The Man-Eaters of Tsavo/LOI

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
The mighty river stretching away to the north amid enchanting scenery
 * Heads of Eight Lions shot by the Author in British East Africa
 * Mombasa, from the Harbour
 * The Native Quarter, Mombasa
 * Well-wooded hills and slopes on the mainland
 * Vasco da Gama Street and Pillar
 * The best way to get three . . . was by gharri
 * I pitched my tent under some shady palms
 * Kilindini is on the opposite side of the island
 * The Place of Deep Waters
 * A lucky shot brought down the huge bird
 * I slept that night in a little palm hut
 * This interminable nyika
 * The river crossed by means of a temporary bridge
 * Women of Uganda
 * The tent from which jemadar Ungan Singh was carried off
 * My own tent was pitched in an open clearing
 * We shared a hut of palm leaves and boughs
 * The camps of the workmen had also been surrounded by thorn fences
 * Railhead Camp, with its two or three thousand workmen
 * The two wounded coolies were left where they lay, a piece of torn tent having fallen over them
 * A luncheon served in the wilds, with occasionally a friend to share it
 * It very soon became a great pet
 * Heera Singh made a wild spring into the water to get clear of the falling stone
 * The door which was to admit the lion
 * When the trap was ready, I pitched a tent over it
 * They found him stuck fast in the bushes of the boma
 * Perched on the top of water-tanks
 * I took up my position in a crib made of sleepers
 * Whitehead on a Trolley at the exact spot where the Lion jumped upon him
 * Abdullah and his two Wives
 * A party of Wa Jamousi
 * His length from tip of nose to tip of tail was nine feet eight inches
 * Head of the first Man-Eater
 * The following evening I took up my position in this same tree
 * He measured nine feet six inches from tip of nose to tip of tail, and stood three feet eleven and a half inches high
 * The bridge over the Tsavo rapidly neared completion
 * The heavy stones were swung into position
 * The girder was run over its exact place
 * And finally lowered gently into position
 * Very soon I had the satisfaction of seeing the first train cross the finished work
 * The completed Tsavo bridge
 * One of the Trolley Lines after the Flood
 * Swahili Caravan Porters
 * Such was my cook, Mabruki
 * The women . . . wear a long, brightly-coloured cloth
 * The women attire themselves only in a short kilt
 * We arrived at M'Gogo's capital
 * Making pombe in the hollowed-out stump of a tree
 * Wa Taita Men
 * M'Kamba Woman
 * Until it joins the Athi River
 * The banks of the Sabaki are lined with trees
 * I caught sight of a fine waterbuck and successfully bowled him over
 * A young one was lying down in the grass quite close to me
 * A crocodile on the Sabaki
 * Beyond all doubt, the man-eaters' den!
 * Watch the animals come down to drink
 * The antelope swinging by his feet
 * Hippo Head
 * Slaves chained neck to neck as was the custom
 * Hospital Tent at Voi where Mrs. O'Hara rested
 * In the Bazaar at Kampala
 * The great Athi Plains
 * First the earth surface has to be prepared
 * Cuttings have to be made and hollows banked up
 * Another gang drops the rails in their places
 * It never moved again
 * The trophy was well worth the pains I had taken to add it to my collection
 * Jackson's Hartebeeste, and Zebra
 * Waterbuck
 * Fortunately the brute fell dead after this final effort
 * We managed to bring them in triumph to the camp
 * I got near enough for a safe shot, which bowled the antelope over stone-dead
 * Wart-hog
 * A successful snapshot of an impala just after it had been shot
 * A Masai Chief
 * Masai Warriors
 * Masai Woman
 * Masai Girls
 * Masai Women
 * N'derobbo Boy
 * N'derobbo Boy, with Collabus Monkey
 * N'derobbo Girl
 * Wa Kikuyu
 * The women of the Wa Kikuyu carry the heavy loads
 * Spooner's plucky servant, Imam Din
 * A Collection of Trophies
 * He was kept on view for several days, and then shot
 * Impala
 * I took a photograph of him standing reside his fine trophy
 * Succeeded in finishing him off without further trouble
 * Steamer unloading at Kisumu, on Lake Victoria Nyanza
 * The Grand Falls, Tana River
 * Shimone, The Place of Falling Water (Eldama Ravine)
 * Oryx
 * Roan Antelope
 * An excellent, cheery fellow . . . named Landaalu
 * Crossing a Stream on the Cook's Box
 * Crossing the Angarua River
 * Reedbuck
 * The New Eland -- T. oryx pattersonianus
 * Thomson's Gazelle
 * War Canoe on Lake Victoria Nyanza, near the Ripon Falls
 * Preparing Breakfast in Camp
 * View in the Kenya Province
 * A flying visit in a rickshaw to Kampala
 * Clad in long flowing cotton garments
 * Jinja
 * Rushing over the Ripon Falls
 * Wa Kikuyu Warriors
 * Map of British East Africa
 * Facsimile of address presented to the author on his departure from East Africa in 1899