The Mission by Frederick Marryat
page 19 of 382 (04%)
page 19 of 382 (04%)
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from exhaustion, craving for death, arrived at the borders of the
colony, where they were kindly received and gradually recovered." "You now speak of the first party who separated from the captain and the passengers, do you not, uncle?" "Yes." "And what became of the captain's party?" "No tidings were heard of them; their fate was unknown; it was long supposed that they had all perished; for if the sufferings of the seamen, inured to toil and danger, had been so great, what chance was there for helpless women and children? But after some years, there was a report that they had been saved, and were living with the savages. Le Vaillant first mentioned it, and then it died away and was not credited; but since that, the reports of various travelers appear to give confirmation to what Le Vaillant asserted. The paragraph you have now read in the newspaper has again renewed the assertion, and the parties from whom it proceeds are by all accounts worthy of credence. You may imagine, my dear boy, what a pang it gives me when I read these reports,--when I reflect that my poor girl, who was with that party, may at this moment be alive, may have returned to a state of barbarism,--the seeds of faith long dead in her bosom,--now changed to a wild, untutored savage, knowing no God." "But, my dear uncle, allowing that my aunt is alive, she was not so young at the time of the wreck as to forget entirely what she had been taught." |
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