In his piece of writing "Shooting an Elephant" George Orwell (born in India to a middle-class relations but brought up in Britain) relates why he shot an proboscidian when he was an Assistant Superintendent in the British Imperial Police from 1922 to 1927, at Moulmein in Burma.
Personally Orwell viewed foreign policy as an unscrupulous situation and was all for the Burmans antagonistic their British oppressors. And one day he old the existing moral fibre of foreign policy. A constabulary sub-inspector hep him that an proboscidean was ravaging a bazaar. It was a unexciting one that had gone "musth" (Hindi for mad, and is coupled to physiological property rousing), had not working its manacle and escaped. It had broken a hut, killed a cow and damaged to change a dark Dravidian coolie. Orwell proceeded beside an proboscidean piece. An agog Burman pack elatedly waited for the fun of sighted the proboscidian shot, and also desired its meat. Orwell freckled it nearest a sloughy mickey corral peacefully dressing bunches of turf into its jaws and showing no interest in the rabble.