The Book of Enterprise and Adventure eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 85 pages of information about The Book of Enterprise and Adventure.

The Book of Enterprise and Adventure eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 85 pages of information about The Book of Enterprise and Adventure.
half-a-dozen Arabs plunged into the stream.  There! he rises again, and the blacks dash at him as if he hadn’t a tooth in his head.  Now he is gone, the waters close over him, and I never saw him since.  From that time we saw hundreds of crocodiles of all sizes, and fired shots,—­enough of them for a Spanish revolution; but we never could get possession of any, even if we hit them, which to this day remains doubtful.

Remarkable Instance of Courage in a Lady.

In the Life of Thomas Day, Esq., an anecdote is related of Miss B——­, afterwards Mrs. Day, shewing with what remarkable effect presence of mind and courage can tame the ferocity of the brute creation.

Miss B. was, on one occasion, walking in company with another young lady through a field, when a bull came running up to them with all the marks of malevolence.  Her friend began to run towards the stile, but was prevented by Miss B., who told her, that as she could not reach the stile soon enough to save herself, and as it is the nature of these animals to attack persons in flight, her life would be in great danger if she attempted to run, and would be inevitably lost if she chanced to fall; but that, if she would steal gently to the stile, she herself would take off the bull’s attention from her, by standing between them.  Accordingly, turning her face towards the animal with the firmest aspect she could assume, she fixed her eyes steadily upon his.  It is said by travellers, that a lion itself may be controlled by the steady looks of a human being; but that, no sooner a man turns his back, than the beast springs upon him as his prey.  Miss B., to whom this property of animals seems to have been known, had the presence of mind to apply it to the safety of her friend and of herself.  By her steady aspect she checked the bull’s career; but he shewed the strongest marks of indignation at being so controlled, by roaring and tearing the ground with his feet and horns.  While he was thus engaged in venting his rage on the turf, she cautiously retreated a few steps, without removing her eyes from him.  When he observed that she had retreated, he advanced till she stopped, and then he also stopped, and again renewed his frantic play.  Thus by repeated degrees she at length arrived at the stile, where she accomplished her safety; and thus, by a presence of mind rarely seen in a person of her youth and sex, she not only saved herself, but also, at the hazard of her own life, protected her friend.  Some days afterwards, this bull gored its master.

Indian Field Sports.

We give a few anecdotes illustrative of the above, from a work intitled “Sketches of Field Sports, as followed by the Natives of India,” from the reading of which we have derived much pleasure.  The authority is Dr. Johnson, East India Company’s Service.

He begins by informing his readers, that the “Shecarries” (or professed hunters) are generally Hindoos of a low caste, who gain their livelihood entirely by catching birds, hares, and all sorts of animals; some of them confine themselves to catching birds and hares, whilst others practise the art of catching birds and various animals; another description of them live by destroying tigers.

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The Book of Enterprise and Adventure from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.