278 PHILIP QUARLL. beast he had a mind for went. Impatient to know the success of his snares, he got up betimes the next morning to examine them: in one he found an animal something like a fawn, the colour of a deer, but feet and ears like a fox, and as large as a well-grown hare. He was much rejoiced at his game, whose mouth he immediately opened, and finding, by the greens in it, that it was not a beast of prey, he took it home, in order to dress part of it for his dinner. Having stuck a long stick at both ends in the ground, making half a circle, he hung one quarter of the animal upon a string before a good fire, and roasted it. Having dined both plentifully and deliciously, he made nets, in order to take his game alive for the future ; and as he had no small twine to make them with, he was obliged to unravel the sail which he luckily had by him. Having made a couple of nets about four feet square, which he fastened instead of the killing snares, several days passed without taking anything, so that he wanted flesh a whole week ; when one afternoon (which was not his customary time to examine his nets) chancing to pass them in the wood, he found in one two animals taken as large as a kid, of a bright dun, their horns upright and straight, their shape like a stag, with a small tuft of hair on each shoulder and hip: the animals he found were antelopes (calling to mind he had seen them in his travels) so with cords he fastened them to the outside of his lodge, and with constant feeding of them, in two months’ time made them so tame, that they followed him up and down, and ate out of his hand. This added much to the pleasure he took in his habitation, which by this tire was covered with green leaves, both top and sides, the stakes it was made of having struck root, and shot out young branches. Having resolved, as the summer approached, to thin his clothing by degrees, he fell to ripping his jacket, in the lining of which he found seven peas and three beans, which were got