[The Swiss Family Robinson; or Adventures in a Desert Island by Johann David Wyss]@TWC D-Link bookThe Swiss Family Robinson; or Adventures in a Desert Island CHAPTER XXXII 33/34
Notwithstanding our uneasiness, and our wretched condition, for we were wet to the skin, we could not but laugh heartily at him.
I would not consent to use the coverings he had brought; neither Fritz nor I could be worse for the distance we had to go, and Jack was younger and more delicate; I obliged him therefore to retain his curious protection; and asked how he had left his mother. "Very uneasy," said he, "about you; else I think she must be much better, for her cheeks are very red, and her eyes very bright, and she talks incessantly.
She would have come herself to seek you, but could not rise; and when I told her I would come, she bid me be very quick; but when I was coming down stairs, I heard her call me back for fear of the rain and the thunder; I would not hear her, but ran as fast as I could, hoping to reach Tent House.
Why did you come back so soon ?" "To spare you half your journey, my brave little man," said I, hastening on; for Jack's account of his mother made me uneasy.
I perceived she must be labouring under fever, and the blood ascending to her head.
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