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! Had this work gone on much longer the field-cornet would have had but a poor gathering in harvest-time. The baboons thought the corn ripe enough, and would soon have made a crop of it, but at this moment their operations were interrupted. Totty knew but little of the danger she underwent, when she ran forth with nothing but that long broom-handle to drive off a troop of chacmas. She only thought of the loss her kind master was sustaining; and down the ladder she hurried, and ran straight out to the corn-field. Several sentinels met her by its edge, grinned, chattered, screamed, barked, and showed their long canine teeth; but they only received a blow over their ugly snouts from the broom-handle. Their cries summoned the others; and in a few moments the poor Hottentot was standing in the midst of an angry circle of chacmas, that were only prevented from springing in upon her by the expert manner in which she continued to ply the broomstick. But this slight weapon would not have served much longer, and Totty's fate--that of being torn to pieces--would soon have been sealed, had not four horsemen, or rather "quagga-men," at that moment galloped up to her rescue. These were the hunters returning from the chase; and a volley from their guns at once scattered the ugly chacmas, and sent them howling back to their caves. After that the field-cornet looked well to his maize, until it was ready for gathering; when it was all brought home, and deposited in safety out of the reach of either birds, reptiles, quadrupeds or _quadrumuna_. CHAPTER FORTY SEVEN. THE WILD HOUNDS AND THE HARTEBEEST. Since the taming of the quaggas the hunting had been attended with tolerable success. Not a week passed without adding a pair of tusks-- sometimes two or three pairs--to the collection, which now began to assume the form of a little pyramid of ivory standing near the bottom of the nwana. Von Bloom, however, was not quite satisfied with his progress. He thought they might do far better if they only had a few dogs. Though the quaggas were of great service to them, and with these they were often able to overtake the elephant, yet they as often lost their great game, and it is more easy to do so than most persons imagine. But with dogs to join in the hunt, the result would be quite different. It is true these animals cannot pull down an elephant, nor do him the slightest injury; but they can follow him whithersoe
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