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قراءة كتاب The Adventures of Dick Trevanion: A Story of Eighteen Hundred and Four

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The Adventures of Dick Trevanion: A Story of Eighteen Hundred and Four

The Adventures of Dick Trevanion: A Story of Eighteen Hundred and Four

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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href="@public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@39800@[email protected]#petherick-makes-a-discovery">PETHERICK MAKES A DISCOVERY

CHAPTER THE EIGHTEENTH

A HIGH DIVE

CHAPTER THE NINETEENTH

A BARGAIN WITH THE REVENUE

CHAPTER THE TWENTIETH

THE LAST DEAL

CHAPTER THE TWENTY-FIRST

THE ATTACK ON THE TOWERS

CHAPTER THE TWENTY-SECOND

JOHN TREVANION IN THE TOILS

CHAPTER THE TWENTY-THIRD

THE PRICE OF TREACHERY

CHAPTER THE TWENTY-FOURTH

PEACE AND GOODWILL

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

"THERE LOOMED OUT OF THE MIST A THREE-MASTED VESSEL" . . . . . . Frontispiece, see page 175

"'HALT, IN THE KING'S NAME!' CRIED MR. MILDMAY"

"'STAND!' CRIED DICK, DASHING FORWARD. 'LEAVE HIM, OR WE'LL FIRE'"

"AS THE SEAL PLUNGED INTO THE SEA, SAM BROUGHT HIS HAMMER DOWN"

"THERE WAS NO ONE TO HEAR THE SHORT DIALOGUE THAT ENSUED AT THE HEAD OF THE WELL"

"DICK RUSHED LIKE A WHIRLWIND ON THE MAN"

"PETHERICK'S HEAD APPEARED THROUGH THE HATCH"

"DELAROUSSE RUSHED HEADLONG TOWARDS THE APPROACHING GROUP"

CHAPTER THE FIRST

The Village and the Towers

The village of Polkerran lies snugly in a hollow between cliffs facing the Atlantic, at the head of a little bay that forms a natural harbour. The grey stone cottages rise from the sea-level in tiers, as in an amphitheatre, huddled together, with the narrowest and most tortuous of lanes between them. Through the midst a stream flows from the high ground behind, in summer a mere brook, in winter a swollen torrent that colours the sea far out with the soil it carries down. The bay is shaped like a horseshoe; at low tide its mouth is closed by a reef except at the northern end, where there is always a narrow fairway between the reef and the sharp point of land known as the Beal. Northward of this is another little inlet called Trevanion Bay, whence the coast winds north-east, a line of rugged, precipitous, and overhanging cliffs, unbroken until you come to St. Cuby's Cove, where they reach a height of three hundred feet, and bulge out over the sea like a penthouse roof.

One August evening, in the year 1804, a wide tubby boat lay in twelve feet of water, just outside the line of breakers beneath the cliffs, about a mile and a half from the village. The sun had been down some two hours, but there was enough of twilight to show to any one out at sea—the boat being invisible from the land—that it contained two lads, one a tall, slight, but muscular youth of seventeen or thereabouts, the other a thicker, sturdier boy, who looked older, but was, in fact, a year or more younger than his companion.

"Well, Maister Dick," said the younger boy, "I reckon we'd better go home-along; it do seem as if the water be too clear to-night."

"They're not on the feed, Sam, that's certain," replied Dick Trevanion. "But I don't like going empty-handed. I'm thinking of supper."

"It do be queer, sure enough. 'Tis a hot night, and they mostly comes in close when 'tis hot, and the biggest comes the closest. I 'spect what us do want is a bit of a tumble, to stir up the bottom and muddy the water."

Dick Trevanion had come out at sunset with his companion Sam Pollex to fish for salmon bass, which at this time of year were usually plentiful along the coast. For two hours they had had no luck. Every now and then a ripple and spirt on the smooth surface showed that fish were sporting beneath; but though they

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