登陆注册
5255500000029

第29章 X. LIONS(1)

A very large lion I killed stood three feet and nine inches at the withers, and of course carried his head higher than that. The top of the table at which I sit is only two feet three inches from the floor. Coming through the door at my back that lion's head would stand over a foot higher than halfway up. Look at your own writing desk; your own door. Furthermore, he was nine feet and eleven inches in a straight line from nose to end of tail, or over eleven feet along the contour of the back. If he were to rise on his hind feet to strike a man down, he would stand somewhere between seven and eight feet tall, depending on how nearly he straightened up. He weighed just under six hundred pounds, or as much as four well-grown specimens of our own "mountain lion." I tell you this that you may realize, as I did not, the size to which a wild lion grows. Either menagerie specimens are stunted in growth, or their position and surroundings tend to belittle them, for certainly until a man sees old Leo in the wilderness he has not understood what a fine old chap he is.

This tremendous weight is sheer strength. A lion's carcass when the skin is removed is a really beautiful sight. The great muscles lie in ropes and bands; the forearm thicker than a man's leg, the lithe barrel banded with brawn; the flanks overlaid by the long thick muscles. And this power is instinct with the nervous force of a highly organized being. The lion is quick and intelligent and purposeful; so that he brings to his intenser activities the concentration of vivid passion, whether of anger, of hunger or of desire.

So far the opinions of varied experience will jog along together.

At this point they diverge.

Just as the lion is one of the most interesting and fascinating of beasts, so concerning him one may hear the most diverse opinions. This man will tell you that any lion is always dangerous. Another will hold the king of beasts in the most utter contempt as a coward and a skulker.

In the first place, generalization about any species of animal is an exceedingly dangerous thing. I believe that, in the case of the higher animals at least, the differences in individual temperament are quite likely to be more numerous than the specific likenesses. Just as individual men are bright or dull, nervous or phlegmatic, cowardly or brave, so individual animals vary in like respect. Our own hunters will recall from their personal experiences how the big bear may have sat down and bawled harmlessly for mercy, while the little unconsidered fellow did his best until finished off: how one buck dropped instantly to a wound that another would carry five miles: how of two equally matched warriors of the herd one will give way in the fight, while still uninjured, before his perhaps badly wounded antagonist. The casual observer might-and often does-say that all bears are cowardly, all bucks are easily killed, or the reverse, according as the god of chance has treated him to one spectacle or the other. As well try to generalize on the human race-as is a certain ecclesiastical habit-that all men are vile or noble, dishonest or upright, wise or foolish.

The higher we go in the scale the truer this individualism holds.

We are forced to reason not from the bulk of observations, but from their averages. If we find ten bucks who will go a mile wounded to two who succumb in their tracks from similar hurts, we are justified in saying tentatively that the species is tenacious of life. But as experience broadens we may modify that statement;for strange indeed are runs of luck.

For this reason a good deal of the wise conclusion we read in sportsmen's narratives is worth very little. Few men have experience enough with lions to rise to averages through the possibilities of luck. ESPECIALLY is this true of lions. No beast that roams seems to go more by luck than felis leo. Good hunters may search for years without seeing hide nor hair of one of the beasts. Selous, one of the greatest, went to East Africa for the express purpose of getting some of the fine beasts there, hunted six weeks and saw none. Holmes of the Escarpment has lived in the country six years, has hunted a great deal and has yet to kill his first. One of the railroad officials has for years gone up and down the Uganda Railway on his handcar, his rifle ready in hopes of the lion that never appeared; though many are there seen by those with better fortune. Bronson hunted desperately for this great prize, but failed. Rainsford shot no lions his first trip, and ran into them only three years later. Read Abel Chapman's description of his continued bad luck at even seeing the beasts.

MacMillan, after five years' unbroken good fortune, has in the last two years failed to kill a lion, although he has made many trips for the purpose. F. told me he followed every rumour of a lion for two years before he got one. Again, one may hear the most marvellous of yarns the other way about-of the German who shot one from the train on the way up from Mombasa; of the young English tenderfoot who, the first day out, came on three asleep, across a river, and potted the lot; and so on. The point is, that in the case of lions the element of sheer chance seems to begin earlier and last longer than is the case with any other beast.

And, you must remember, experience must thrust through the luck element to the solid ground of averages before it can have much value in the way of generalization. Before he has reached that solid ground, a man's opinions depend entirely on what kind of lions he chances to meet, in what circumstances, and on how matters happen to shape in the crowded moments.

同类推荐
  • 西湖老人繁胜录

    西湖老人繁胜录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 吴三桂考

    吴三桂考

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 任诞

    任诞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 蜀都杂抄

    蜀都杂抄

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 狱中上母书

    狱中上母书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 皇后十诫

    皇后十诫

    他需要的只是一个安稳的坐在后位上,没有任何非分之想的棋子。她都照着做了,为什么他还是不满意?这是一个外表阴柔病弱内里腹黑狠毒的帝王和一个外表天然蠢萌内里没心没肺的皇后的逗比恋爱故事。
  • 武圣关云长

    武圣关云长

    中国五千年,被尊为圣人立庙祭祀的武将仅一人,他,便是关羽!从古至今,被广为推崇的忠义楷模也仅一人,他,仍是关羽!不为金钱所动、不为美色所惑,神威奋武、义薄云天。生能做人杰,死亦为鬼雄!
  • 试婚男女

    试婚男女

    当80、90后相继步入婚姻的殿堂,当裸婚、试婚和失婚成为社会大背景下人们仓皇躲避的围城,究竟谁会用虔诚的心守候最初的爱情?
  • 年少爱慕可追忆

    年少爱慕可追忆

    苏夏清很久很久以前喜欢过一个人。对她来说,林奕诉就是她阴暗童年中的一道光,在几乎所有人都快忽略她的时候,是他给了她温暖。此后她越来越耀眼,想要努力站在他身边。可是命运却给了她致命一击,当多年后再遇见他时,他身边已经有了他挚爱的人。那么,这段感情,这段支撑自己这么久的感情,就要这样无疾而终了吗?
  • 如果不遇顾知深

    如果不遇顾知深

    【新文《甜妻狂想娶:总裁翻墙来》欢迎阅读】云简月在姐姐的订婚当天被交往三年的男友甩了。酒吧买醉,隔日醒来,准姐夫变成了亲老公。前任新欢对她出手,隔天新欢家公司宣布破产!有杂志报道她勾引姐夫,不知廉耻?翌日杂志社无端倒闭!云简月慌了,睁大漆黑的瞳仁,惶恐道:我,我们去把婚离了。亲老公忙着签文件,头都没抬的回她一句:既然婚都结了,何必浪费9块钱,我们试试吧。云简月一脸呆滞:试什么?顾知深终于舍得放下手中的文件,俯身凑近,亲密的咬着她的耳朵低喃:试爱,你要是想试尺寸,随时可以!云简月:“……”
  • 女性要懂心理学

    女性要懂心理学

    现实生活中,每一个追求幸福与成功的女性都要懂点心理学,要重视自身面临的心理问题,掌握审视心理状况、调节心理问题的方法,学会自我肯定,自我疏导,以健康的身心迎接社会与时代的各种挑战,这样才能在快节奏的现代社会里把握自己。使自己在生活中更加成熟,在工作中更加突出,成为一个更加健康、更加自信、更加出色、更加美丽的幸福女人。
  • 落日余晖陪你看

    落日余晖陪你看

    在她十岁生日那年,由于她爸妈开的公司刚起步,很多时候抽不开身陪伴在她身边,连一句生日祝福也忙忘了。余文蔚失落极了,心里像是缺失一块特别重要的东西。第二天傍晚时分,她趁林姨做饭的间隙偷偷离家出走。她漫无目的的在公园里逛着,走累了随意找了个椅子坐下,孤独寂寞的她再也忍不住了,抱着头埋在手臂下偷偷哭泣着。这时一个热心的小男孩,毫无征兆的走到她前面。男孩身形有些肥胖,个子不高,肥嘟嘟的脸让人觉得很是可爱。很快,两个孩子融洽的玩到了一起,他们很投缘,约定以后还要在一起玩,却不料,时隔十五年后,他们才再次相遇......
  • 希叟绍昙禅师广录

    希叟绍昙禅师广录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Of Money

    Of Money

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 上清洞真智慧观身大戒文

    上清洞真智慧观身大戒文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。