[The Mission by Frederick Marryat]@TWC D-Link book
The Mission

CHAPTER I
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The reason given for this separation was, that it was impossible to procure food for so large a number, and that they would be more likely to obtain sustenance when divided.

The party who thus proceeded in advance encountered the most terrible difficulties; they coasted along the seashore because they had no other food than the shell-fish found on the rocks; they had continually to cross rivers from a mile to two miles wide; they were kept from their slumbers by the wild beasts which prowled around them, and at length they endured so much from want of water, that their sufferings were extreme.

They again subdivided and separated, wandering they hardly knew where, exposed to a burning sun, without clothing and without food.

One by one they sat down and were left behind to die, or to be devoured by the wild beasts before they were dead.

At last they were reduced to such extremity, that they proposed to cast lots for one to be killed to support the others; they turned back on their route, that they might find the dead bodies of their companions for food.
Finally, out of the whole crew, three or four, purblind and staggering from exhaustion, craving for death, arrived at the borders of the colony, where they were kindly received and gradually recovered." "You now speak of the first party who separated from the captain and the passengers, do you not, uncle ?" "Yes." "And what became of the captain's party ?" "No tidings were heard of them; their fate was unknown; it was long supposed that they had all perished; for if the sufferings of the seamen, inured to toil and danger, had been so great, what chance was there for helpless women and children?
But after some years, there was a report that they had been saved, and were living with the savages.


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