ISSUE 29: Spring 2015

Elephant v. Rhinoceros

Ctesias, physician Artemidorus Ephesius, geographer Diodorus Siculus, historian

 

I. Witnesses

Ctesias, physician

Artemidorus Ephesius, geographer

Diodorus Siculus, historian

Oppian, poet

Pliny, scientist and historian

Valentin Ferdinand, printer

Albrecht Dürer, artist

Guillaume de Salluste du Bartas, poet

Edward Topsell, naturalist

Oliver Goldsmith, novelist

Commodore George Anson

Captain Thomas Williamson

Jean Chardin, traveller Comte de Buffon, naturalist John Church, physician Stephani Polito, menagerist Richard Owen, anatomist

 

II. Opening Arguments

The rhinoceros is especially hostile to the elephant

There is a natural antipathy

a natural enmity between the beasts

The rhinoceros is a natural-born enemy of the elephant

It is the elephant’s inveterate

sworn

fierce

deadly

mortal enemy

 No antipathy has been observed between these animals In captivity, they live quietly together without offence or provocation

The rhinoceros prepares itself for combat by sharpening its horn against

gets ready for battle by filing its horn on

Before attacking, it sharpens

always first whets its horn upon the stones

against a rock

The rhinoceros attacks

surprises

opens the fight with

overcomes the elephant by

charging it at the chest

thrusting its forehead under the belly

fastening its horn in the lower part of the elephant’s belly

In the encounter it strikes the elephant on the chest

runs at the elephant with his head between his forelegs

slips under

goes especially for

strikes most of all at the belly

shoves its horn in the stomach

which it knows to be softer

the softest part

tenderest and most penetrable part

weakest part of the body

thinnest skin

where his sharpened blade will in

As the rhinoceros is naturally of a pacific temper it is probable that accounts of it engaging the elephant are without foundation

The rhinoceros rips open the flesh with its horn as a sword

rips up the elephant’s belly

tears it to pieces

without mercy

gores him

wounds mortally

opens his guts

The elephant’s entrails tumble out

The rhinoceros has no taste for flesh

 

III. Physical Evidence

The elephant is often found dead in the forests pierced

with the horn of a rhinoceros

elephants are occasionally found dead

obviously from wounds given by the rhinoceros

A rhinoceros dead at the London Zoo seventh rib fractured by an elephant poking its tusks through the palings between their enclosures death ascribed to injury of the left lung caused by the fracture

 

IV. Eyewitness Accounts

Lisbon, 1515

Valentin Ferdinand:

On the day of the Blessed Trinity

an elephant was led to a courtyard

near the King’s Palace

A rhinoceros was led to the same place

The elephant uneasy and furious

uttered a tremendous cry, ran

to one of the barred windows

wrenched the iron bars

with trunk and teeth

fled away

Persia, 1667 Jean Chardin: On the left of the Royal stables were two great elephants covered with cloths of gold brocade And one rhinoceros So near one to the other the animals showed not the least aversion or uneasiness

Africa, 1807

Captain Thomas Williamson:

The late Major Lally witnessed

a most desperate engagement

between a rhinoceros

and a large, male elephant

the latter protecting a small herd

retiring in a state of alarm

The elephant was worsted

and fled into heavy jungle

London, 1814 Stephani Polito: The formidable rhinoceros one of the largest ever seen In the adjoining den, in the same apartment a fine large male elephant adorned with long ivory tusks The two animals so closely united so reconciled as to take their food from one other

 

V. Closing Arguments

The rhinoceros kills the elephant

kills many of them

many a time it lays so mighty a beast dead in the dust

unless the rhinoceros is prevented by the trunk and tusks the elephant may defend itself with the trunk or teeth then throw the rhinoceros down throw it on the ground and kill it

the elephant succumbing to the pain drops and crushes its enemy by the weight of its body

seldom does combat cease without death of both fighters

 

The rhinoceros gores the elephant and carries him off upon his head, but the blood and fat of the elephant run into his eyes, and make him blind; he falls to the ground; and what is very astonishing, the roc carries them both away in her claws, to be meat for her young ones

 

The Court finds both weight and the weight of the evidence to be on the side of the elephant. The scales of justice tip in its favour.

 

 

[Note: Fragments of text borrowed from: Ctesias, Ancient India; Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica; Oppian, Kynegetika; Pliny, The Natural History; Valentin Ferdinand, Letter; Guillaume de Salluste du Bartas, La Semaine; Jean Chardin, Travels in Persia; Edward Topsell, History of Four-Footed Beasts and Serpents; Arabian Nights; Comte de Buffon, Natural History; George Anson, A Voyage Around the World; Oliver Goldsmith, A History of the Earth and Animated Nature; Thomas Williamson, Oriental Field Sports; John Church, A Cabinet of Quadrupeds; Richard Owen, On the Anatomy of the Indian Rhinoceros.]

 

About the author

Kate Sutherland is a poet, a fiction writer, and a collage artist. She is the author of four books, most recently the poetry collection The Bones Are There, published by Book*hug Press in the fall of 2020.