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One room in the house of her childhood was called "the little bookroom", Farjeon explains in the Author's Note. Although there were many books all over the house, this dusty room was like an untended garden, full to the ceiling of stray, left-over books, opening "magic casements" on to other times and places for the young Eleanor, filling her mind with a silver-cobwebby mixture of fact, fancy ...
"Tiger! Tiger!": logo and illustration by Will H. Drake, St. Nicholas Magazine, Vol. XXI, 1894. "Tiger!Tiger!" is a short story by Rudyard Kipling.A direct sequel to "Mowgli's Brothers", it was published in magazines in 1893–94 before appearing as the third story in The Jungle Book (1894), following "Kaa's Hunting".
The Tiger II was a German heavy tank of the Second World War. The final official German designation was Panzerkampfwagen Tiger Ausf. B, [a] often shortened to Tiger B. [9] The ordnance inventory designation was Sd.Kfz. 182. [9] (Sd.Kfz. 267 and 268 for command vehicles). It was also known informally as the Königstiger [9] (German for Bengal ...
King Tiger (キング・タイガー, Kingu Taigā) is a GWM master of martial arts and one of Tiger's Den Four Heavenly Kings, or Four Tigers. A vicious and extremely powerful wrestler, he fought Tiger Mask under a match with special rules and dominated most of the fight, beating Naoto one-sidedly several times.
This image was adapted as the cover illustration for the 1975 book The Mythical Man-Month. Bison on the 1901 United States ten-dollar bill, drawn by Knight Tiger holding Hunters at bay, 1917 Tylosaurus from 1899. Knight's works are currently included as part of the permanent collections of these colleges, libraries, museums, and zoos:
[3] [4] In Korean mythology and culture, the tiger is regarded as a guardian that drives away evil spirits and a sacred creature that brings good luck – the symbol of courage and absolute power. For the people who live in and around the forests of Korea, the tiger considered the symbol of the Mountain Spirit or King of mountain animals.
"Here There Be Tygers" is a short horror story by Stephen King. It was originally published in the Spring 1968 issue of Ubris magazine, and collected in King's Skeleton Crew in 1985. This story follows a third-grader who discovers a tiger lurking in his school bathroom.
Early story illustration in Gernsback's Science and Invention (January 1922) Frank R. Paul can be credited with the first color painting of a space station (August 1929, Science Wonder Stories) published in the U.S. [12] His cover for the November 1929 Science Wonder Stories was an early, if not the earliest, depiction of a flying saucer. [13]