Crusoes of the Frozen North eBook

William Gordon Stables
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 55 pages of information about Crusoes of the Frozen North.

Crusoes of the Frozen North eBook

William Gordon Stables
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 55 pages of information about Crusoes of the Frozen North.

Title:  Crusoes of the Frozen North

Author:  Gordon Stables

Release Date:  April 11, 2004 [EBook #11997]

Language:  English

Character set encoding:  ASCII

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[Illustration:  They found Tom at the lake-side, standing over A huge dead bear.]

The Crusoes Of The Frozen North

From the Well-known Story by Dr. Gordon Stables

CHAPTER I

“I’m sure of one thing,” said Aralia to her little sister Pansy, as they sat together one lovely summer afternoon on the garden seat, and gazed away and away far over the North Sea.  “I’m quite sure of one thing.  Nobody ever could have so good an uncle as our uncle.  Now, could anybody, Pansy?”

“Oh no!” answered Pansy, shaking her pretty head.  Pansy was hardly eight years old, and always agreed with her older sister, who was nearly eleven.

“How I wish he were home again from his old ship,” sighed Aralia, “and Tom with him!”

“Well, Ara, we can sit here hours and hours every day and watch the sea, can’t we?”

“Yes, and we shall easily know the ship.  As she goes by, shell set all her flags a-flying, and, if Father isn’t at home, Mother will send up our great red flag on the garden pole.  Oh dear!  I could nearly cry for joy to think of it!”

“And me too!” said Pansy.

“And me too!” Veevee seemed to say, as he gave a short bark, and, jumping down from the seat, ran round the garden, looking like a fluffy white ball.

The sea was very blue, only patched with green wherever a cloud-shadow fell on it.  Down beneath the cliff on which the cottage stood, the waves broke lazily in long white lines of foam.  On the sea itself were vessels of almost every kind, from the little fishing craft with brown sails to great ships sailing away to distant lands.

Aralia knew what class of vessel each was by its rig; her best of uncles had taught her.  And well could she use the spy-glass too, which she now held to her right eye.  It had been hard at first to keep the left closed, but she could manage it now quite easily without asking Pansy to clap a hand over it.

Soon she began to talk in little gasps: 

“Oh, Pansy—­I think—­Oh, I’m nearly sure—­yes—­yes—­it must be! it is Uncle’s ship!  I can see the flags all a-flying—­Hurrah!  Come and look!”

[Illustration]

Pansy sat on her sister’s knee and peeped through the glass.  Then both the children started up and waved their arms in the air at the far-off ship.  They were just about to rush off to tell Mother, when their cousin Frank came up.  He was a lad of about thirteen or fourteen, but he was so tall and manly that he looked older.

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Crusoes of the Frozen North from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.