feat. My general tactics are to dismount if riding,
and manoeuvre the machine- so as to keep it between
myself and my savage assailant if there be but one;
and if more than one, make feints with it at them
alternately, not forgetting to caress them with a handy
stone whenever occasion offers. There is a certain
amount of cowardice about these animals notwithstanding
their size and fierceness; they are afraid and suspicious
of the bicycle as of some dreaded supernatural object;
atnd although I am sometimes fairly at my wit’s
end to keep them at bay, I manage to avoid the necessity
of shooting any of them. I have learned that
to kill one of these dogs, no matter how great the
provocation, would certainly get me into serious trouble
with the natives, who value them very highly and consider
the wilful killing of one little short of murder;
hence my forbearance. When I arrive at a threshing-floor,
and it is discovered that I am actually a human being
and do not immediately encompass the destruction of
those whose courage has been equal to awaiting my
arrival, the women and children who have edged off
to some distance now approach, quite timidly though,
as if not quite certain of the prudence of trusting
their eyesight as to the peaceful nature of my mission;
and the men vie with each other in their eagerness
to give me all desired information about my course;
sometimes accompanying me a considerable distance
to make sure of guiding me aright. But their
contumacious canine friends seem anything but reassured
of my character or willing to suspend hostilities;
in spite of the friendly attitude of their masters
and the peacefulness of the occasion generally, they
make furtive dashes through the ranks of the spectators
at me as I wheel round the small circular threshing-floor,
and savagely snap at the revolving wheels. Sometimes,
after being held in check until I am out of sight
beyond a knoll, these vindictive and determined assailants
will sneak around through the fields, and, overtaking
me unseen, make stealthy onslaughts upon me from the
brush; my only safety is in unremitting vigilance.
Like the dogs of most semi-civilized peoples, they
are but imperfectly trained to obey; and the natives
dislike checking them in their attacks upon anybody,
arguing that so doing interferes with the courage
and ferocity of their attack when called upon for a
legitimate occasion.
It is very questionable, to say the least, if inoffensive wayfarers should be expected to quietly submit to the unprovoked attack of ferocious animals large enough to tear down a man, merely in view of possibly checking their ferocity at some other time. When capering wildly about in an unequal contest with three or four of these animals, while conscious of having the means at hand to give them all their quietus, one feels as though he were at that particular moment doing as the Romans do, with a vengeance; nevertheless, it has to be borne, and I manage to come through with