The Tiger Man

The Tiger Man is a 1918 American Western silent film directed by William S. Hart, written by J.G.

Hawks, and starring William S. Hart, Jane Novak, Milton Ross, Robert Lawrence, Charles K. French, and J. P. Lockney.

[3] As described in a film magazine,[4] Hawk Parsons (Hart), escaping a sheriff's posse, comes upon Ruth Ingram (Novak) and a group of missionaries on their way to the frontier.

Through the innocence of the young woman Parsons finds his better self and returns her to her little party and husband, and then gives himself up to the cavalry.

", "The knife wasn't for you", "It was for myself when the time came", and "The passing of the brute — the birth of the man before the unafraid eyes of chastity", view of arrow lodging in man's shoulder, two closeups of young woman standing in doorway of bedroom frightened, the four intertitles "She's an angel from heaven, as pure as the day you sold her", "She's an angel of heaven, as pure as the day she came away", "She's the same good woman she was out there", and "Look at me, you'll see I'm not lying", and inserted the intertitles "The devils will close in the dark — I'm not taking any chances — she'll have to come with me as a hostage — you put the sheriff on my trail" and "It's a lie — she surrendered to me as a hostage".