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قراءة كتاب Our Little Brazilian Cousin
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
id="pgepubid00003">Contents
CHAPTER | PAGE | |
I. | A Quiet Siesta | 1 |
II. | In the Forest | 11 |
III. | A Tropical Storm | 20 |
IV. | Along the Amazon | 33 |
V. | A Visit to Grandmamma's | 44 |
VI. | En Route to Rio | 52 |
VII. | In the Capital | 66 |
VIII. | A Gala Day in Rio | 78 |
IX. | The Coffee Plantation | 91 |
X. | A Treat in Prospect | 101 |
XI. | The Falls of Iguazu | 111 |
XII. | Guacha | 122 |
List of Illustrations
PAGE | |
"He threw himself down upon the grass" (See page 4) | Frontispiece |
"He placed himself on a raft and was rowed to the middle of the great river" | 27 |
"This he kept up until the paddle had a thick coating of rubber" | 38 |
"The Fazenda of the Senhor Dias stood upon a hill overlooking the Amazon" | 44 |
"The children saw for the first time the harbour of Rio de Janeiro" | 66 |
"'I must not be silly and cry,' she said to herself" | 116 |
CHAPTER I
A QUIET SIESTA
Affonzo was tired of talking to the white cockatoo. It was the time of day when his little sister Lola took her siesta, and he had no one to play with. He was himself such a big boy, soon eleven years old, that he felt no longer the need of the daily siesta, although in the warm country of Brazil where he lived, even grown people like a nap in the middle of the day.
Affonzo himself did not feel very lively. The sun beat down like a great ball of fire and only the cool veranda or the shady garden seemed enticing. The garden should have been pleasant enough to satisfy any boy, for it was a vision of tropic beauty. Tall palms waved their feathery branches heavenward, and gaily coloured flowers flaunted their gorgeous petals while brilliant birds flittered hither and yon.
But Affonzo was used to all this beauty, and he wanted something new to do, for this little Brazilian cousin was very like his American ones and could not be quiet very long. Even the fruit garden seemed tiresome. Generally he was glad to spend his time there, for the huge banana trees which grew in a banana patch at the end of the house were sure of several visits from him during the day. The plants were twice as tall as he, and the fruit grew in great bunches, many of them weighing fifty pounds, and Affonzo always chose the finest for himself and Lola to eat. Besides these there were figs, pineapples, mangoes, grapes and oranges all of which grow in Brazil.
The American watermelon also had been planted and the Senhor was watching eagerly to see if it would bear fruit, for he had been told that in other parts of Brazil it grew rapidly and bore well. Affonzo was much interested in it too, for his cousin in the States had sent the seeds and told him how delicious the fruit was.
He strolled toward the sunny slope where the vines were