[With Lee in Virginia by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link bookWith Lee in Virginia CHAPTER XII 6/40
However, you may as well sleep now if you can, for there will be nothing to do till night." Vincent went back to the edge of the wood, and sat down where he could command a view of the cottage.
The country was for the most part covered with wood, for it was but thinly inhabited except in the neighborhood of the main roads.
Few of the farmers had cleared more than half their ground; many only a few acres.
The patch, in which the house with its little clump of trees stood nearly in the center, was of some forty or fifty acres in extent, and though now rank with weeds, had evidently been carefully cultivated, for all the stumps had been removed, and the fence round it was of a stronger and neater character than that which most of the cultivators deemed sufficient. Presently he heard the sound of horses' feet in the forest behind him, and he made his way back to a road which ran along a hundred yards from the edge of the wood.
He reached it before the horseman came up, and lay down in the underwood a few yards back.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|