Rolf In The Woods by Ernest Thompson Seton (phonics story books .txt) π
Quonab, The Last Of The Myanos Sinawa, Stepped
From His Sheltered Wigwam Under The Cliff That
Borders The Asamuk Easterly, And, Mounting To The Lofty
Brow Of The Great Rock That Is Its Highest Pinnacle, He
Stood In Silence, Awaiting The First Ray Of The Sun Over
The Sea Water That Stretches Between Connecticut And
Seawanaky.
Read free book Β«Rolf In The Woods by Ernest Thompson Seton (phonics story books .txt) πΒ» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Ernest Thompson Seton
Read book online Β«Rolf In The Woods by Ernest Thompson Seton (phonics story books .txt) πΒ». Author - Ernest Thompson Seton
Was On The Water, And The Little Craft Went Skimming And Wimpling
Across. In Half An Hour It Was Beached At Callan's. In A Little
More Than An Hour's Jog And Stride He Was At Warren's, Ready For
Work. As He Marched In, Strong And Brisk, His Colour Up, His
Blue Eyes Kindled With The Thought Of Seeing Albany, The Trader
Could Not Help Being Struck By Him, Especially When He Remembered
Each Of Their Meetings -- Meetings In Which He Discerned A Keen,
Young Mind Of Good Judgment, One That Could Decide Quickly.
Gazing At The Lithe, Red-Checked Lad, He Said: "Say, Rolf, Air Ye
An Injun?? "
"No, Sir."
"Air Ye A Half-Breed?"
"No, I'm A Yank; My Name Is Kittering; Born And Bred In Redding,
Connecticut."
"Well, I Swan, Ye Look It. At Fust I Took Ye Fur An Injun; Ye Did
Look Dark (And Rolf Laughed Inside, As He Thought Of That
Butternut Dye), But I'm Bound To Say We're Glad Yer White."
"Here, Bill, This Is Rolf, Rolf Kittering, He'll Go With Ye To
Albany." Bill, A Loose-Jointed, Middle-Aged, Flat-Footed, Large-
Handed, Semi-Loafer, With Keen Gray Eyes, Looked Up From A Bundle
He Was Roping.
Then Warren Took Rolf Aside And Explained: "I'm Sending Down All
My Fur This Trip. There's Ten Bales Of Sixty Pounds Each, Pretty
Near My Hull Fortune. I Want It Took Straight To Vandam's, And,
Night Or Day, Don't Leave It Till Ye Git It There. He's Close To
The Dock. I'm Telling Ye This For Two Reasons: The River's
Swarming With Pirates And Sneaks. They'd Like Nothing Better
Than To Get Away With A Five-Hundred-Dollar Bundle Of Fur; And,
Next, While Bill Is A1 On The River And True As Steel, He's Awful
Weak On The Liquor; Goes Crazy, Once It's In Him. And I Notice
You've Always Refused It Here. So Don't Stop At Troy, An' When Ye
Get To Albany Go Straight Past There To Vandam's. You'll Have A
Letter That'll Explain, And He'll Supply The Goods Yer To Bring Back.
He's A Sort Of A Partner, And Orders From Him Is Same As From Me.
"I Suppose I Ought To Go Myself, But This Is The Time All The Fur
Is Coming In Here, An' I Must Be On Hand To Do The Dickering, And
There's Too Much Much To Risk It Any Longer In The Storehouse."
"Suppose," Said Rolf, "Bill Wants To Stop At Troy?"
"He Won't. He's All Right, Given He's Sober. I've Give Him The
Letter."
"Couldn't You Give Me The Letter, In Case?"
"Law, Bill'd Get Mad And Quit."
"He'll Never Know."
"That's So; I Will." So When They Paddled Away, Bill Had An
Important Letter Of Instructions Ostentatiously Tucked In His
Outer Pocket. Rolf, Unknown To Any One Else But Warren, Had A
Duplicate, Wrapped In Waterproof, Hidden In An Inside Pocket.
Bill Was A1 On The River; A Kind And Gentle Old Woodman, Much
Stronger Than He Looked. He Knew The Value Of Fur And The Danger
Of Wetting It, So He Took No Chances In Doubtful Rapids. This
Meant Many Portages And Much Hard Labour.
I Wonder If The World Realizes The Hard Labour Of The Portage Or
Carry? Let Any Man Who Seeks For Light, Take A Fifty-Pound Sack
Of Flour On His Shoulders And Walk A Quarter Of A Mile On Level
Ground In Cool Weather. Unless He Is In Training, He Will Find It
A Heavy Burden Long Before He Is Half-Way. Suppose, Instead Of A
Flour Sack, The Burden Has Sharp Angles; The Bearer Is Soon In
Torture. Suppose The Weight Carried Be Double; Then The Strain
Is Far More Than Doubled. Suppose, Finally, The Road Be Not A
Quarter Mile But A Mile, And Not On Level But Through Swamps,
Over Rocks, Logs, And Roots, And The Weather Not Cool, But
Suffocating Summer Weather In The Woods, With Mosquitoes Boring
Into Every Exposed Part, While Both Hands Are Occupied, Steadying
The Burden Or Holding On To Branches For Help Up Steep Places --
And Then He Will Have Some Idea Of The Horror Of The Portage; And
There Were Many Of These, Each One Calling For Six Loaded And
Five Light Trips For Each Canoe-Man. What Wonder That Men Will
Often Take Chances In Some Fierce Rapid, Rather Than To Make A
Long Carry Through The Fly-Infested Woods.
It Was Weighty Evidence Of Bill's Fidelity That Again And Again
They Made A Portage Around Rapids He Had Often Run, Because In
The Present Case He Was In Sacred Trust Of That Much Prized
Commodity -- Fur.
Eighty Miles They Called It From Warren's To Albany, But There
Were Many Halts And Carries Which Meant Long Delay, And A Whole
Week Was Covered Before Bill And Rolf Had Passed The Settlements
Of Glens Falls, Fort Edward, And Schuylerville, And Guided Their
Heavily Laden Canoe On The Tranquil River, Past The Little Town
Of Troy. Loafers Hailed Them From The Bank, But Bill Turned A
Deaf Ear To All Temptation; And They Pushed On Happy In The
Thought That Now Their Troubles Were Over; The Last Rapid Was
Past; The Broad, Smooth Waters Extended To Their Port.
Chapter 54 (Albany)
Only A Man Who In His Youth Has Come At Last In Sight Of Some
Great City He Had Dreamed Of All His Life And Longed To See, Can
Enter Into Rolf's Feelings As They Swept Around The Big Bend, And
Albany -- Albany, Hove In View. Abany, The First Chartered City
Of The United States; Albany, The Capital Of All The Empire
State; Albany, The Thriving Metropolis With Nearly Six Thousand
Living Human Souls; Albany With Its State House, Beautiful And
Dignified, Looking Down The Mighty Hudson Highway That Led To The
Open Sea.
Rolf Knew His Bible, And Now He Somewhat Realized The Feelings Of
St. Paul On That Historic Day When His Life-Long Dream Came True,
When First He Neared The Eternal City -- When At Last He Glimpsed
The Towers Of Imperial, Splendid Rome.
The Long-Strung Docks Were Massed And Webbed With Ship Rigging;
The Water Was Livened With Boats And Canoes; The Wooden
Warehouses Back Of The Docks Were Overtopped By Wooden Houses In
Tiers, Until High Above Them All The Capitol Itself Was The
Fitting Climax.
Rolf Knew Something Of Shipping, And Amid All The Massed Boats
His Eyes Fell On A Strange, Square-Looking Craft With A Huge
Water-Wheel On Each Side. Then, Swinging Into Better View, He
Read Her Name, The Clermont, And Knew That This Was The Famous
Fulton Steamer, The First Of The Steamboat Age.
But Bill Was Swamped By No Such Emotion. Albany, Hudson,
Clermont, And All, Were Familiar Stories To Him And He Stolidly
Headed The Canoe For The Dock He Knew Of Old.
Loafers Roosting On The Snubbing Posts Hailed Him, At First With
Raillery; But, Coming Nearer, He Was Recognized. "Hello, Bill;
Back Again? Glad To See You," And There Was Superabundant Help To
Land The Canoe.
"Wall, Wall, Wall, So It's Really You," Said The Touter Of A Fur
House, In Extremely Friendly Voice; "Come In Now And We'll Hev A
Drink."
"No, Sir-Ree," Said Bill Decisively, "I Don't Drink Till Business
Is Done."
"Wall, Now, Bill, Here's Van Roost's Not Ten Steps Away An' He
Hez Tapped The Finest Bar'l In Years."
"No, I Tell Ye, I'm Not Drinking -- Now."
"Wall, All Right, Ye Know Yer Own Business. I Thought Maybe Ye'd
Be Glad To See Us."
"Well, Ain't I?"
"Hello, Bill," And Bill's Fat Brother-In-Law Came Up. Thus Does
Me Good, An' Yer Sister Is Spilin' To See Ye. We'll Hev One On
This."
"No, Sam, I Ain't Drinkin'; I've Got Biz To Tend."
"Wall, Hev Just One To Clear Yer Head. Then Settle Yer Business
And Come Back To Us."
So Bill Went To Have One To Clear His Head. "I'll Be Back In Two
Minutes, Rolf," But Rolf Saw Him No More For Many Days.
"You Better Come Along, Cub," Called Out A Red-Nosed Member Of
The Group. But Rolf Shook His Head.
"Here, I'll Help You Git Them Ashore," Volunteered An Effusive
Stranger, With One Eye.
"I Don't Want Help."
"How Are Ye Gain' To Handle 'Em Alone?"
"Well, There's One Thing I'd Be Glad To Have Ye Do; That Is, Go
Up There And Bring Peter Vandam."
"I'll Watch Yer Stuff While You Go."
"No, I Can't Leave." "Then Go To Blazes; D'yte Take Me For Yer
Errand Boy?" And Rolf Was Left Alone.
He Was Green At The Business, But Already He Was Realizing The
Power Of That Word Fur And The Importance Of The Peltry Trade.
Fur Was The One Valued Product Of The Wilderness That Only The
Hunter Could Bring. The Merchants Of The World Were As Greedy For
Fur As For Gold, And Far More So Than For Precious Stones.
It Was A Commodity So Light That, Even In Those Days, A Hundred
Weight Of Fur Might Range In Value From One Hundred To Five
Thousand Dollars, So That A Man With A Pack Of Fine Furs Was A
Capitalist. The Profits Of The Business Were Good For Trapper,
Very Large For The Trader, Who Doubled His First Gain By Paying
In Trade; But They Were Huge For The Albany Middleman, And
Colossal For The New Yorker Who Shipped To London.
With Such Allurements, It Was Small Wonder That More Country Was
Explored And Opened For Fur Than For Settlement Or Even For Gold;
And There Were More Serious Crimes And High-Handed Robberies Over
The Right To Trade A Few Furs Than Over Any Other Legitimate
Business. These Things Were New To Rolf Within The Year, But He
Was Learn- Ing The Lesson, And Warren's Remarks About Fur Stuck
In His Memory With Growing Value. Every Incident Since The Trip
Began Had Given Them New Points.
The Morning Passed Without Sign Of Bill; So, When In The
Afternoon, Some Bare-Legged Boys Came Along, Rolf Said To Them:
"Do Any Of Ye Know Where Peter Vandam's House Is?"
"Yeh, That's It Right There," And They Pointed To A Large Log
House Less Than A Hundred Yards Away.
"Do Ye Know Him?"
"Yeh, He's My Paw," Said A Sun-Bleached Freckle-Face.
"If You Bring Him Here Right Away, I'll Give You A Dime. Tell Him
I'm From Warren's With A Cargo."
The Dusty Stampede That Followed Was Like That Of A Mustang Herd,
For A Dime Was A Dime In Those Days. And Very Soon, A Tall,Ruddy
Man Appeared At The Dock. He Was A Dutchman In Name Only. At
First Sight He Was Much Like The Other Loafers, But Was Bigger,
And Had A More Business-Like Air When Observed Near At Hand.
"Are You From Warren's?"
"Yes, Sir."
"Alone? "
"No, Sir. I Came With Bill Bymus. But He Went Off Early This
Morning; I Haven't Seen Him Since. I'm Afraid He's In Trouble."
"Where'd Ho Go?"
"In There With Some Friends."
"Ha, Just Like Him; He's In Trouble All Right. He'll Be No Good
For A Week. Last Time He Came Near Losing All Our Stuff. Now
Let's See What Ye've Got."
"Are You Mr. Peter Vandam? "
"Of Course I Am."
Still Rolf Looked Doubtful. There Was A Small Group Around, And
Rolf Heard Several Voices, "Yes, This Is Peter; Ye Needn't
A-Worry." But Rolf Knew None Of The Speakers. His Look Of
Puzzlement At First Annoyed Then Tickled The Dutchman, Who
Exploded Into A Hearty Guffaw.
"Wall, Wall, You Sure Think Ill Of Us. Here, Now Look At That,"
And He Drew Out A Bundle Of Letters Addressed To Master Peter
Vandam. Then He Displayed A Gold Watch Inscribed On The Back
"Peter Vandam"; Next He Showed A Fob Seal With A Scroll And An
Inscription, "Petrus Vandamus"; Then He Turned To A Youngster And
Said, "Run, There Is The Reverend Dr. Powellus, He May Help Us";
So The Black-Garbed, Knee-Breached, Shovel-Hatted Clergyman Came
And Pompously Said: "Yes, My Young Friend, Without Doubt You May
Rest Assured That This Is Our Very Estimable Parishioner, Master
Peter Vandam; A Man Well Accounted In The World Of Trade."
"And Now," Said Peter, "With The Help Of My Birth- Register And
Marriage-Certificate, Which Will Be Placed At Your Service With
All Possible Haste, I Hope I May Win Your Recognition." The
Situation, At First Tense, Had Become More And More Funny, And
The
Comments (0)