[Peter Simple and The Three Cutters, Vol. 1-2 by Frederick Marryat]@TWC D-Link bookPeter Simple and The Three Cutters, Vol. 1-2 CHAPTER XXV 16/20
She spoke very good French, and told us that fortunately her husband was absent; that the reason why we had not been supplied was, that a wolf had met her little girl returning the other day, but had been beaten off by the mastiff, and that she was afraid to allow her to go again; that she heard the wolf had been killed this evening, and had intended her girl to have gone to us early to-morrow morning; that wolves were hardly known in that country, but that the severe winter had brought them down to the lowlands, a very rare circumstance, occurring perhaps not once in twenty years.
"But how did you pass the mastiff ?" said she; "that has surprised my daughter and me." O'Brien told her, upon which she said "that the English were really '_des braves_.' No other man had ever done the same." So I thought, for nothing would have induced me to do it.
O'Brien then told the history of the death of the wolf, with all particulars, and our intention, if we could not do better, of returning to Flushing. "I heard that Pierre Eustache came home yesterday," replied the woman; "and I do think that you will be safer there than here, for they will never think of looking for you among the _casernes_, which join their cabaret." "Will you lend us your assistance to get in ?" "I will see what I can do.
But are you not hungry ?" "About as hungry as men who have eaten nothing for two days." "_Mon Dieu! c'est vrai._ I never thought it was so long, but those whose stomachs are filled forget those who are empty.
God make us better and more charitable!" She spoke to the little girl in Dutch, who hastened to load the table, which we hastened to empty.
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