of these animals. We believe that we counted
eight hundred elephants in sight at once. In
the choice of such a strong hold, they have shown
their usual sagacity, for no hunter can get near them
through the swamps. They now keep far from the
steamer; but, when she first came up, we steamed into
the midst of a herd, and some were shot from the ship’s
deck. A single lesson was sufficient to teach
them that the steamer was a thing to be avoided; and
at the first glimpse they are now off two or three
miles to the midst of the marsh, which is furrowed
in every direction by wandering branches of the Shire.
A fine young elephant was here caught alive, as he
was climbing up the bank to follow his retreating
dam. When laid hold of, he screamed with so much
energy that, to escape a visit from the enraged mother,
we steamed off, and dragged him through the water
by the proboscis. As the men were holding his
trunk over the gunwale, Monga, a brave Makololo elephant-hunter,
rushed aft, and drew his knife across it in a sort
of frenzy peculiar to the chase. The wound was
skilfully sewn up, and the young animal soon became
quite tame, but, unfortunately the breathing prevented
the cut from healing, and he died in a few days from
loss of blood. Had he lived, and had we been
able to bring him home, he would have been the first
African elephant ever seen in England.
The African male elephant is from ten to a little
over eleven feet in height, and differs from the Asiatic
species more particularly in the convex shape of his
forehead, and the enormous size of his ears.
In Asia many of the males, and all the females, are
without tusks, but in Africa both sexes are provided
with these weapons. The enamel in the molar teeth
is arranged differently in the two species.
By an admirable provision, new teeth constantly come
up at the part where in man the wisdom teeth appear,
and these push the others along, and out at the front
end of the jaws, thus keeping the molars sound by
renewal, till the animal attains a very great age.
The tusks of animals from dry rocky countries are
very munch more dense and heavier than those from
wet and marshy districts, but the latter attain much
the larger size.
The Shire marshes support prodigious numbers of many
kinds of water-fowl. An hour at the mast-head
unfolds novel views of life in an African marsh.
Near the edge, and on the branches of some favourite
tree, rest scores of plotuses and cormorants, which
stretch their snake-like necks, and in mute amazement
turn one eye and then another towards the approaching
monster. By and-by the timid ones begin to fly
off, or take “headers” into the stream;
but a few of the bolder, or more composed, remain,
only taking the precaution to spread their wings ready
for instant flight. The pretty ardetta (Herodias
bubulcus), of a light yellow colour when at rest,
but seemingly of a pure white when flying, takes wing,
and sweeps across the green grass in large numbers,