Wild scenes and wild hunters of the world . rod of Harrodsburg 231 CHAPTER Fox and Fox Hunting in America 248 CHAPTER Texan Huntress 274 CHAPTER of Bear Hunting 343 CHAPTER Peccaries in Texas—a Bear-Hunt without the Meta-physics 381 6 CONTENTS. PAOK CHAPTER Buffalo 394 CHAPTER , and our other Felines 403 CHAPTER Dan Henrie ; his Adventure with Wolves 425 CHAPTER Darkie Fiddler and the Wolves 446 CHAPTER Chased by Wolves 454 CHAPTER Mustang, or Wild Horse 460 CHAPTER Birds-eye View of the


Wild scenes and wild hunters of the world . rod of Harrodsburg 231 CHAPTER Fox and Fox Hunting in America 248 CHAPTER Texan Huntress 274 CHAPTER of Bear Hunting 343 CHAPTER Peccaries in Texas—a Bear-Hunt without the Meta-physics 381 6 CONTENTS. PAOK CHAPTER Buffalo 394 CHAPTER , and our other Felines 403 CHAPTER Dan Henrie ; his Adventure with Wolves 425 CHAPTER Darkie Fiddler and the Wolves 446 CHAPTER Chased by Wolves 454 CHAPTER Mustang, or Wild Horse 460 CHAPTER Birds-eye View of the Speclater 472 CHAPTER in June 482 CHAPTER Night-hunt up the Cungamunck 492 CHAPTER on Jessups River 503 CHAPTER of Moose and Deer Hunting among the Northern Lakes. 515 CHAPTER Elephants in South Africa 536 CHAPTER Giraffe 561 CHAPTER African Lions 572 CHAPTER Rhinoceros and Hippopotamus 694 CHAPTER and Antelopes of South Africa 604. THE ROMANCE OF SPOETING. ? » CHAPTER I. BIRD, BEAST AND HUNTER. The air is filled with birds that fly, and are pursued hybird and beast. The earth, with beasts that run, and arepursued by beast and bird; while man, in a world of pursuersand pursued, is chief hunter of them all! Whatever may have been the case in primeval times, it certainly seems very natural now that our relations to the living creatures by which we are surrounded should be mainly those of hunter and the hunted; and that these relations should be most immediate to bird and beast seems equally of course, since they more nearly approach us on the ascending scale 2 17 18 WILD SCENES AND WILD HUNTERS. of being. But these most intimate relations to the life below us express far more than is conveyed in mere consanguinity, for they are each separate and living types of our compounded selves. Thus we see in the bird the type of our intellect—of the soul. We feel that they addre


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850, bookpublishe, booksubjecthunting