name imports, is now for the most part bestowed on the spe cies itself. "To the wild Arab of the desert, the camel is all that his necessities require. He feeds on the flesh, drinks the milk, makes clothes and tents of the hair; belts, sandals, saddles, and buckets of the hide; he conveys himself and family on his back, makes his pillow of his side, and his shelter of him against the whirlwind of sand. Couched in a circle around him, his camels form a fence, and in battle an intrenchment behind which his family and property are obstinately, and often successfully defended. All these advantages are a necessary result of the constitutional faculties and structure of the camel when residing in the locality assigned him by nature: under another atmosphere, his qualifications become less important, and his conformation less applicable. In Tartary and Southern Russia, where the Bac trian species (longer of body and shorter of limb than the Arabian) is harnessed to wheel-carriages, and even to the plough, the elevation of his shoulders evidently produces a waste of strength; and, in a country where herbage and water are proportionally abundant, his sobriety is not required. If the camel is transferred to rocky and mountainous regions, his feet soon wear, and he ascends and descends with great awkwardness. If he be brought into temperate regions, the frequent mud, and above all, the thawed snows, soften his feet, and he is unable to work; as is at least partially experienced in Central and Northern Asia, notwithstanding that the Bactrian camel, again provided by nature for his particular locality, has soles of greater hardness than the Arabian, and the dissolution of the snow is excessively rapid when once begun."-Griffith's Animal Kingdom, vol. iv. p. 40. The ancient authors do not seem to take notice of the camel as an inhabitant of Northern Africa. It is, however, mentioned in Genesis (chap. xii. ver. 16) as among the gifts bestowed by Pharaoh on Abram, and must therefore have been well known on the banks of the Nile at a period anterior to the oldest of the Greek or Roman writers. It has indeed been remarked as a singular circumstance, that the Romans, who carried on such frequent wars in Africa, should not have thought of mentioning these animals, till Procopius noticed camel-riding Moors in arms against Solomon, the lieutenant of Belisarius. Their uses in modern times are so well known, and all books of African travel are so frequent in their description of these docile beasts of burden that we deem it unnecessary to dwell any longer on the subject. Very few animals of the deer kind, properly so called, are found in Africa. The red deer, however (Cervas elaphrus), one of the noblest of the tribe, and the most stately of all the wild animals still indigenous to Britain, occurs in some of its northern quarters. But to these it was not improbably imported, at some unknown period, from Europe. Before proceeding to the more abundant family of the antelopes, of which Africa is the great emporium, we shall mention, as a species entirely peculiar to this continent, the giraffe or camelopard, the tallest and, in every other respect, one of the most singular of quadrupeds. Its appearance is too familiar to our readers to require description. We shall merely state that it is a timid and gentle animal, feeding principally on the leaves of trees (especially those of the genus Mimosa), and inhabiting the plains of Central and Southern Africa. Its gait, or mode of progression, is de scribed as extraordinary by Mr. Lichtenstein. "We had scarcely travelled an hour when the Hottentots called our attention to some object on a hill not far off on the left hand, which seemed to move. The head of something appeared almost immediately after, feeding on the other side of the hill, and it was concluded that it must be that of a very large animal. This was confirmed, when after going scarcely a hundred steps farther, two tall swan-necked giraffes stood almost directly before us. Our transports were indescribable, particularly as the creatures themselves did not perceive us, and therefore gave us full time to examine them, and to prepare for an earnest and serious chase. The one was smaller and of a paler colour than the other, which Vischer immediately pronounced to be a colt, the child of the larger. Our horses were saddled, and our guns loaded in an instant, when the chase commenced. Since all the wild animals of Africa run against the wind, so that we were pretty well assured which way the course of these objects of our ardent wishes would be directed, Vischer, as the most experienced hunter, separated himself from us, and by a circuit took the animals in front, that he might stop their way, while I was to attack them in the rear. I had almost got within shot of them when they perceived me, and began to fly in the direction we expected. But their flight was so beyond all idea extraordinary, that, between laughter, astonishment, and delight, I almost forgot my designs upon the harmless creatures' lives. From the extravagant disproportion between the height of the fore to that of the hinder parts, and of the height to the length of the animal, great obstacles are presented to its moving with any degree of swiftness. When Le Vaillant asserts that he has seen the giraffe trot, he spares me any farther trouble in proving that this animal never presented itself alive before him.* How in the world should an animal, so disproportioned in height before and behind, trot? The giraffe can only gallop, as I can affirm from my own experience, having seen between forty and fifty at different times, both in their slow and hasty movement, for they only stop when they are feeding quietly. But this gallop is so heavy and unwieldy, and seems performed with so much labour, that in a distance of more than a hundred paces, comparing the ground cleared with the size of the animal and of the surrounding objects, it might almost be said that a man goes faster on foot. The heaviness of the movement is only compensated by the length of the steps, each one of which clears, on a moderate computation, from twelve to sixteen feet." A tolerably good horse overtakes the giraffe without difficulty, especially over rising ground. Camelopards were known to the Romans, and were exhibited in the Circæan Games by Cæsar the dictator. The Emperor Gordian afterward exhibited ten at a single show, and tolerably accurate figures of this animal, both in a browsing and grazing attitude, have been handed down by the Prænestine pavement. During the darker ages, and for some centuries after the revival of learning, it seems to have remained unknown to Europeans; but, about the middle of the sixteenth century, the emperor of Germany, Fre * It would be more proper, and equally logical, rather to infer that Le Vaillant misapplied the term which he made use of to designate the movements of the camelopard, than that he imagined himself to have seen an animal alive which had never presented itself to him in that condition.-ED. dericus Ænobarbus, received one from the sultan of Bany. lon. Lorenzo de Medicis was also presented with a live camelopard by the bey of Tunis; and in our own times they have been received by the kings both of France and England from the (late) dey of Algiers. Africa is the country of antelopes. These creatures are the most lively, graceful, and beautifully proportioned of the brute creation. Wherever known, they have attracted the attention and admiration of mankind from the earliest ages; and the beauty of their dark and lustrous eyes affords a frequent theme to the poetical imaginings of the eastern poets. Their names are of frequent occurrence in the most ancient of the eastern mythologies, and their figures occur among the oldest of the astronomical symbols. Naturalists are more or less acquainted with about fifty species, the greater proportion of which are peculiar to the African continent. The blue antelope (Antilope leucophaa), formerly met with in the Cape colony, is now so rare in South Africa, that no specimen has been killed there since the year 1799. Its history and manners are little known. The roan antelope (A. equina) is a very large animal, measuring nearly eight feet in length. It was found by Mr. Burchell among the mountainous plains in the vicinity of Lattakoo. The Caffrarian oryx (A. oryx) is an animal equally remarkable for the vigour as the beauty of its form. It inhabits elevated forests and the rocky regions of Southern Africa, and is exceedingly fierce during the rutting season, especially when wounded. A friend of Major Smith's having fired at one of these antelopes, it immediately turned upon his dogs, and transfixed one of them upon the spot. They afford the best venison of any of the species found in the south of Africa. The small white buffalo mentioned by Captain Lyon as occurring in the Great Desert south of Tunis, was no doubt a species of oryx. Another animal of very showy aspect belonging to this tribe is the addax, recently transmitted from Nubia by M. Rüppell. They reside in pairs on the barren deserts, and, extending over the whole Sahara, are found as far west as Senegal. The white-faced antelope (A. pygarga) is inferior in size to the stag of Europe. According to Major Smith, this species does not seem to be known in Central Africa. It is found in the regions which border the colony of the Cape, and is called blessbock by the Dutch. In manners it resembles the gnu, and lives in small families of seven or eight. The springer antelope (A. euchon) is named springbock by the Dutch. It inhabits the plains of Southern and Central Africa, and assembles in vast flocks during its migratory movements. "These migrations, which are said to take place in their most numerous form only at the intervals of several years, appear to come from the north-east, and in masses of many thousands, devouring, like locusts, every green herb. The lion has been seen to migrate, and walk in the midst of the compressed phalanx, with only as much space between him and his victims as the fears of those immediately around could procure by pressing outwards. The foremost of these vast columns are fat, and the rear exceedingly lean, while the direction continues one way; but with the change of the monsoon, when they return towards the north, the rear become the leaders, fattening in their turn, and leaving the others to starve, and to be devoured by the numerous enemies who follow their march. At all times when impelled by fear, either of the hunter or the beast of prey darting among the flock, but principally when the herds are assembled in countless multitudes, so that an alarm cannot spread rapidly and open the means of flight, they are pressed against each other, and their anxiety to escape impels them to bound up in the air, showing, at the same time, the white spot on the croup dilated by the effort, and closing again in their descent, and producing that beautiful effect from which they have obtained the name of Springer and Showy-bock."-Griffith's Animal Kingdom, vol. iv. p. 209. The kevel (A. kevella) is nearly all ied to the dorcas, but does not appear to occur to the north of the Atlas, with the exception, perhaps, of the western coast of Morocco. In Central Africa, across the banks of the Congo, and southwards as far as the country of the Caffres, it forms numerous flocks. The pallah (A. melampus) is a beautiful species, mentioned by Lichtenstein. It is described as a model of elegance and vigour, and is a native of Caffraria, especially the Boshuana country. It never appears to the south of the Koorges Vallev The klipspringer (A. oreo |