[The Bush Boys by Captain Mayne Reid]@TWC D-Link bookThe Bush Boys CHAPTER FOURTEEN 14/14
A roast of that, and a drink of cool water from the spring, soon refreshed the three wearied travellers. The horses were let loose among the mimosa-trees, and allowed to shift for themselves; and although under ordinary circumstances they would have "turned up their noses" at such food as mimosa-leaves, they now turned them up in a different sense, and cleared the thorny branches like so many giraffes. Some naturalist of the "Buffon" school has stated that neither wolf, fox, hyena, nor jackal, will eat the carcass of a lion,--that their fear of the royal despot continues even after his death. The field-cornet and his family had proof of the want of truth in this assertion.
Before many hours both jackals and hyenas attacked the carcass of the king of beasts, and in a very short while there was not a morsel of him there but his bones.
Even his tawny skin was swallowed by these ravenous creatures, and many of the bones broken by the strong jaws of the hyenas.
The respect which these brutes entertain for the lion ends with his life.
When dead, he is eaten by them with as much audacity as if he were the meanest of animals..
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