LETTERS FROM INDIA.
333
love; he is quite well, and so am I. I have certainly very good health in this country.
Yours most affectionately,
E. E.
TO A FRIEND.
Saturday, March 18, 1837.
Some officer at Ghazeepore sent us yesterday two young bears, two fawns, and a very young mouse-deer; the united ages of the whole set could not make a month. The bears were the size of Chance and very like him. One fawn died, but the other and the mouse-deer I am trying to rear by means of a teapot and some milk. The little mouse-deer stands very comfortably in my hand; when full grown they are about the height of Chance, with such slender limbs and beautiful black eyes. It is a pity I cannot send you some.
Did I ever mention that I sent
some more tortoises by the Duke of Devonshire’s gardener, who went home in the ‘Zenobia’? He will leave them in Grosvenor Place. There are two different kinds; the spotted are very pretty, and thcir skulls are sometimes set as bracelets.I went on Friday evening to the cathedral to