The Desert World

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BOOK I. THE DESERTS OF EUROPE AND ASIA: THE LANDES, THE DUNES, AND THE STEPPES.

BOOK II. THE DESERTS OF SAND: THE DESERTS OF EUROPE AND AFRICA.

BOOK III. PRAIRIES, SAVANNAHS, PAMPAS, AND LLANOS.

BOOK IV. T H E F O R E S T S.

BOOK V. THE POLAR DESERTS THE MOUNTAINS.

Every attempt has been made to replicate the original book as printed. Some typographical errors have been corrected. A list follows the etext. No attempt has been made to correct or normalize printed botanical names. The footnotes have all been moved to the end of the etext. Some illustrations have been moved from within paragraphs for ease of reading. (etext transcriber’s note)

Preface.
Contents.
Index.
List of Illustrations.
Footnotes.

T H E   D E S E R T   W O R L D.

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“For I have learned
To look on Nature, not as in the hour
Of thoughtless youth; but hearing oftentimes
The still sad music of humanity.”
Wordsworth

THE DESERT WORLD.

FROM THE FRENCH OF ARTHUR MANGIN.

Edited and Enlarged

BY

THE TRANSLATOR OF “THE BIRD, BY MICHELET.”

———
WITH 160 ILLUSTRATIONS BY W. FREEMAN, FOULQUIER, AND YAN DARGENT.
———

LONDON:
T. NELSON AND SONS, PATERNOSTER ROW;
EDINBURGH; AND NEW YORK.
———
1869.

Preface.

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THE area of our present work would be very limited if we understood the word Desert in its more rigorous signification; for we should then have only to consider those desolate wildernesses which an inclement sky and a sterile soil seem to exclude for ever from man’s dominion.

But, by a license which usage authorizes, we are able to attribute to this term a much more extended sense; and to call Deserts not only the sandy seas of Africa and Asia, the icy wastes of the Poles, and the inaccessible crests of the great mountain-chains; but all the regions where man has not planted his regular communities or permanent abodes; where earth has never been appropriated, tilled, and subjected to cultivation; where Nature has maintained her inviolability against the encroachments of human industry.

Thus understood, the picture we are about to trace assumes not only vast proportions, but an infinite variety of aspects.

Here and there, it is true, our eyes will rest on the gloomy spectacle of rugged solitudes, where the soil churlishly refuses almost every kind of product, where the boldest traveller cannot penetrate without a shudder, and where the very beast of prey is rather a visitor than an inhabitant: lugubrious regions, on whose threshold one might write the legend written, according to Dante, on the gates of hell—

“Lasciate ogni speranza, voi ch’entrate.”
(All hope abandon, ye who enter here.)

But, on the whole, these true Deserts offer ample material for the admiration of the artist, the meditations of the thinker, the researches of the naturalist and the physician. Theirs is that kind of beauty which borders on the sublime, and which impresses us so powerfully in the Ocean. And, like the Ocean, they awake in the soul the feeling of infinity. They render it forgetful of the tumultuous regions which are perturbed by petty passions, and vexed by the contentions of ephemeral interests, and transport it to the boundless space and the eternal spheres, or allow it to draw back within itself and muse upon its future destiny.

Finally, what grave problems does the Desert place before the man of science! And first, why do life and fertility prevail elsewhere,—here, sterility and death? Why does an irrevocable curse seem to weigh upon certain parts of the world, while others rejoice in Nature’s fairest gifts? It is by examining the constitution of the soil and the character of the climate that we discover the key to this enigma, and recognize in this apparent anomaly a necessary effect of the harmonious laws of the universe. Then the Desert has a geology and a meteorology of its own; is the theatre of special phenomena, which we do not observe in more favoured regions. Life itself is not completely absent from it; specimens of the organic kingdoms are rare, no doubt, but for this very reason are the more interesting.

And if, from the Desert properly so called, we pass to those countries where the genial air and the abundant waters favour the action of the productive forces, the interest increases with the increasing development of life. The picture changes every moment, and every moment grows more animated. The scenes of the savage world unfold before our eyes like a moving panorama; unexpected incidents and dramatic episodes multiply one upon another. Every region appears before us with its primitive aspect, its grand and picturesque landscapes, its characteristic fauna and flora—frequently, also, with its tribes of white, or tawny, or black, or copper-coloured men, whose singular manners, brutal instincts, fierce passions, and wretched condition offer, in all its mournful reality, the spectacle of that “state of nature” celebrated by a great writer as the ideal of virtue and happiness.

To conclude: the task which I here pursue is the same which I recently commenced by the publication of my “Mysteries of the Ocean;”[1] to invite and prepare the general reader and the young for the study of the physical and natural sciences, by bringing before them the most interesting results of the discoveries and the observations with which these sciences have been enriched. Only, this new essay is entirely descriptive, and has no didactic pretensions. I have contented myself with sketching the physiognomy of the great regions not yet conquered by civilization, with indicating the more remarkable features they present, the peoples by whom they are inhabited, and the important plants and animals they nourish.

THE AUTHOR.

[The Translator has only to add, that he has made copious additions to the original work, with the view of rendering its scope more comprehensive and complete, and of adapting it specially to the requirements of the English reader. He has also corrected and confirmed M. Mangin’s statements by reference to the best and most recent authorities, without, he would hope, any injury to the original scheme, or any detriment to the value of M. Mangin’s agreeable and highly interesting chapters.]

A.

Contents.

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  ———  
BOOK I.
THE DESERTS OF EUROPE AND ASIA:—THE LANDES, THE DUNES, AND THE STEPPES.
Chapter   Page
I. THE DESERT IN FRANCE:—THE LANDES OF BRITTANY, 13
II. THE LANDES OF GASCONY, 24
III. THE DUNES, OR SAND-HILLS, 32
IV. WILD SCENES OF ENGLAND:—DARTMOOR AND THE FEN COUNTRY, 39
V. THE STEPPES:—THE DESERT IN RUSSIA, SIBERIA, AND TARTARY, 46
VI. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE STEPPES:—THE WILD HORSE AND THE CAMEL, 51
VII. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE STEPPES:—WILD RUMINATING ANIMALS, RODENTS, CARNIVORA, BIRDS, 64
VIII. INHABITANTS OF THE STEPPES:—TARTARS, COSSACKS, KALMUCKS, KIRGHIZ, MONGOLS, 78
  ———  
BOOK II.
THE DESERTS OF SAND:—THE DESERTS OF EUROPE AND AFRICA.
I. THE RAINLESS DESERT—THE BED OF A SEA—THE DEAD SEA, 95
II. ARABIA DESERTA AND ARABIA PETRÆA, 106
III. THE NUBIAN DESERT—THE GREAT SAHARA—DESERTS OF AFRICA, 118
IV. PHENOMENA OF THE DESERT, 134
V. VEGETABLE LIFE IN THE DESERT—THE OASES, 148
VI. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE DESERT, 162
VII. THE MEN OF THE DESERT, 174
  ———  
BOOK III.
PRAIRIES, SAVANNAHS, PAMPAS, AND LLANOS.
I. WILD PLAINS OF THE OLD WORLD:—THE AFRICAN INTERIOR, 186
II. DESERTS OF THE NEW WORLD:—PRAIRIES, PAMPAS, LLANOS, 207
III. THE AUSTRALIAN INTERIOR, 231
IV. VEGETABLE LIFE IN THE AFRICAN PLAINS, 240
V. VEGETABLE LIFE IN THE PRAIRIES, PAMPAS, AND LLANOS OF THE NEW WORLD, 258
VI. FLORA OF THE AUSTRALIAN PLAINS, 273
VII. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE PRAIRIES OF THE OLD WORLD:—HERBIVOROUS ANIMALS, 281
VIII. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE PRAIRIES OF THE OLD WORLD—CONTINUED:—THE CARNIVORA, 300
IX. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE PRAIRIES OF THE OLD WORLD—CONTINUED:—BIRDS AND REPTILES, 317
X. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE PRAIRIES OF THE NEW WORLD:—HERBIVORA, INSECTIVORA, AND CARNIVORA, 328
XI. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE PRAIRIES OF THE NEW WORLD—CONTINUED:—BIRDS AND REPTILES, 353
XII. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE AUSTRALIAN PRAIRIES, 366
  ———  
BOOK IV.
THE FORESTS.
I. THE VIRGIN FORESTS, 379
II. VEGETABLE LIFE IN THE FORESTS OF THE OLD WORLD, 397
III. VEGETABLE LIFE IN THE FORESTS OF THE GREAT ISLANDS, 412
IV. VEGETABLE LIFE IN THE FORESTS OF THE NEW WORLD, 428
V. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE TROPICAL FORESTS:—THE ELEPHANT—THE RHINOCEROS, 447
VI. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE VIRGIN FORESTS:—THE GREAT APES, 463
VII. THE ANTHROPOMORPHIC APES:—ORANGS—GIBBONS—CHIMPANZEES—GORILLAS, 472
VIII. ANIMAL LIFE IN THE FORESTS:—THE CEBIDÆ, OR MONKEYS OF AMERICA—THE LEMURS—THE SLOTHS—THE SQUIRRELS, 487
IX. MAN IN THE SAVANNAHS AND THE FORESTS:—ANTHROPOPHAGY, 502
X. MAN IN THE SAVANNAHS AND THE FORESTS:—THE SAVAGE RACES—THE NEGROES, 514
XI. MAN IN THE SAVANNAHS AND THE FORESTS:—THE MALAYS—POLYNESIANS—THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS, 526
  ———  
BOOK V.
THE POLAR DESERTS—THE MOUNTAINS.
I. THE POLAR DESERTS, 543
II. ANIMAL LIFE AND VEGETABLE LIFE IN THE POLAR DESERTS, 555
III. THE INHABITANTS OF THE ARCTIC WILDERNESSES:—THE LAPLANDERS, SAMOIEDES, OSTIAKS, KAMTSCHATDALES, ESKIMOS (OR ESQUIMAUX), 569
IV. THE MOUNTAINS, 579
V. VEGETABLE LIFE AND ANIMAL LIFE IN THE MOUNTAINS, 598

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THE DESERT WORLD.

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