Willis the Pilot eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 410 pages of information about Willis the Pilot.

Willis the Pilot eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 410 pages of information about Willis the Pilot.

“Then you think it is a terrific affair to kill a tiger or two?  You have been accustomed to the sea, and fancy landsmen are good for nothing but shooting crows and wild-cats; that is a mistake, however; we are familiar with larger game.”

“Shiver my timbers! do you call bears and tigers game?”

“I am afraid, Willis, you are a bit of a milksop.”

“Avast heaving there, Master Fritz! as it is, I am a half-hanged man already, so death has now no terrors Dov me; it is the first pang that is most felt.”

“Yes; but in the case of tigers, they never give you time to feel a second pang; miss your aim, and it is all over with you.”

“True; and therefore I wish you would give up the project.  As for myself, I would face anything with a four-pounder, but rifle practice on board ship is mostly confined to the marines; it is not that, however, I am troubled about; I am certain your worthy father would never forgive me if I countenance this project.”

“You need not tell him anything about it.”

“Where, then, are the skins to come from?  Can you say you bought them at the furrier’s?  You must really hit upon some other fancy.”

“But it is not a fancy, Willis, it is a necessity; it is not our own amusement we are consulting.  Just imagine yourself what will happen during the excursion now being arranged.  Our parents will, of course, offer their bear skins to Mr. and Mrs. Wolston; there will be refusals on the one side and entreaties on the other.”

“And, as is usual in these sort of discussions,” added Jack, “Mrs. Wolston will call her carriage.”

“Yes,” continued Fritz, “and my mother will most certainly deprive herself of a covering that is absolutely indispensable during the cold nights of this climate.”

“There is reason in what you say,” observed Willis, scratching his ear.

“You see, Willis, the thing ought and must be done.”

“As you put it, yes; but it will take time to prepare the skins.”

“They will not be ready in time for this expedition certainly, and my mother must do without her skin this journey; but it is our duty to prevent anything of the sort happening in future.”

“Were I to consent to this project,” said Willis, “there is still something more required.”

“What, Willis?”

“Why, the tigers and what’s-a-names; it is necessary to find the brute before you can get its skin.”

“Granted; there would be a difficulty in the case had we not here quite handy a magnificent covering of wild animals, all ready to kill or to be killed.  Just steer a point to the east, Willis; there, that will do.  Just beyond that bluff you see yonder, there is a low flat plain covered with brushwood and tufted with trees; on the left, this prairie is bounded by a chain of low hills, and on the right a broad river, which last we have named the St. John, because it bears some resemblance to a stream of that name in Florida; beyond this plain there is a swamp.”

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Willis the Pilot from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.