CHIMPANZEES. 
on the ground, it is upright, with the hands on the nape of the neck. They sleep 
on trees, and make a covering over their heads to shelter them from the rain. 
They eat no flesh, but feed on nuts and other fruits; nor have they any under¬ 
standing beyond instinct. When the people of the country travel through the 
woods they make fires in the night, and in the morning when they are gone the 
pongos will come and sit round it till it goes out, for they do not possess sagacity 
enough to lay on more wood. They go in bodies to kill many negroes who travel 
in the wood. When elephants happen to come and feed where they are, they will 
HEAD OF CHIMPANZEE. 
fall on them, and so beat them with their clubbed fists and sticks, that they are 
forced to run away roaring. The grown pongos are never taken alive, owing to 
their strength, which is so great that ten men cannot hold one of them. The 
young hang upon their mother’s belly with their hands clasped about her. Many 
of them are taken by shooting the mothers with poisoned arrows. 
From that date our knowledge of these animals has been gradually added to, 
although there is still room for fuller authentic accounts of their habits in a state 
of nature. Young chimpanzees have been frequently brought alive to Europe, and 
exhibited in the Zoological Gardens of this and other countries. They require, 
however, the greatest care and attention, and even with these they invariably die 
after a few years or months from the effects of our climate, which generally show 
