2 
A TREATISE ON ELEPHANTS. 
and little cultivated country, intersected by rivers and mountain 
chains, the elephant finds a congenial home, and it is in this 
country, inhabited by shy and retiring people, that a number of 
elephants are bred in captivity. Elephants in these parts are used 
chiefly for transport purposes between villages, and are a con- 
spicuous element in all festivities held by Chiefs. Young tusker 
calves, when not more than five or six years of age, find a ready 
sale among the numerous Chiefs of the Shan and Laos tribes and 
Siamese officials, at prices from three to five hundred rupees. As 
much as twelve hundred rupees has been offered for a promising 
ten-year old tusker. The wealth of many Chiefs consists largely of 
elephants, some of them owning as many as one hundred animals, 
and continually adding to the number. One of the great amuse- 
ments of the Chiefs is to watch the training of their animals ; this 
training begins at an early age, when the elephant is taught to 
submit to a man riding on his back or neck ; he is then taught to 
carry a saddle and small load, and later to drag timber. When an 
animal is being taught to drag, he is taken with a trained elephant 
to the sandy bed of a dried-up stream and put in harness ; if he is 
obstinate and shows temper, the old elephant is given a long tow 
rope which is attached to the youngster, and at a given signal he 
moves off, towing the youngster, who frequently falls, but is 
nevertheless towed along on his back or side as the case may 
be ; after a few such lessons he learns how to drag, but it is not 
till an animal reaches the age of twenty that any serious work is 
expected of him. Till he is full-grown he is a pet and, if a fine 
animal, an object of admiration in a cavalcade of elephants on 
festival occasions. 
During the last few years purchases for Burma have been made 
in Assam and Siam. 
Age. 
The limit of age in elephants, and the indications of the age an 
individual has reached, are not accurately known. It is natural to 
suppose that in the wild state they attain a much greater age than 
in captivity. In the latter condition they not infrequently die 
prematurely from preventible causes. That they do sometimes live 
to a great age is pretty certain. An instance of this is recorded in 
Beeton's Dictionary of Natural History," namely, that amongst the 
papers of Colonel Robertson (son of the historian of Charles V.), 
who held a command in Ceylon in 1799, shortly after the capture 
of the Island by the British, is one showing that a decoy was then 
attached to the elephant establishments at Matura, which the records 
proved to have served with the Dutch during the entire period of 
