
 
        
         
		to have left for their breeding-grounds.  A small  terrier  
 dog  in our possession also played  havoc with  the  ants,  
 which it not only  caught, but eat in large numbers. 
 After  a  fortnight’s  intermittent  rain,  the  weather  
 became sufficiently favourable,  or  rather  the  roads were  
 once more passable, for another visit to my Kafirs  at the  
 Bark  farm.  A new world  of  animal  life  now met  the  
 view as I   drove  along  the  roads, which  in  many places  
 were  composed  of marshy mud, where  on  my last visit  
 I   raised  clouds  of  dust.  In  Coleóptera  giant Anthias  
 {Anthia thoracica  and A. maxillosa) were  seen foraging  
 about,  and  the  huge  Manticora  tuber culata  was  very  
 abundant,  whilst  Polyhirma  macilenta  ran  about  the  
 roads where  the  surface was  sandy and  gritty.  In this  
 way  I  frequently  stopped  and  obtained  some  fine  
 species.  In  the wooded  tracts  I found Cetonias  on the  
 wing,  many  adhering  to  the  leaves  of  trees,  and  one  
 (Diplognatha  hebrcea)  even  on  the  long  stalks  of  last  
 season’s  dried  hut  now damp  grasses.  In the wet but  
 scant  herbage  Blue  Cranes  (Anthropoides  paradisea),  
 usually  in  pairs,  searched  for  the  orthopterous  insects  
 which  now almost  daily  became  more  plentiful, whilst  
 the Widow-bird  (Chera  progne)  had  now  again  developed  
 its  long  tail-feathers for the breeding-season,  and  
 frequented  the  long  sedgy  grasses  that  grew  on  the  
 marshy  portions  of  the veld.  These  long  tail-feathers  
 appear  to  offer  a  direct  hindrance  to  flight,  and  the  
 birds always  seemed to  proceed with  difficulty and great  
 encumbrance,  like  a  Court  Lady  dragging  a  heavy  
 train. 
 Nature frequently reminds mankind of her forces, and  
 .she  did  so with these heavy rains :  small  spruits became  
 torrents, and  insignificant rivers raging floods.  As usual,  
 accounts  slowly came into Pretoria—for  it  is  the  press  
 which allows  civilized  man  to  rise above  tradition  and  
 hearsay, and' newspapers  give to prosaic life the romance  
 of  current  history.  The  “ Six-mile  Spruit,”  a  stream  
 through which the coaches  drive, and  at a  distance from  
 Pretoria  which  its  name  specifies,  came  down  with  a  
 suddenness that has made it famous  among  the  streams 
 Manticora  tuberculata.  Polyhirma  macilenta. 
 Anthia  maxillosa.  Anthia  thoracica.  
 A f t e r   t h f .   R a i n s .