[The Boy Hunters by Captain Mayne Reid]@TWC D-Link book
The Boy Hunters

CHAPTER ELEVEN
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CHAPTER ELEVEN.
THE CHAIN OF DESTRUCTION.
Directly in front of the tent, and at no great distance from it, a thick network of vines stretched between two trees.

These trees were large tupelos, and the vines, clinging from trunk to trunk and to one another, formed an impenetrable screen with their dark green leaves.

Over the leaves grew flowers, so thickly as almost to hide them--the whole surface shining as if a bright carpet had been spread from tree to tree and hung down between them.

The flowers were of different colours.
Some were white and starlike, but the greater number were the large scarlet cups of the trumpet-vine (_bignonia_).
Francois, although listening to his brother, had for some time kept his eyes in that direction, as if admiring the flowers.

All at once, interrupting the conversation, he exclaimed,-- "_Voila_! look yonder--humming-birds!" Now the sight of humming-birds is not so common in America as travellers would have you believe.


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