Adventures in Many Lands, by 
Various 
 
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Title: Adventures in Many Lands 
Author: Various 
Illustrator: F. Gillett 
Release Date: November 17, 2007 [EBook #23530] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 
ADVENTURES IN MANY LANDS *** 
 
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Martin Pettit and the Online Distributed 
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
ADVENTURES IN MANY LANDS
* * * * * 
THE BRAVE DEEDS SERIES 
UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME 
THE BLACK TROOPERS, AND OTHER STORIES 
A RACE FOR LIFE, AND OTHER TALES 
NOBLE DEEDS OF THE WORLD'S HEROINES. By Henry Charles 
Moore. 
THROUGH FLOOD AND FLAME. Adventures and Perils of 
Protestant Heroes. By Henry Charles Moore. 
HEROES OF THE GOODWIN SANDS. By the Rev. T. S. Treanor, 
M.A. 
ON THE INDIAN TRAIL, AND OTHER STORIES OF THE CREE 
AND SALTEAUX INDIANS. By Egerton R. Young. 
REMARKABLE ADVENTURES FROM REAL LIFE. 
THROUGH FIRE AND THROUGH WATER. By T. S. Millington. 
FRANK LAYTON. An Australian Story. By George E. Sargent. 
THE REALM OF THE ICE-KING. A Narrative of Arctic Exploration. 
By T. Frost. 
THE FOSTER-BROTHERS OF DOON. A Tale of the Irish Rebellion. 
By E. H. Walshe. 
THE CAPTAIN'S STORY. By Captain E. F. Brooke-Knight. 
STEADFAST AND TRUE. By L. C. Silke. 
ADVENTURE STORIES: DARING DEEDS ON LAND AND SEA.
HISTORICAL TALES FOR YOUNG PROTESTANTS. 
BRAVE SONS OF THE EMPIRE. By Henry Charles Moore. 
THE LOG OF A SKY-PILOT; or, Work and Adventure around the 
Goodwin Sands. By T. S. Treanor, M.A. 
SAXBY. A Tale of the Commonwealth Time. By Emma Leslie. 
WITHIN SEA WALLS. By E. H. Walshe and G. E. Sargent. 
THE HEROES OF MOSS HALL SCHOOL. A Public School Story. 
By E. C. Kenyon. 
A GREAT MISTAKE. A Story of Adventure in the Franco-German 
War. By T. S. Millington. 
THE TREASURE OF CHIN-LOO. 
LONDON: THE RELIGIOUS TRACT SOCIETY. 
* * * * * 
[Illustration: THE WOUNDED ANIMAL SUDDENLY SPRANG 
OUT AT ME. See page 59.] 
 
ADVENTURES IN MANY LANDS 
Told by 
ALGERNON BLACKWOOD, WILLIAM WEBSTER, ALFRED 
COLBECK, A. LEE KNIGHT, And Other Writers. 
WITH THREE COLOURED ILLUSTRATIONS BY F. GILLETT 
LONDON 
THE RELIGIOUS TRACT SOCIETY 4 Bouverie Street & 65 St.
Paul's Churchyard 
 
CONTENTS 
PAGE I 
A TERRIBLE ADVENTURE WITH HYENAS 5 By C. Randolph 
Lichfield 
II 
THE VEGA VERDE MINE 10 By Charles Edwardes 
III 
A VERY NARROW SHAVE 20 By John Lang 
IV 
AN ADVENTURE IN ITALY 31 By J. Kinchin Smith 
V 
THE TAPU-TREE 38 By A. Ferguson 
VI 
SOME PANTHER STORIES 49 By Various Writers 
VII 
A MIDNIGHT RIDE ON A CALIFORNIAN RANCH 69 By A. F. 
Walker 
VIII 
O'DONNELL'S REVENGE 84 By Frank Maclean
IX 
MY ADVENTURE WITH A LION 105 By Algernon Blackwood 
X 
THE SECRET CAVE OF HYDAS 116 By F. Barford 
XI 
AN ADVENTURE IN THE HEART OF MALAY-LAND 155 By 
Alexander Macdonald, F.R.G.S. 
XII 
A WEEK-END ADVENTURE 171 By William Webster 
XIII 
THE DEFLECTED COMPASS 193 By Alfred Colbeck 
XIV 
IN PERIL IN AFRICA 214 By Maurice Kerr 
XV 
KEEPING THE TRYST 227 By E. Cockburn Reynolds 
XVI 
WHO GOES THERE? 245 By Rowland W. Cater 
XVII 
A DROWNING MESSMATE 257 By A. Lee Knight 
XVIII 
THE PILOT OF PORT CREEK 266 By Burnett Fallow
ADVENTURES IN MANY LANDS 
 
I 
A TERRIBLE ADVENTURE WITH HYENAS 
There are many mighty hunters, and most of them can tell of many very 
thrilling adventures personally undergone with wild beasts; but 
probably none of them ever went through an experience equalling that 
which Arthur Spencer, the famous trapper, suffered in the wilds of 
Africa. 
As the right-hand man of Carl Hagenbach, the great Hamburg dealer in 
wild animals, for whom Spencer trapped some of the finest and rarest 
beasts ever seen in captivity, thrilling adventures were everyday 
occurrences to him. The trapper's life is infinitely more exciting and 
dangerous than the hunter's, inasmuch as the latter hunts to kill, while 
the trapper hunts to capture, and the relative risks are not, therefore, 
comparable; but Spencer's adventure with the "scavenger of the wilds," 
as the spotted hyena is sometimes aptly called, was something so 
terrible that even he could not recollect it without shuddering. 
He was out with his party on an extended trapping expedition, and one 
day he chanced to get separated from his followers; and, partly 
overcome by the intense heat and his fatigue, he lay down and fell 
asleep--about the most dangerous thing a solitary traveller in the 
interior of Africa can do. Some hours later, when the scorching sun was 
beginning to    
    
		
	
	
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