626 THE HIPPOPOTAMUS. 
will attack one or other of the crew, and with a single grasp of his horrid jaws either terribly 
mutilates the poor fellow, or, it may be, cuts his body fairly in two. : 
“<The chase often lasts a considerable time. So long as the line and the harpoon hold, the 
animal cannot escape, because the ‘buoy’ always marks his whereabout. At length, from loss 
of blood or exhaustion, Behemoth succumbs to his pursuers.”’ 
The Hippopotamus is a gregarious animal, collecting in herds of twenty or thirty in num- 
ber, and making the air resound with their resonant snorts. The snort of this creature is a 
most extraordinary sound, and one that is well calculated to disturb the nerves of sensitive 
persons, especially if heard unexpectedly. The animals at the Zoological Gardens make the 
very roof ring with the strange unearthly sounds which they emit. In their native state it is 
very difficult to ascertain even approximately the number of a herd, as the animals are con- 
tinually diving and rising, and never appear simultaneously above the surface of the water. 
The creature is generally a harmless one, and need not be much dreaded. Sometimes, 
however, it becomes angry if molested in its watery home, and will then make a violent attack 
upon the object that has excited its anger. One of these animals, whose calf had been speared 
on the previous day, made at the boat in which Dr. Livingstone was sitting, and drove her 
head against it with such force that she lifted the forepart of the boat completely out of the 
water, capsized one of the black oarsmen fairly into the river, and forced the whole crew 
to jump ashore. 
Although in its native river the female Hippopotamus is a most kind and. affectionate 
mother, the tame animal does not display such excellent qualities. The female Hippopotamus 
in the Jardin des Plantes in Paris has twice been a mother, and twice has killed her offspring. 
On the last occasion she seemed to have been seized with a sudden fit of anger, for the marks 
of her teeth were only too plain on the poor little beast when its dead body was discovered, 
and her tusks had penetrated into its lungs. On the first occasion she killed it from sheer 
awkwardness ; and after carrying it about on her neck in the proper manner, she bruised it so 
severely in her clumsy efforts to teach her offspring the proper mode of getting out of the 
bath, that it never recovered from the hurts which it received. 
The Hippopotamus has for years been extinct in Europe, but the fossil remains of the 
animal are found abundantly in the London clay, showing that in some remote age the Hippo- 
potamus must have traversed the plains of England, and wallowed in its rivers. There is 
another species of Hippopotamus, which is smaller than that which has just been described, 
and is termed Hippopotamus Liberiensis. It is a native of Western Africa, and is remarkable 
for only having two incisors in the lower jaw. 
