Shopping Cart Now in your cart items CyberRead carries over 40,000 of your favorite books from both major and independent publishers for your PDA and PC Book Categories Search Books Get Reader Software My Account ... Customer Support All Formats Mobipocket Microsoft Reader Adobe Acrobat PDF Microsoft Word Product Details All Categories The Man-Eaters of Tsavo Mobipocket Reader (498.00 Kb) Price: Author: Patterson, J. H. Publisher: eBookbase ( All Products by eBookbase Publish Date: ISBN: Category: Nature Language: English Type: Downloadable Formats: Summary: a selection from the FOREWORD: It was some seven or eight years ago that I first read, in the pages of The Field newspaper, a brief account written by Col. J.H. Patterson, then an engineer engaged on the construction of the Uganda Railway, of the Tsavo man-eating lions. From the time of Herodotus until to-day, lion stories innumerable have been told and written. I have put some on record myself. But no lion story I have ever heard or read equals in its long-sustained and dramatic interest the story of the Tsavo man-eaters as told by Col. Patterson. A lion story is usually a tale of adventures, often very terrible and pathetic, which occupied but a few hours of one night; but the tale of the Tsavo man-eaters is an epic of terrible tragedies spread out over several months, and only at last brought to an end by the resource and determination of one man. It was some years after I read the first account published of the Tsavo man-eaters that I made the acquaintance of President Roosevelt. I told him all I remembered about it, and he was so deeply interested in the story as he is in all true stories of the nature and characteristics of wild animals that he begged me to send him the short printed account as published in The Field. This I did; and it was only in the last letter I received from him that, referring to this story, President Roosevelt wrote: "I think that the incident of the Uganda man-eating lions, described in those two articles you sent me, is the most remarkable account of which we have any record. It is a great pity that it should not be preserved in permanent form." Well, I am now glad to think that it will be preserved in permanent form; and I venture to assure Col. Patterson that President Roosevelt will be amongst the most interested readers of his book. | |
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