E-text prepared by Rudy Ketterer
and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
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One Morning's Bag
This collection of African stories has no pretentious purpose. It is merely the record of a most delightful hunting trip into those fascinating regions along the Equator, where one may still have "thrilling adventures" and live in a story-book atmosphere, where the "roar of the lion" and the "crack of the rifle" are part of the every-day life, and where in a few months one may store up enough material to keep the memory pleasantly occupied all the rest of a lifetime. The stories are descriptive of a four-and-a-half months' trip in the big game country and pretend to no more serious purpose than merely to relate the experiences of a self-confessed amateur under such conditions.
CHAPTER ONE
The Preparation for Departure. Experiences with Willing Friends and Advisers
CHAPTER TWO
The First Half of the Voyage. From Naples to the Red Sea, with a Few Side-Lights on Indian Ocean Travel
CHAPTER THREE
The Island of Mombasa, with the Jungles of Equatorial Africa "Only a Few Blocks Away." A Story of the World's Champion Man-Eating Lions
CHAPTER FOUR
On the Edge of the Athi Plains, Face to Face with Herds of Wild Game. Up in a Balloon at Nairobi
CHAPTER FIVE
Into the Heart of the Big Game Country with a Retinue of More Than One Hundred Natives. A Safari and What It Is
CHAPTER SIX
A Lion Drive. With a Rhino in Range Some One Shouts "Simba" and I Get My First Glimpse of a Wild Lion. Three Shots and Out
CHAPTER SEVEN
On the Tana River, the Home of the Rhino. The Timid are Frightened, the Dangerous Killed, and Others Photographed. Moving Pictures of a Rhino Charge
CHAPTER EIGHT
Meeting Colonel Roosevelt in the Uttermost Outpost of Semi-Civilization. He Talks of Many Things, Hears that he has Been Reported Dead, and Promptly Plans an Elephant Hunt
CHAPTER NINE
The Colonel Reads Macaulay's "Essays," Discourses on Many Subjects with Great Frankness, Declines a Drink of Scotch Whisky, and Kills