[EARLY SCRAPES]
[A Stray Shot]1
[Peep of Day]4
[Chip from an Old Log]9
[First Lesson in Finance]15
[Robinson Crusoe Realised]20
[Maoriland]25
[EARLY AUSTRALIAN SHAVINGS]
[Sydney in 1839]32
[The Gold Fever]37
[Some Bushrangers I Have Known]41
[How Money Used to be Made]49
[NEW CALEDONIA]
[Taking Possession: “Tit for Tat”]53
[“He who Fights and Runs Away”]56
[Another Narrow Squeak]60
[A South Sea Trip]63
[NEW SOUTH WALES]
[A Few Old Identities]69
[A Land Speculation]75
[A Hard Knock]79
[Home, Sweet Home]83
[Antipodean Gratitude]88
[CEYLON]
[Grains of Singalese Sand]92
[The Paraherra]96
[“Hamlet” Under Difficulties]103
[An Elephant Hunt]106
[A Matrimonial “Scrape”]113
[The Tree of Life]131
[A Water Party in the Garden of Eden]145
[INDIA]
[Madras]155
[The Ganges]158
[Calcutta]162
[The Denizens of the Jungle]169
[Sanctimonious]173
[The Calcutta Exhibition]180
[A Tramp Through India]184
[Benares—the Sacred City]196
[Through the Central Provinces]200
[Princely Hospitality]206
[Indian Sports]211
[Home, “Dear” Home]224

The Christening.

IN one of the first chapters of Charles Dickens’ “Nicholas Nickleby” he gives a very amusing description of the family conclave held to decide upon the name of the newborn infant.

I am now in the same dilemma.

It is very well to say that “A rose will smell quite as sweet,” &c., &c., and that there is nothing in a name. On this point I must agree to differ.

When I wrote this book I had fixed upon “Ups and Downs”—my publisher tells me that there is already in existence a book under that name. “A Random Shot” met with a similar objection. A score more attempts proved equally fruitless—“Too long,” “Too short,” “Won’t do”—until I made up my mind to translate it into French and call it “Sans nom,” which after all would be most appropriate.

Owing no doubt to perplexity, a homicidal fit came upon me. My fire was being lit: my M.S. laid before me. It struck me that after all it would serve admirably to kindle a flame.