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the pathfinder-第22部分

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me now。  Hold firmly to the canoe; Mabel; and fear
nothing。〃

At the next moment the swift current had sucked them
into the rift; and for three or four minutes the awe…struck;
rather than the alarmed; girl saw nothing around her but
sheets of glancing foam; heard nothing but the roar of
waters。  Twenty times did the canoe appear about to dash
against some curling and bright wave that showed itself
even amid that obscurity; and as often did it glide away
again unharmed; impelled by the vigorous arm of him
who governed its movements。  Once; and once only; did
Jasper seem to lose command of his frail bark; during
which brief space it fairly whirled entirely round; but by
a desperate effort he brought it again under control; re…
covered the lost channel; and was soon rewarded for all
his anxiety by finding himself floating quietly in the deep
water below the rapids; secure from every danger; and
without having taken in enough of the element to serve
for a draught。

〃All is over; Mabel;〃 the young man cried cheerfully。
〃The danger is past; and you may now indeed hope to
meet your father this very night。〃

〃God be praised!  Jasper; we shall owe this great hap…
piness to you。〃

〃The Pathfinder may claim a full share in the merit;
but what has become of the other canoe?〃

〃I see something near us on the water; is it not the
boat of our friends?〃

A few strokes of the paddle brought Jasper to the side
of the object in question: it was the other canoe; empty
and bottom upwards。  No sooner did the young man as…
certain this fact; than he began to search for the swimmers;
and; to his great joy; Cap was soon discovered drifting down
with the current; the old seaman preferring the chances
of drowning to those of landing among savages。  He was
hauled into the canoe; though not without difficulty; and
then the search ended; for Jasper was persuaded that the
Pathfinder; would wade to the shore; the water being shal…
low in preference to abandoning his beloved rifle。

The remainder of the passage was short; though made
amid darkness and doubt。  After a short pause; a dull
roaring sound was heard; which at times resembled the
mutterings of distant thunder; and then again brought
with it the washing of waters。  Jasper announced to his
companions that they now heard the surf of the lake。
Low curved spits of land lay before them; into the bay
formed by one of which the canoe glided; and then it shot
up noiselessly upon a gravelly beach。  The transition that
followed was so hurried and great; that Mabel scarcely
knew what passed。  In the course of a few minutes; how…
ever sentinels had been passed; a gate was opened; and
the agitated girl found herself in the arms of a parent
who was almost a stranger to her。



CHAPTER VIII。

A land of love; and a land of light;
Withouten sun; or moon; or night:
Where the river swa'd a living stream;
And the light a pure celestial beam:
The land of vision; it would seem
A still; an everlasting dream。
_Queen's Wake。_


The rest that succeeds fatigue; and which attends a
newly awakened sense of security; is generally sweet and
deep。  Such was the fact with Mabel; who did not rise
from her humble pallet  such a bed as a sergeant's
daughter might claim in a remote frontier post  until
long after the garrison had obeyed the usual summons of
the drums; and had assembled at the morning parade。
Sergeant Dunham; on whose shoulders fell the task of
attending to these ordinary and daily duties; had got
through all his morning avocations; and was beginning to
think of his breakfast; before his child left her room; and
came into the fresh air; equally bewildered; delighted; and
grateful; at the novelty and security of her new situation。

At the time of which we are writing; Oswego was one of
the extreme frontier posts of the British possessions on this
continent。  It had not been long occupied; and was garri…
soned by a battalion of a regiment which had been origin…
ally Scotch; but into which many Americans had been re…
ceived since its arrival in this country; all innovation that
had led the way to Mabel's father filling the humble but
responsible situation of the oldest sergeant。  A few young
officers also; who were natives of the colonies; were to be
found in the corps。  The fort itself; like most works of
that character; was better adapted to resist an attack of
savages than to withstand a regular siege; but the great
difficulty of transporting heavy artillery and other neces…
saries rendered the occurrence of the latter a probability
so remote as scarcely to enter into the estimate of the en…
gineers who had planned the defences。  There were bas…
tions of earth and logs; a dry ditch; a stockade; a parade
of considerable extent; and barracks of logs; that answered
the double purpose of dwellings and fortifications。  A few
light fleld…pieces stood in the area of the fort; ready to be
conveyed to any point where they might be wanted; and
one or two heavy iron guns looked out from the summits
of the advanced angles; as so many admonitions to the
audacious to respect their power。

When Mabel; quitting the convenient; but compara…
tively retired hut where her father had been permitted to
place her; issued into the pure air of the morning; she
found herself at the foot of a bastion; which lay invitingly
before her; with a promise of giving a _coup d'oeil_ of all
that had been concealed in the darkness of the preceding
night。  Tripping up the grassy ascent; the light…hearted
as well as light…footed girl found herself at once on a point
where the sight; at a few varying glances; could take in all
the external novelties of her new situation。

To the southward lay the forest; through which she had
been journeying so many weary days; and which had proved
so full of dangers。  It was separated from the stockade by
a belt of open land; that had been principally cleared of
its woods to form the martial constructions around her。
This glacis; for such in fact was its military uses; might
have covered a hundred acres; but with it every sign of
civilization ceased。  All beyond was forest; that dense;
interminable forest which Mabel could now picture to
herself; through her recollections; with its hidden glassy
lakes; its dark rolling stream; and its world of nature。

Turning from this view; our heroine felt her cheek
fanned by a fresh and grateful breeze; such as she had not
experienced since quitting the far distant coast。  Here a
new scene presented itself: although expected; it was not
without a start; and a low exclamation indicative of pleas…
ure; that the eager eyes of the girl drank in its beauties。  To
the north; and east; and west; in every direction; in short;
over one entire half of the novel panorama; lay a field of
rolling waters。  The element was neither of that glassy
green which distinguishes the American waters in general;
nor yet of the deep blue of the ocean; the color being of a
slightly amber hue; which scarcely affected its limpidity。
No land was to be seen; with the exception of the adjacent
coast; which stretched to the right and left in an unbroken
outline of forest with wide bays and low headlands or
points; still; much of the shore was rocky; and into its
caverns the sluggish waters occasionally rolled; producing
a hollow sound; which resembled the concussions of a dis…
tant gun。  No sail whitened the surface; no whale or other
fish gambolled on its bosom; no sign of use or service re…
warded the longest and most minute gaze at its boundless
expanse。  It was a scene; on one side; of apparently end…
less forests; while a waste of seemingly interminable water
spread itself on the other。  Nature appeared to have de…
lighted in producing grand effects; by setting two of her
principal agents in bold relief to each other; neglecting de…
tails; the eye turning from the broad carpet of leaves to
the still broader field of fluid; from the endless but
gentle heavings of the lake to the holy calm and poetical
solitude of the forest; with wonder and delight。

Mabel Dunham; though unsophisticated; like most of
her countrywomen of that period; and ingenuous and
frank as any warm…hearted and sincere…minded girl well
could be; was not altogether without a feeling for the
poetry of this beautiful earth of ours。  Although she could
scarcely be said to be educated at all; for few of her sex
at that day and in this country received much more than
the rudiments of plain English instruction; still she had
been taught much more than was usual for young women
in her own station in life; and; in one sense certainly; she
did credit to her teaching。  The widow of a field…officer;
who formerly belonged to the same regiment as her father;
had taken the child in charge at the death of its mother;
and under the care of this lady Mabel had acquired some
tastes and many ideas which otherwise might always have
remained strangers to her。  Her situation in the family
had been less that of a domestic than of a humble com…
panion; and the results were quite apparent in her attire;
her language; her sentiments; and even in her feelings;
though neither; perhaps; rose to the level of those which
would properly characterize a lady。  She had lost the less
refined habits and manners of one in her original position;
without having quite reached a point that disqualified her
for the situation in life that the accidents of birth and
fortune would probably compel her to fill。  All else that
was distinctive and peculiar in her belonged to natural
character。

With such antecedents it will occasion the reader no
wonder if he learns that Mabel viewed the novel scene
before her with a pleasure far superior to that produced
by vulgar surprise。  She felt its ordinary beauties as most
would have felt them; but she had also a feeling for its
sublimity  for that softened solitude; that calm grandeur;
and eloquent repose; which ever pervades broad views of
natural objects yet undisturbed by the labors and strug…
gles of man。

〃How beautiful!〃 she exclaimed; unconscious of speak…
ing; as she stood on the solitary bastion; facing the air
from the lake; and experiencing the genial influen
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