第9章
- Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs
- 佚名
- 233字
- 2015-12-26 16:55:47
On Monday (as I said) they set their wigwams on fire and went away. It was a cold morning, and before us there was a great brook with ice on it; some waded through it, up to the knees and higher, but others went till they came to a beaver dam, and I amongst them, where through the good providence of God, I did not wet my foot. I went along that day mourning and lamenting, leaving farther my own country, and traveling into a vast and howling wilderness, and I understood something of Lot's wife's temptation, when she looked back. We came that day to a great swamp, by the side of which we took up our lodging that night. When I came to the brow of the hill, that looked toward the swamp, I thought we had been come to a great Indian town (though there were none but our own company). The Indians were as thick as the trees: it seemed as if there had been a thousand hatchets going at once. If one looked before one there was nothing but Indians, and behind one, nothing but Indians, and so on either hand, I myself in the midst, and no Christian soul near me, and yet how hath the Lord preserved me in safety? Oh the experience that I have had of the goodness of God, to me and mine!
- Hippolytus
- Soldiers Three-2
- The Crisis Papers
- Their Silver Wedding Journey
- To The Last Man
- Poems and Songs of Robert Burnsl
- The dawn of amateur radio in the U
- Moments of Vision and Miscellaneous Verses
- Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches
- Taming of the Shrew
- IN THE SOUTH SEAS
- The History and Practice of the Art of
- The Crystal Stopper
- The Queen of Hearts
- Camille