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Afloat and Ashore

Online Book

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4.95 of 5 Votes: 5
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Language
English
Publisher
Duke Classics

Afloat And Ashore - Plot & Excerpts

I grieve No more for all that thou hast riven!
    Pass on, in God's name—only leave The things thou never yet hast given.—" LUNT.
After every means had been uselessly exhausted to persuade Marble from his design, it only remained to do all we could to make him comfortable and secure. Of enemies, there was no danger, and care was not necessary for defence. We got together, however, some of the timber, planks and other materials, that were remaining at the shipyard, and built him a cabin, that offered much better shelter against the tropical storms that sometimes prevailed, than any tent could yield. We made this cabin as wide as a plank is long, or twelve feet, and some five or six feet longer. It was well sided and tightly roofed, having three windows and a door. The lights of the wreck supplied the first, and her cabin-door the last. We had hinges, and everything that was necessary to keep things in their place. There was no chimney required, fire being unnecessary for warmth in that climate; but the French had brought their camboose from the wreck, and this we placed under a proper covering at a short distance from the hut, the strength of one man being insufficient to move it.

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Read books by author James Fenimore Cooper

Read books in category Picture Books