgli, who did not know anything
of a python’s powers of fascination. “I
saw no more than a big snake making foolish circles
till the dark came. And his nose was all sore.
Ho! Ho!”
“Mowgli,” said Bagheera
angrily, “his nose was sore on thy account, as
my ears and sides and paws, and Baloo’s neck
and shoulders are bitten on thy account. Neither
Baloo nor Bagheera will be able to hunt with pleasure
for many days.”
“It is nothing,” said Baloo; “we
have the man-cub again.”
“True, but he has cost us heavily
in time which might have been spent in good hunting,
in wounds, in hair—I am half plucked along
my back—and last of all, in honor.
For, remember, Mowgli, I, who am the Black Panther,
was forced to call upon Kaa for protection, and Baloo
and I were both made stupid as little birds by the
Hunger Dance. All this, man-cub, came of thy
playing with the Bandar-log.”
“True, it is true,” said
Mowgli sorrowfully. “I am an evil man-cub,
and my stomach is sad in me.”
“Mf! What says the Law of the Jungle, Baloo?”
Baloo did not wish to bring Mowgli
into any more trouble, but he could not tamper with
the Law, so he mumbled: “Sorrow never stays
punishment. But remember, Bagheera, he is very
little.”
“I will remember. But he
has done mischief, and blows must be dealt now.
Mowgli, hast thou anything to say?”
“Nothing. I did wrong.
Baloo and thou are wounded. It is just.”
Bagheera gave him half a dozen love-taps
from a panther’s point of view (they would hardly
have waked one of his own cubs), but for a seven-year-old
boy they amounted to as severe a beating as you could
wish to avoid. When it was all over Mowgli sneezed,
and picked himself up without a word.
“Now,” said Bagheera,
“jump on my back, Little Brother, and we will
go home.”
One of the beauties of Jungle Law
is that punishment settles all scores. There
is no nagging afterward.
Mowgli laid his head down on Bagheera’s
back and slept so deeply that he never waked when
he was put down in the home-cave.