
I CIRCUS DAYS
II JUNGLE STRATAGEMS
III ELEPHANTS
IV SHIPPING WILD ANIMALS
V THE SEA TRAGEDY OF THE JUNGLE FOLK
VI "KILLING A MAN-EATER"
VII UP A TREE IN THE JUNGLE
A restless teenager steals away from school to the wandering circus, chasing the magnetic pull of the big‑top and its menagerie. He quickly trades schoolbooks for water buckets, learns the gritty routine of setting up tents, handling ropes, and caring for the creatures that draw crowds. The job of property‑boy—hard, sleep‑anywhere work— becomes his apprenticeship, and his fascination with the animals, especially the elephants, deepens with each show.
Soon the circus heads south, and he is thrust into a new world of jungle expeditions, tasked with capturing wild beasts alive for transport to distant ports. The narrative follows his daring forays into dense Malay forests, where he must outwit both the terrain and the wary creatures he hopes to cage without harming. His observations of the locals, the perilous river crossings, and the delicate balance between profit and preservation paint a vivid picture of a young man caught between the thrill of the circus and the raw reality of the wilderness.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (282K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Garden City, N.Y.: Garden City Publishing Co., Inc., 1920, copyright 1921.
Credits
Al Haines
Release date
2023-08-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1862–1927
Drawn from years spent capturing and supplying wild animals in Southeast Asia, his adventure writing offers a vivid look at circus life, jungle travel, and the attitudes of an earlier era. Best known for Trapping Wild Animals in Malay Jungles, he wrote from direct experience in the field.
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