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Camp-fire and Wigwam

Chapter 2 A DOUBTFUL ENTERPRISE.

Word Count: 1632    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

t of retiring and rising early. They were ardent believers in the saying of Poor Ri

the pillow. The mother remained by the fire some time after the boys withdrew. Her small white fingers flitted hither back and forth, while her mild brown eyes seemed to look beyond the flashing needles, and into the glowin

was growing, and she trembled when she recalled that he was soon to start on another excursion into t

wind blew strongly, sometimes with a power which caused the strongest trees to bow their heads to the blast. As

it appeared above the horizon. The boys were in high spirits over the beaut

ng his lips and shaking his head. "I feel it in my bo

ose only discomfort was his exceeding

re going to succeed is simply his pleasure over the prospect of a ramble in the woods. We w

tasted in twenty-four hours. They were shocked, and both took him to task for his failure to make known the truth the evening before. He made

ing; but when she learned how the poor fellow had been made to suffer with hunger her feelings changed. It was hard to repress her indignation, and she made up her mind to talk to the cruel folks as they had never been talked to before;

nd a determined expression; "Otto doesn't comes back till he

dow Carleton), his father and mother were eating their breakfast. They looked surlily at him as

Toby that

? I tried hard to find him again, and had it not been f

u brought him with you?" demanded the father, glarin

last night, when it was so dark and stormy. I

y, but before the question could be debated Otto had flung the powder-horn over his shoulders, adjusted the bullet-pou

e breakfast

ou shall not have a mouthful under my roof

lad was indignant enough to reply: "I've had one mea

could rally from the unparalleled

mother good-by several times and he repeated the fond embrace. Tears were in the eyes of both, and the mother stood in

Martin shook hands with them, and asked all the particulars of the business on which they were engaged. His age

and the colonel smiled g

come upon another. Take my advice, however," added the colonel with a wink of his

k we mean to steal a horse!"

tlement hastened to say, "I don't believe you could be pers

tances," exclaimed Jack, his face flushing over the idea that

tepping in front of them, "you tell me you are going a

not get one

then do you propo

tto's father, is wandering in

he is?" interru

oing so only a

ians hunt through this portion of Louisiana, and they would be much quicker than you to observe the trail of a horse wearing an iron shoe; they

lp which they were certain to need. Should he fail to do so, they could no more recapture and take the colt to his own

and, while Jack was asking himself whether he should linger long enough to explain the situation, the gent

of work there is to do in clearing the ground and getting it ready for cultivation; you would much rather be hunting and rambling through the woods; I can't

el gave the boys a vigorous shove which sent them

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Camp-fire and Wigwam
Camp-fire and Wigwam
“Classic adventure novel. According to Wikipedia: "Edward Sylvester Ellis (April 11, 1840 – June 20, 1916) was an American author who was born in Ohio and died at Cliff Island, Maine. Ellis was a teacher, school administrator, and journalist, but his most notable work was that that he performed as author of hundreds of dime novels that he produced under his name and a number of noms de plume. Notable works by Ellis include The Huge Hunter, or the Steam Man of the Prairies and Seth Jones, or the Captives of the Frontier. Internationally, Edward S. Ellis is probably best known for his Deerhunter novels widely read by young boys up to the 1950s (together with works by James Fenimore Cooper and Karl May). In the mid-1880s, after a fiction-writing career of some thirty years, Ellis eventually turned his pen to more serious works of biography, history, and persuasive writing."”
1 Chapter 1 AT HOME.2 Chapter 2 A DOUBTFUL ENTERPRISE.3 Chapter 3 WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN EXPECTED.4 Chapter 4 CAPTORS AND CAPTIVES.5 Chapter 5 JOURNEYING SOUTHWARD.6 Chapter 6 AN INVOLUNTARY BATH.7 Chapter 7 TWO VISITORS.8 Chapter 8 A SURPRISE.9 Chapter 9 BY THE CAMP-FIRE.10 Chapter 10 WAITING AND HOPING.11 Chapter 11 THROUGH THE FOREST.12 Chapter 12 THE SIGNAL FIRES.13 Chapter 13 THE INDIAN VILLAGE.14 Chapter 14 ON THE MOUNTAIN CREST.15 Chapter 15 THE RETURN AND DEPARTURE.16 Chapter 16 A PERPLEXING QUESTION.17 Chapter 17 TWO ACQUAINTANCES AND FRIENDS.18 Chapter 18 THE TRAPPERS.19 Chapter 19 DEERFOOT'S WOODCRAFT.20 Chapter 20 SAUK AND SHAWANOE.21 Chapter 21 CHRISTIAN AND PAGAN.22 Chapter 22 AN ABORIGINAL SERMON.23 Chapter 23 IN THE LODGE OF OGALLAH.24 Chapter 24 A ROW.25 Chapter 25 THE WAR FEAST.26 Chapter 26 AN ALARMING DISCOVERY.27 Chapter 27 GAH-HAW-GE. 28 Chapter 28 A PATIENT OF THE MEDICINE MAN.29 Chapter 29 CONVALESCENCE.30 Chapter 30 OUT IN THE WORLD.31 Chapter 31 JOURNEYING EASTWARD.32 Chapter 32 A MISCALCULATION.33 Chapter 33 CONCLUSION.