[The Swiss Family Robinson; or Adventures in a Desert Island by Johann David Wyss]@TWC D-Link book
The Swiss Family Robinson; or Adventures in a Desert Island

CHAPTER XXXV
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I was not so much alarmed for Fritz, a strong, bold youth of nineteen years of age, and a determined hunter: as for poor Jack, bold even to rashness, and having neither strength nor experience to secure him, I could not help fancying him carried away by the stream, and his brother not daring to return without him.

My wife occasionally awoke, but the narcotic stupified her; she did not perceive the absence of her sons.

Francis slept tranquilly; but when Ernest awoke, and heard the tempest so terribly augmented, he was almost distracted; all his selfishness, all his indolence disappeared.

He entreated me to allow him to go in search of his brothers, and with difficulty I detained him.

To convince him that he was not the sole cause of the danger of Fritz and Jack, I related to him, for the first time, the history of the boat and the vessel, and assured him that the great cause of their anxiety to go over to Tent House, was to search for some traces of the unfortunate seamen and their vessel, exposed to that furious sea.
"And Fritz, also, is exposed to that sea," cried Ernest.


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