[The Bush Boys by Captain Mayne Reid]@TWC D-Link book
The Bush Boys

CHAPTER TWENTY
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Abyssinia on the east, and Senegal on the west, are his northern limits, and but a few years ago he roamed southward to the very Cape of Good Hope.

The activity of the Dutch ivory-hunters, with their enormous long guns, has driven him from that quarter; and he is no longer to be found to the south of the Orange River.
Some naturalists (Cuvier among others) believed the Abyssinian elephant to be of the Indian species.

That idea is now exploded, and there is no reason to think that the latter inhabits any part of Africa.

It is very likely there are varieties of the African species in different parts of the continent.

It is well-known that those of the tropical regions are larger than the others; and a _reddish and very fierce_ kind is said to be met with in the mountains of Africa, upon the river Niger.


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