The Roar of the Tiger
Hunting & Shikar Tales from a Bygone Era
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Publisher Description
This is a compilation of hunting tales from the jungles of India from the centuries gone by. ìÖWe have no word in English that properly embraces all this, but all are expressed by the Persian word ëshikar!íÖî ìÖSitting on the ground in a thorn ìBomaî for a lion in Africa is considered an ordinary enough thing to do; but sitting on the ground for a tiger in dense jungles of the Indian subcontinent can be an entirely different experience. The risk inherent should be obvious to all. Sitting on a machan built on a tree was the more common approach employed by Tiger hunters of yore; but of course, there were exceptions...î ìÖIn another moment the old Panther sprang out of the jungle, made a pat at the kid, and then crouched by its side. If there had been more space, I should have waited and watched the Pantherís proceedings, but as I was afraid that she would drag the goat into the jungle, I fired at once, and immediately jumped up so as to see above the smoke. The Panther sprang into the air, fell backwards, and then disappeared among the bushesÖî ìÖI was standing at the junction of two pathways, and the beat had approached to within a hundred yards, when I heard ìWoof! Woof!î I imagined the beaters had started up a big wild boar. The ìwoofingî was repeated during the next minute, coming closer each time, until finally there was a resounding ìWoofî in the tall grass about fifteen yards in front of me. By this time I was standing on tip-toe, trying to peer into the grass ahead of me, when suddenly I realized that what I was staring at behind an ant-heap was the tail-end of a tigerÖî The stories in this collection are extracted from rare works from the 17th, 18th, 19th centuries.