Preface 



plain, one won't think they mean Waterbuck or 

 Hartebeest respectively. Of course they do as 

 a rule, and every one knows it. What I mean 

 is that a man who notices configuration of the 

 country, soil, trees, grass, etc., and thinks where 

 he saw the kind before, and then puts two and 

 two together, may just be able to get a shy, 

 difficult beast, because he remembers that he 

 found it in similar country before, and does not 

 go blundering along and frighten the thing away 

 through not knowing what he might expect. 



Unfortunately there is no proper large scale 

 map obtainable to show all the little places in 

 the large districts dealt with ; but new maps are 

 announced as coming out immediately, I believe, 

 and can be obtained from the Intelligence Depart- 

 ment of the War Office and from the Geographical 

 Society. A very good map of the Anglo-German 

 Boundary has been issued, entitled "Kilimanjaro," 

 but naturally this embraces only a portion of the 

 hunting grounds. 



