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Leaving e of some kind people in Durban, I started into
"the Zulu"--a land hich I had already become well acquainted as a
youth, there to carry onI never cared uessed from the little
that ever I nant
towas always the breath ofcreatures, for any huhter
No, it is the excitement of sport, which, before breechloaders cah, I can assure you; the lonely existence in wild places,
often with only the sun and the stars for coe tribes hoer, the hope always of finding soreat and
new, that attracted and still attracts reat and the new There, Ilike this, or I
shall thron e for Africa, and incidentally
to the next world, no doubt--that world of the great and new!
It was, I think, in the h country between the White and Black Umvolosi Rivers, by
per of Zululand after the