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Rh difficult to coax him to come to you and lay bare his thoughts before you, that it requires great patience and long time to understand him and then to express yourself to him in his own language, that his dialects vary from place to place, and then the intricacies and difficulties of the problem of learning and recording the languages of the hill and forest tribes will become manifest. Hence it is that we value all the dearer the attempts, however fragmentary they may be, made by the early missionaries in this direction. The labours of Rev. F. Batsch among the Oraons, of Rev. J. Dawson among the Gonds. of Lieut. Col. Marshall, Rev. F. Metz, Rev. G. U. Pope and Par M. De Quatrfages De Brean among the Todas, and of Col. Tickell among the Ho people, not to mention those of the Rev. J. Brigel among the Tulus and Major R. A. Cole among the Coorgs, besides those of a host of