Getting under weigh—Tally-ho!—Game afoot—A cunning old
tusker— One man down—At our wits' end—A ghat ahead—The
boar is a "jinker"—A comical interlude—"Now's the chance"—First spear!— A
desperate fight for life—Death of the boar—Eulogy on the sport— The
Queenslander on
Indian sports—"Hints to Hog Hunters" from The
Oriental Sporting Magazine.
What fox
hunting is in the merry shires of England, what grouse shooting is on the
heathery moors of Scotland, what kangaroo hunting is to the hardy bushmen of
Australia, so is pig sticking to the Anglo-Indian planter, or to the bold,
keen spirits that are to be found in every military cantonment in broad
Hindostan. I know of no sport that gives greater enjoyment. The boar spear
is the weapon par
excellence of
the finished Indian sportsman. It requires the coolest judgment, the most
unfaltering nerve, the most consummate tact, a keen eye and unflinching
courage, to face the fierce rush of an enraged tusker when he makes up his
mind to fight; and, unless well-mounted and thoroughly self-confident, I
pity the chicken-hearted tyro who essays to stop the gallant charge of a
fighting boar at his spear's point, when the indomitable old grey jungly
warrior, with tusks champing and bristles erect, comes tearing down with a
snort of fury and defiance, determined to do or die.
Long, long ago, now, amid the tussocks, fern and spear-grass
of the Canterbury back ranges in New Zealand, I have
"ridden pigs" and pistolled them off horseback;
but I never felt the fierce delight of the chase in perfection until I was
initiated into the wild, conflicting emotions of a successful boar hunt in
India, under the auspices of Paddy Hudson and Jamie McLeod, two of the
finest sportsmen I ever heard utter the whoop of victory over the gallant
grey boar, when they "dropped him in his tracks," and watched Ins unavailing
struggles to "get home" and sheath his tusks in their panting steeds.
To be a successful pig-sticker, requires a rare combination
of qualities, and many a time and oft, even the most gallant rider, true of
heart, steady of hand and keen of eye, will find all his skill and courage
unavailing, and is forced to sheer off before the determined charge of a
fighting old grey boar.
Our elephants were fagged out rather, with recent long
marches, and as they had some distance to go for charra—-i.e. fodder—we
determined to have an off-day at Pig. We were the more inclined to adopt
such a course from hearing of the sad ravages made by numbers of them on the
paddy fields of the poor villagers. On every hand we could see evidences of
their destructive ravages; and while Mac and Peter went off to try for
florican to the north of the village, the rest of us, having mounted our
horses, and accompanied by a tatterdemalion mob of -villagers, set out to
the southward to beat up a likely patch of jungle, just beyond the
surveyor's mound before mentioned.
Under the direction of Joe we divided our forces. Butty,
myself, Young D., my assistant, a plucky little fellow and a capital rider,
and our captain, took the side nearest the river, where the jungle abutted
on the sand flats, quicksands and still lagoons of intercepted flood water,
which I have already described. The other contingent consisted of George,
Pat, and Tom H., who rode up just as we were about to begin the beat. Tom
was an assistant then on one of the north Purneah factories, and hearing of
our vicinity, had ridden over some eight miles to exchange greetings and get
the news of our shikar.
We were not long in getting under weigh. The villagers raised
the usual caterwauling din, to the accompaniment of brittle thundering
tomtom, screeching copper boms, and rattling instruments of the kettle-drum
order, only ten times more discordant. Knowing by experience that the pigs
would break cover far ahead, we rode slowly along, well in front of the line
of beaters, and a wild tally-ho on the far left soon told us that game was
afoot. The. wild exhilarating whoop was quickly followed by our seeing three
horsemen tearing madly along the plain after a black speck in the distance,
and they were soon lost to view behind a rising undulation topped by a clump
of jowar, the
circling clouds of dust marking their speedy track.
We were just beginning to wonder if all the luck was to be on
their side, when Joe espied a waving, rustling, zig-zag motion in the grass
ahead, and in a low whisper he enjoined silence and circumspection.
"There's a sounder on ahead, boys," he whispered. "Don't
press them. Give 'em rope. Let them break."
We were now all excitement. We waved our hands to let the
beaters see there was quarry on ahead. This caused them to redouble their
shouting and yelling, and they bawled and raised din enough to wake the
Seven Sleepers. The crash of their "mingled din" seemed to impart a fixed
resolve to the authors of those wavering and vacillating movements in the
grass. The little porkers seemed to scatter in affright, while the zig-zag
motion gave place to a steady forward rush, and soon with an angry "hoo hoo"
of defiance, an enormous boar with gleaming tusks, followed by three sows
and a few half-grown youngsters, broke like a rocket from the friendly cover
and scattered over the plain in front.
Singling out the old boar, we were very soon in swift
pursuit. The tusker was making for a ragged edge in the plain, where the
crumbling bank of a steep descent on to the plane of the river below, made
riding almost impossible. His tactics showed the marvellous instinct of a
sagacious animal. Had he kept to the level upland we must have very soon
overhauled him. Had he gone right down to the hard sand below, we could have
surrounded him. He was unwilling to face the yelling mob of beaters in the
rear, and with the quick divination of a hunted beast he made for the one
spot where he could most readily battle pursuit, and where he stood the best
chance of escape.
If my readers can imagine the scene, they will readily
understand the posture of affairs. The rivers in India run mostly through
flat alluvial plains, in which they quietly cut a channel, which during the
rains is brimful, of a vast breadth, and the turbid mass of swiftly running
water is almost of the same level as the surrounding plain. When the rains
are over, however, the river contracts to a narrow stream of silver, in the
middle of a great desolate, wide tract of sandy ridges and water-worn
hollows, plentifully interspersed with rotting trunks of trees, small
patches of tumbled drift and straggling jungle. The real flood-bank of the
river is now perhaps miles away from the actual stream, and the river-bed
is, in fact, an alley, some miles in breadth in places, confined between two
ragged walls of shifting sand and crumbling mould, and along the base of the
wall are generally a succession of these still lagoons to which I have more
than once alluded, in which the village tame buffaloes love to wallow; where
often the village fisherman finds a rich finny harvest, and which, in the
cool misty mornings of December or January, are alive with teal or widgeon,
wild duck, ibis, curlew, plover, and innumerable winged varieties of game.
The cunning old grey boar had headed direct for the extreme
edge of this rotten, crumbling ground. Young D divined his tactics, and made
for a rotten-looking descent on to the sandy flats below. His footing,
however, was unstable, as if he were treading on a loose heap of grain, and
we on the top enjoyed a hearty grin as we watched and his unlucky
country-bred mare go tumbling head over heels in a perfect avalanche of dust
and sand, until they rolled, unhurt, but choked and blinded, on the cool,
crisp sand-bar below.
The pig was lobbing along leisurely in front of us. Now on
the extreme edge of the bank, dodging among the half-uprooted tussocks of
elephant-grass that hung over the bank, anon hidden from view as he dipped
under the overhanging bank and raised the finely pulverised Indian river
sand in a cloud behind him. Occasionally he would halt and grimly survey us
with a cool, critical look and an angry tremble in his eye below kept
shouting insulting threats at him, and occasionally had to make a wide detour to
avoid one of those lagoons I have described. We were fairly circumvented.
None of us were so foolhardy, or had so little respect for the safety of our
lives, as to venture near the grisly fugitive on foot. We could not get our
horses to go near the rotten edge of the bank, and we were fairly at our
wits end.
We rode leisurely along at some distance from the edge of the
crumbling cliff, keeping parallel with the boar, and occasionally getting
one of the syces, or
running grooms, to heave a clod at his sullen majesty, just to keep his
temper lively, or in the vain attempt to lure him from his admirably chosen
line of retreat. He was too wary, however, to be tempted from his masterly
position. But just then D shouted out—
"Look out, boys! there's a ghat on
ahead;" and looking forward, sure enough, to our joy, we descried one of
those cart-tracks worn down the face of the bank, and leading to a ford. The
boar, too, seemed to discern that here was a dangerous pass, and still
betraying a most marvellous understanding of the imminence of his peril and
the only way to escape it, he suddenly turned sharp round, and doubling
back, seemed once again to laugh at all our efforts to come up with him.
"Hang the brute!" said Joe. "He may jink us this way till
nightfall. We must dislodge
him somehow."
By this time the other contingent, having killed their boar,
had rejoined our party, and there being a small tattoo or
native pony, ridden by one of my native tokedars, Pat
got off his horse, leapt on the tat, and
rode close up to the brink of the rotten bank, shouting and brandishing his
spear, and hurling all the execrations he could think of at the wary old
boar.
Perhaps he (the boar) may have understood Pat's insinuations,
and felt indignant at so much insult. Perhaps he disdained to fly from a
Sahib mounted on a sorry-looking diminutive native pony. Perhaps he really
thought he had an opportunity of turning the Philistines to flight in the
person of the vituperative Pat, but, at any rate, his "dander was up." Pat
proved "a draw," and, with bristles erect, eyes flashing forth rage and
spite, his tusks champing and his whole mind bent on ripping up Pat's
miserable mount, he charged up the bank and came tearing down at the double
on the venturesome Master Pat. It was comical to see our friend kick and
straggle and spur the unfortunate tat. The
pony didn't seem to see the adventure in the same light as his rider. He
struggled with might and main to turn and flee. Paddy was as full of fight
as a bulldog, and vigorously plied his spurs. The pony had a mouth as hard
as a coupling chain, and tried all he knew to avoid facing the
fierce-looking assailant that was now within a very few yards of him,
grunting forth the most defiant challenge, such as only an enraged Indian
boar can grunt. The saddle Pat bestrode, was one of those flimsy padded
constructions dear to the native equestrian, and the girths were only
knotted cords, which had been patched up once and again, until it were
difficult to tell how much of the original material now remained. The
unwonted exertions of the generally somniferous tat proved
too much for the textile strength of the belly band. It snapped. The boar
was close on the pony. Away went Pat ignomidously over the rump of the
recalcitrant steed. The saddle, or agglomeration of padded felts and cloths
which did duty for that part of the equestrian furniture, went one way, and
Pat went another. The pony, feeling himself free, gave vent to his relieved
feelings in a spasmodic upheaval of the hinder portion of his frame,
disclosing his hoofs to the startled gaze of us onlookers. Lucky also for
Pat that he (the pony) gave utterance to a neigh of martial defiance. This
served to rouse the warlike tendencies of the boar to tenfold fury, and with
a concentrated grunt of rage he made straight after the. retreating steed.
Now was my opportunity. Cutting in between the boar and the
bank, I delivered a spear, that in my eagerness took him too high and far
forward, and only made an ugly gash over his off fore shoulder. Joe followed
me up and delivered a telling thrust in the loins; and now the boar,
realising all his danger and roused to the utmost pitch of rage and fury,
began charging right and left at every fresh assailant. All his cunning now
was lost in his blind rage and eager desire to inflict an injury on Ins
cruel enemies.
It is really a grand sight to see a boar at bay.
He disdains quarter.
If he is of the true fighting breed, he sets his heart as
hard as a flint, and "drees his darg" without a sound. I have seen a boar
fighting with a tiger. I have been in at the death of many a tawny monster.
The true Bengal boar is a very Spartan. He disdains to utter sound or sob or
sigh. When the fighting fever is on him, he is a very devil incarnate. He
shows no quarter and he asks for none, and sad indeed is the plight of man
or beast that forms a close-acquaintance with his sharp, unpitying tusks.
They can cut as sharp and clean as a razor; and even the stately elephant
prefers to give a wide berth to a grisly old grey boar when his fighting
instincts are fairly aroused, and he determines to be the pursued no longer,
but strikes a blow before he dies for vengeance and may be victory.
So it was now with our old boar. He was a true old Jungly
warrior. He had made his mind up now to fight. Yet even now his native
cunning and generalship did not desert him. There was a small withered mango
tree close by. Feeling that he had deserted his only stronghold, the
friendly sheltering bank, he made straight for this tree, and planting his
stern against its trunk, he prepared to do battle with all and sundry who
wished to battle with him.
Pat by this time had got to his feet and beaten an
ignominious and undignified retreat. Turning to distinguish himself and
recover his lost laurels, he was the first to urge his steed down full tilt
on the savage boar; but here for once the experienced pig-sticker was at
fault, his over-eagemess defeated itself. He missed the boar, and the old
grey warrior once again turned the tables on his foe, and got well home with
his charge, inflicting a nasty, ugly, gaping wound on the stifle of the
horse.
The thrust Joe had given him was now, however, becoming stiff
and sore. He occasionally settled down on his haunches like a panting dog on
a hot day, and my next spear took him fair in the spine, and very speedily
the old boar was stark and stiff.
We beat back again for the coverts, and once more dividing
our party, we were lucky in spearing five young boars before lunch. Every
one of them fought well. These boars of the Koosee Diraras are
all plucky animals. Instances have been known in which they have even proved
too much for the Royal Tiger himself. One of these encounters I myself once
witnessed and will in a future chapter describe. But what I want to impress
on the reader is the fact that pig-sticking in India is no child's play. It
demands every quality of a true sportsman. It taxes all the powers of a
finished rider, and one of bold undaunted nerve, to come off victorious in
the encounter. It is the sport par
excellence of
the Indian jungles, and there never was a "rank duffer" yet on this earth
who made a good pig-sticker. A man who is "good after Pig" could hold his
own anywhere, whether after wild cattle on the pampas, out mustering on the
salt bush country, or in the Australian scrubs and gullies, or over the
stiff timbers and six footers of Leicestershire or Galway. In very truth I
know no sport in all the world that calls for more varied exercise of pluck,
judgment, forethought, quickness, resource, and all manly qualities than
this same pig-sticking. I was rather amused then to read in that delightful
paper the Queenslaneder some
time ago, under the heading "The Savage Life," the following remarks on
Indian sport, which, although in a certain sense doubtless true of some, is
altogether inapplicable to the fierce and thrilling ardour that fires every
vein as you feel your good steed bound under you, while you rally for the
final burst after a fighting thirty-inch old grey boar. The quotation is as
follows:—
"The self-reliance engendered by the constant wrestle with
Nature in her silent wastes, which induces patient endurance of hardship,
the fortitude to bear disappointment, and the intense enjoyment of success,
is not a requisite in our Native Shikar. In India, the sportsman is
enervated by the luxuries of the chase. He adds nothing to his moral fibre
by successful warfare against the brute creation. Jungles teeming with
pea-fowl and the smaller feathered game—where nilghai, spotted and hog deer
crash through the undergrowth—in winch the huge grey tusker grunts
suspiciously as he grubs up his meal of roots—in which possibly the awful
tiger has made a lair for his sleek consort —afford excitement enough and to
spare for the sportsman who finds his pleasure in fowling-piece and rifle.
There is the requisite spice of danger, too, that lends excitement its
keenest zest. But there are no higher excellences required of the hunter
than that of shooting deftly at such game as offers. He is not called upon
to measure his reason against the wary instincts and acute senses of his
quarry, and to stake. Ids chance of success upon his superior cunning. Far
less is he called upon to extract the moderate provision necessary for
existence from a wary conflict with pitiless elements. The Indian sportsman
is housed in a commodious tent, waited upon by obsequious servants. His
every want is foretold. Bottled beer and brandy pawnee cheer him after his
day's fatigues. His bearer kneels to wash his feet as he lounges on a
comfortable cliarpoy, indolently recalling the incidents of the day under
the soothing influence of a cheroot. "When he goes forth in the morning his
head shikaree marshals the army of beaters, directing their movements with
the one object of affording the Sahib the maximum of sport at the minimum of
trouble. He is, in fact, the sultan for whose pleasure a subservient
following are bound to find such amusement as the jungle affords. Xo doubt
the pastime is glorious and the enjoyment great. But to such a one the
subtle, the almost weird charm of what we have termed 'the savage life' is
almost unknown, and with every appreciation of comfort, we are led to think
he has faded to attain to a hunter's truest pleasures."
The writer has evidently never been out pig-sticking in a
planting district, or tiger-shooting during the rains near the Terai, or
black buck shooting in a remote corner of Oudh, or bear hunting in the
Sonthal Pergunnahs, or leopard stalking in the sal jungles of Bhaugulpore,
to say nothing of the ibex shooting on the Thian Shan, stalking Ovis Amnion
or Thar or Harigul among the glorious hills near Cashmere, or maliseer
fishing in Assam.
To give the reader, however, a graphic unvarnished account of
this most famous and favourite of all Indian sports, I cannot, I think, do
better than extract a capitally written article called "Hints to Hog
Hunters," which appeared in the Oriental
Sporting Magazine for
November, 1873, and from a perusal of which a better idea can be formed of
the nature of the sport than from reams of description giving details of
individual encounters :—
"Whatever the strength of the party," says my unknown author,
"not more than three riders should follow the same hog, as a large number
will interfere with good sport, by being in each other's way, as well as by
preventing the overmatched boar from showing his finest qualities as a
fighter; it is when opposed singly, or by not more than two horsemen, that
these qualities are displayed pre-eminently. Another rule equally good is,
that when the hunter has the hog in his right front and within double
spear's length, no other should attempt to come between them; and a third,
still more important, is, that under no provocation or temptation should the
spear be thrown at the hog. The breach of these rules entails half of the
accidents which happen to both man and horse; while another source of wounds
is the too great importance attached to the taking of the 'first spear,'
which often renders horsemen too eager and reckless in the determination to
draw first blood. It is well known that boars are far more savage and
dangerous after feeling the first wound, and consequently more skill and
daring are called for then than previously, when the principal object of the
hunted beast has been to escape into some neighbouring covert; but while too
great an eagerness for the coveted honour is to be avoided, that honour is
well bestowed upon him who, by his bold and skilful riding, has first not
merely scratched the
wild hog's back, but buried deep in his side the glistening blade, since,
after such an injury, the enraged animal seldom thinks more of escape, but
only of revenge, and thus his death becomes a certainty if the first spear
be ably seconded by his companions.
"When the horseman can deliver his thrust with hand held low
and rapidly dashed outwards from his side into the hog's ribs, the wound
will not only prove mortal, but the spear can be easily withdrawn; but this
can only be effected when the horse is racing alongside the hog; when the
latter charges, the spear is usually driven deep down from his crest through
his lungs, or somewhat further back, in which case the weapon cannot be
readily extracted, but is often left standing in the body of the hog; and it
is no uncommon sight to see a large one with two, three, or even more spears
standing deep buried in his body, and yet charging desperately all who
approach him, till, weak from loss of blood and feeling his strength gone,
he gently subsides to the earth, without a sigh or groan.
"A touch on the spine with a keen spear will generally kill
at once, and require no second thrust: the best places therefore to aim at
are the ribs, the crest and the centre of the back. Beginners, it is
notorious, frequently links the charging boar through their over anxiety to
inflict a severe wound, which induces them to raise too high the spear hand
and so go over the animal's back; whereas in truth all that is called for is
a quick eye to direct to the fatal part, the spear held low in a firm and
steady hand: the speed of the steed and boar as they advance towards each
other will do the rest. In the course of the chase, when an encounter is not
imminent, the spear is balanced easily across the body, the right hand which
holds it rests on the right thigh, and its fingers can if necessary aid
those of the left which guides the horse; but when the hunted hog may be
expected momentarily to turn and charge, the hand is slightly raised and
projected forward from the body, the point of the weapon being some three
feet from the ground, much of which is concealed by jungle of some sort.
Pig-stickers require a strong rather than a pretty seat on horseback; the
more so since they will mount fresh or young horses totally devoid of any
experience of cross-country work, and expect and make them do their work by
a firm and exacting hand, rather than by a gentle and coaxing one; so that
the vulgar saying of 'a rum 'un to look at but a good one to go,' may be
frequently applied with justice to many individuals of their class.
"Dogs are not employed in either hunting out hogs or hunting
them afterwards, as if good and courageous they would be soon killed, and
their places could be supplied with difficulty and only at great expense;
but if inferior and cautious, they are in the way of the horseman without
lending him any assistance. The best beaters for all descriptions of jungle
but thick forest, in which hogs are seldom looked for, are elephants; but
when they cannot be obtained, men armed with long staves, and supplied with
fireworks, rattles and kettle-drums, generally serve the purpose, though
accidents among them must be anticipated, as hogs which have made up their
minds not to face the open, cannot without difficulty and some danger be
dislodged by beaters from their strongholds; in these cases a charge of
snipe shot, applied from a moderate distance on a certain prominent part,
will cause them almost invariably to move at once.
"The Wild Hog of India," pursues our author, and most Indian
sportsmen will cordially endorse his remarks, "is acknowledged by
experienced sportsmen to be the most courageous—one might almost say
chivalrous—of all the numerous beasts of the chase to be found in the
Peninsula, throughout almost every part whereof he may be met with,
differing slightly according to the locality. Taking that of the plains of
Bengal Proper as the best type of his race, he may be described as generally
a nocturnal animal, possibly rather through compulsion than choice, as in
spots not much disturbed by man he will be found resting and wallowing in
the soft lowlands at all hours of the day, specially should there happen to
he water lying thereon. He is the first among wild animal to leave the
coverts of an evening in search of food, and the last to return thereto the
following morning. His favourite lairs are the banks of tanks, lakes, and
water-courses overgrown with grass, reeds, or rushes, and shaded by
overhanging trees. There he will prepare himself a dainty and luxurious
couch by cutting down and stamping upon a sufficient quantity of the softest
grass and leaves, and then with his snout gently raising the mass, and
inserting his body, until a perfect little hut be formed impervious to sun
and rain; in this, with his back to a thick bush of thorns, his snout to the
outlet, he will devour up the juicy sugar cane, the ripening paddy, and the
soft black mud of the neighbouring jheel, till
the heavy crushing advance of a line of elephants, or haply more fortunate,
the slanting rays of the setting sun penetrating the leafy shade, and the
calls of the francolin shall wake him softly ere the light sinks behind the
bank of the western clouds.
"The hog is essentially a gentleman of the old school, fond
of society, grave and dignified, not prone to quarrel or attack, but when
insulted (and his feelings of honour are exceedingly acute) he extorts an
apology in the hasty flight of his aggressor, or, failing that, vents his
injured feelings upon him in the most resolute and unflinching manner, no
matter how strong or large that adversary may be; but having once prostrated
him, he disdains generally to mutilate his foe, but tossing up his snout he
looks around to see whether there be any willing to take up the quarrel
again, and if none appear, trots off' with a contented grunt and stiffly
elevated tail.
"Hogs when very young are of a yellowish-brown colour, marked
longitudinally with light-greyish stripes, which disappear after a few
months, and leave them a dark-brown, up to two years of age or thereabouts;
they then become black, and if in fine condition 'blue' black, and thus are
heard stories of desperate fighting 'blue boars,' which are nothing more
than hogs in their prime and lull strength, with an unusual amount of black
bristles.
"With advancing age they become grey, and when very old are
almost harmless. A well-grown boar measures from 36 to 38 inches in height.
Not one in a thousand exceeds, and comparatively few attain that size.
"The head is comparatively lighter than that of the tame
beast; it is armed in the lower jaws by tusks from three to four inches in
length outside the
jaw bone, but these tusks frequently grow to a much greater length,
especially when those of the upper jaw, which are shorter and thicker,
having been broken, permit them to curl over, supplying no longer the bone, on
which they are kept sharp and of serviceable form; in the latter case the
lower tusks become useless for attack and defence, and then sometimes the
conscious animal may exhibit a disinclination for combat. His legs and feet
are very Wood-looking in appearance, and his tail, unlike that of his
domesticated cousin, is invariably straight, and naturally tufted, but the
tufts are often wanting in consequence of the defeated boar being
occasionally scalped by
his conqueror. The sows are much the same sort of animal, though smaller and
lighter in build, and unprovided with tusks in either jaw; but an old one
sometimes carries a tusk of one to two inches in length, quite enough to
enable her to inflict a deep cut. The bristles in her crest and back are
shorter and thinner than those of the boar, whose grow to the length of
three or four inches.
"When wild hogs are numerous they may be met with in
'sounders,' or herds of from ten to thirty, or even more, in each of which
one or more well-grown boars may be found; but in countries more disturbed,
'sounders' of six to ten will be more commonly seen. Boars are often
solitary, or lie singly near the 'sounders' without associating with them,
as is the case with certain bull elephants and buffaloes, and, like such,
these hogs are the fiercest, their tempers having been roused by expulsion
from society.
"Wild hog are not only strong and courageous, but are
extremely crafty and fleet. When first breaking covert and coming in view of
his mounted enemies, he halts for a moment, takes a rapid glance at the
state of affairs, and
often either
charges at once, or more probably, having made up Ins mind as to the line of
country to be taken, goes off at such a pace that for the first few hundred
yards the swiftest horses gain little on him. When he finds that his hunters
are overhauling him, he tries to throw them off by either crossing suddenly, when
at full speed—a
very common practice with him—and then rapidly taking a very different
course, or stopping in full career he avoids the spear by a quick turn to
the right, and, wheeling round, follows the
horse, and endeavours to inflict a wound behind. At such moments the spur
must be plied vigorously to save the horse. In country much intersected by 'nullahs' and
dried water-courses, he will often, descending one of them, turn sharp to
the right or left, or in jungly ground will suddenly halt and hide himself
in the grass till the hunters have passed, and then dash off in some other
direction. A hunted boar has been known to cast himself into the nest of
another, rouse him up, and before, the half-sleeping beast knew what had
occurred, he found the hunters upon him, and to save his life has been
driven into flight, while the intruder, with a grunt of satisfaction, turned
into his comfortable quarters and, after recovering his wind, got into some
heavy covert.
"Many hogs will charge immediately the horsemen overtake him;
indeed, if the strong covert be distant, such will generally be the case,
and his rush will be extremely rapid and sustained to some distance, if he
escape the spear and follows the horse, which he -will do with long bounds
and angry grunts. Now and then a boar will altogether disdain flight, or
even when the sought-for jungle he gained, will slacken speed, turn, and at
a trot increasing to his utmost speed will rush headlong to the attack; at
such moments he is most dangerous, and his appearance as he advances, with
every bristle in his body erect, his eyes flashing fire, the froth flying
from his champing jaws and half-open mouth, is very imposing, and quick and
steady must be the horse, and bold and experienced the rider, who will
escape scatheless and victorious from the encounter. Such face-to-face
meetings with tolerably fresh and large boars are to be avoided if possible,
and may be judiciously, when two or three hunters are out; but the solitary
horseman cannot always do so, and then this sport assumes its most dangerous
and exciting character, for there is death in the meeting."
The above account is at once the most concise and truthful I
have ever seen in print on the dangers incidental to pig-sticking. That the
sport is dangerous enough I have had frequent opportunities of proving. I
have had two friends of my own—young planters and bold riders, too—killed
outright in the hunting field by wild hog, and another was so lamed that he
had to throw up his appointment and go home, where, however, he eventually
succumbed to the influence of his terrible wound. That the sport is exciting
and irresistibly seductive to those who have gained some proficiency in
handling the spear, is proved by its universal popularity all over India,
Wherever a few sportsmen are to be found congregated together, pig-sticking
is the favourite toast in that chosen land of teeming game; and it is, in my
humble opinion, the field sport of all others that most combines the
elements of all true sporting ardour and delight; calls forth the keenest
exercise of all manly qualities, and so enthrals its votaries that all other
sports seem tame and insignificant beside the incomparable glories of a
rattle across country after a fleet grey boar, and a "tussle for first
spear" with bold and generous kindred spirits.
Shortly after this our merry party broke up, and I had to
return to the factory, to undergo a spell of hard work, although in such a
glorious district for large game of all sorts, scarcely a day passed in
which I did not find some adventure worthy of recording in my sporting
journal. |