[The Rifle and The Hound in Ceylon by Samuel White Baker]@TWC D-Link bookThe Rifle and The Hound in Ceylon CHAPTER XII 7/98
A little method and a trifling extra cost will make the jungle trip anything but uncomfortable.
There was nothing wanting in our supplies.
We had sherry, madeira, brandy and curacoa, biscuits, tea, sugar, coffee, hams, tongues, sauces, pickles, mustard, sardines en huile, tins of soups and preserved meats and vegetables, currant jelly for venison, maccaroni, vermicelli, flour, and a variety of other things that add to the comfort of the jungle, including last, but not least, a double supply of soap and candles.
No one knows the misery should either of these fail--dirt and darkness is the necessary consequence. There was a large stock of talipots* (*Large leaves from the talipot tree.) to form tents for the people and coverings for the horses in case of rain; in fact, there never was a trip more happily planned or more comfortably arranged, and there was certainly never such a battery assembled in Ceylon as we now mustered.
Such guns deserve to be chronicled:-- Wortley.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|