136 TERAI TIGERS SIR JOHN HEWETT 



tiger, and an examination of the body showed him 

 to be right. 



Thus ended what a stalker would have termed 

 a " graaand day." 



Of its kind the whole expedition was a master- 

 piece. 



A dynamo on bullock carts provided us with 

 electric light in camp. The food and drink were 

 superlatively good. Everything possible was 

 done to ensure comfort. Nothing was forgotten 

 or mismanaged and our time-table was fulfilled 

 with a punctuality unknown on any railway 

 system. Also the sporting arrangements were 

 perfection. 



It was an experience at once delightful and 

 unique, but it is one I should not care to repeat. 



I think what I enjoyed as much as anything 

 were the long quiet evenings after dinner in 

 Hewett's tent. What he does not know about 

 India is not worth knowing, and from an educa- 

 tional standpoint alone I have greatly benefited 

 by my holiday. 



On Saturday, April I3th, I left for and reached 

 Bareilly, and the last two, subsequent, days I 

 have devoted to selecting a house in Delhi for my 

 last winter in India. 



