ADVENTURES IN CAMP AND JUNGLE. 351 



The record of my doings might no doubt have been more 

 acceptable to the general reader had it been more varied with 

 matter other than mere slaughter, and had the tale of blood- 

 shed been more frequently relieved by accounts of the geo- 

 graphy, scenery, and natural history, human and bestial, of 

 the country ; but all these have been well described elsewhere, 

 and by abler pens. 



THE END. 



Printed ly R. CLARK,' Edinburgh. 



