Where Have All the Tigers Cione?
Where Have All the Tigers Cione? the quest after her faw nes; and overtaketh the hunter that had them 5 away. Thus runneth she too and fro, until! she see that they be embarked and gone, and then for anger that she hath not sped of Where Have All the Tigers Cione? her purpose, she rageth upon the shore and the sands, for the losse of her fawnes. Tigers probably became known to the ancient Greeks through Alexander the Great's campaigns in India and Persia, and they were occasionally used in Roman arenas. "By far the greatest number ever Know also that the Great Khan has many leopards which are good seen at one and the same time," wrote C. A. W. G uggisberg (1975), for hunting and the taking of beasts .... He has several great lions, "were fifty-one, all of them massacred in the course of the games Helioga larger than those of Babylonia. They have very handsome, richly balus arranged to celebrate his marriage. The same emperor is said to colored fur, with longitudinal stripes of black, orange, and white. have harnessed tigers to a chariot on which he himself posed in the guise They are trained to hunt wild boars and bulls, bears, wild asses, of Bacchus." After the heady days of the Romans, tigers seemed to have stags, roebuck, and other game. disappeared from European consciousness until the reappearance of Marco Polo , 1298 Pliny's texts in the form of the Physiologus. "After the disintegration of the Roman empire, no tigers were seen in Europe for a very long time," Guggisberg tells us, "and the memory of the creature faded away so com round AD 70, in his Historia Naturalis, the Roman writer Gaius pletely that Marco Polo was greatly puzzled by the 'lions' he saw at the A Plinius Secundus, known as Pliny the Elder, wrote this about the court of Kublai Kahn .
[Show full text]