John S. C. (John Stevens Cabot) Abbott
Capitolo 11
the exploration of the region around, to see if there was some waiting for it attaches with ferocity
nearby. Then with their guns never ready to be grabbed, and holding a closing
watch for danger signals, they ploughed and they sowed and it gathered in them
picked.
This way fifteen years passed away. Civilization did the gradual abuses.
A truth small cluster of huts of trunk was reared in the neighborhood, where the
held in case of the necessity you/they could run away to the strong one for protection.
Christopher, to fifteen adult, was an illiterate boy, small in
stature, but very affectionate of the loneliness of the forest, and rather famous
as a shot. He was agreeable in disposition, you tame in his/her manners, and
in all the respects a good boy. He had a strong character. Anything him
undertaken, him quietly and without any finished boast. With sound
you judge, and gifted with unusual strength and the elasticity, he was equal
then held equal to some man in all the requisite of the life of frontier.
[The illustration]
To a short distance from the strong one it was a saddler and the Mr. Carson,
with the suggestion of friends, definite to start making apprenticeship his/her child, Kit now called,
to learn that work. The boy remained in this job for two tired
years. Although faithful to every duty, and earning the respect and
the trust of his/her employer, the job was congenial not to him. He craved for
the liberty of the wild region; for the sublime scenes of nature to that
such life would introduce him/it; for the exciting hunting of the Indian buffalo,
and the lucrative searches of the hunter of skins, being floating on distant brooks in
the canoe of whip, and loading his/her barking with rich furs that ever commanded
a ready sale.
Everybody that these small setups that protected strong have been grown in clusters around some. A
you equip that was brought above in the remote west it furnishes the following
interesting accident in his/her his/her own personal experience. It gives a lot a
graphic description of the alarms to which these pioneers were exposed: