With Flashlight and Rifle -* 



attempt to judge animals' brains by our own. We have 

 to remember that many animals have senses which we 

 are without, and that other senses which we have in 

 common are much more highly developed in them than 

 in ourselves. 



I can only say that this young rhinoceros attached 

 himself to me in a very few weeks, and got to dis- 



MY MARABOUS MADE GREAT FRIENDS WITH OUR COOK 



tinguish quite clearly between the large number of men 

 who came into touch with him, bearing himself quite 

 differently with different individuals, just as he still singles 

 me out from all the thousands who approach him now 

 in the Gardens. 



If a zoologist were to ask me to explain the incredible 

 topographical instinct of rhinoceroses, I should reply that 

 these animals are enabled, out of the treasure of experience 



