[Sailing Alone Around The World by Joshua Slocum]@TWC D-Link book
Sailing Alone Around The World

CHAPTER IX
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Indeed, the peril was even greater, inasmuch as the savages on comparatively fine days ventured forth on their marauding excursions, and in boisterous weather disappeared from sight, their wretched canoes being frail and undeserving the name of craft at all.

This being so, I now enjoyed gales of wind as never before, and the _Spray_ was never long without them during her struggles about Cape Horn.

I became in a measure inured to the life, and began to think that one more trip through the strait, if perchance the sloop should be blown off again, would make me the aggressor, and put the Fuegians entirely on the defensive.

This feeling was forcibly borne in on me at Snug Bay, where I anchored at gray morning after passing Cape Froward, to find, when broad day appeared, that two canoes which I had eluded by sailing all night were now entering the same bay stealthily under the shadow of the high headland.

They were well manned, and the savages were well armed with spears and bows.


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