[First Across the Continent by Noah Brooks]@TWC D-Link book
First Across the Continent

CHAPTER XVII -- From Tidewater to the Sea
11/27

Next day they say: "Fortunately for us, the tide did not rise as high as our camp during the night; but being accompanied by high winds from the south, the canoes, which we could not place beyond its reach, were filled with water, and were saved with much difficulty.

Our position was very uncomfortable, but as it was impossible to move from it, we waited for a change of weather.

It rained, however, during the whole day, and at two o'clock in the afternoon the flood tide set in, accompanied by a high wind from the south, which, about four o'clock, shifted to the southwest and blew almost a gale directly from the sea.

The immense waves now broke over the place where we were camped; the large trees, some of them five or six feet thick, which had lodged at the point, were drifted over our camp, and the utmost vigilance of every man could scarcely save our canoes from being crushed to pieces.

We remained in the water, and drenched with rain, during the rest of the day, our only food being some dried fish and some rain-water which we caught.


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