The Rudder Grangers Abroad and Other Stories by Frank Richard Stockton
page 21 of 183 (11%)
page 21 of 183 (11%)
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were. Euphemia earnestly desired that I should have a pelican, and
although she always wished I should hit one of these, she was always glad when I did not. "Think how mournful it would be," she said, "if they should take their accustomed flights, morning and evening, with one of their number missing." "Repeating Wordsworth's verses, I suppose," remarked the little teacher. I had been disappointed in the number of pelicans we had seen. I knew that Florida was one of the homes of the pelican, and I had not expected to see these birds merely in small detachments. But our boatman assured me that on our return trip he would give me a chance of seeing and shooting as many pelicans as I could desire. We would touch at Pelican Island, which was inhabited entirely by these birds, and whence the parties of seven were evidently sent out. When we had had all the fishing we wanted, we broke up our camp, and started northward. We had all been very happy and contented during our ten days' sojourn in this delightful place; but when at last our departure was determined upon, the Paying Teller became possessed with a wild desire to go, go, go. There was some reason, never explained nor fully expressed, why no day, hour, minute, or second should be lost in speeding to the far Northwest. The boatman, too, impelled by what impulse I know not, seemed equally anxious to get home. As for the Paying Teller's "group," it always did exactly as he wished. Therefore, although Euphemia and I would have been glad to linger here and there upon our homeward way, we could not gainsay the desire of the majority |
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