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In this juncture he again becamethe captain of fifteen years, as he had been on the "Pilgrim." But hewould not say anything which could alarm the poor mother before themoment for action had arrived.And he said nothing, not even when, arrived on the bank of a ratherlarge stream, preceding the little troop about one hundred feet, heperceived enormous animals, which threw themselves under the largeplants on the brink.
Plattner offers no interpretation, for nonewas given him. It is well the reader should understand this clearly. Dayafter day, with his head reeling, he wandered about this strange lit worldoutside the world, weary and, towards the end, weak and hungry. By day--byour earthly day, that is--the ghostly vision of the old familiar sceneryof Sussexville, all about him, irked and worried him.tatzarrelpou
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