[The Story of Baden-Powell by Harold Begbie]@TWC D-Link book
The Story of Baden-Powell

CHAPTER VII
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CHAPTER VII.
SCOUT All hardy exercise is good for a soldier, but in pig-sticking Baden-Powell found a sport which, in addition to its effect upon the nerves and sinews, gives a man what is called a "stalker's eye," and that, says B.-P., is _par excellence_ the soldier's eye.

It was this that made B.-P.

an enthusiastic hunter of the wild boar.

"Without doubt," he exclaims, "the constant and varied exercise of the inductive reasoning powers called into play in the pursuit must exert a beneficial effect on the mind, and the actual pleasure of riding and killing a boar is doubly enhanced by the knowledge that he has been found by the fair and sporting exercise of one's own bump of 'woodcraft.' The sharpness of intellect which we are wont to associate with the detective is nothing more than the result of training that inductive reasoning, which is almost innate in the savage.

To the child of the jungle the ground with its signs is at once his book, his map, and his newspaper.


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