Author : Ephraim George Squier
Publisher : Rarebooksclub.com
Page : 238 pages
File Size : 46,13 MB
Release : 2012-05
Category :
ISBN : 9781458948489
Book Description
Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: gaudy red scarf, wound round the head in the form of a peaked turban; and two fat arms, rolling down like elephants' trunks against a white robe for a background, which concealed a bust that passeth description. That portrait? long may it wave as the man said, at the Kossuth dinner, when he toasted The day we celebrate MY LA NDL ATT. My landlady was satisfied, and generous withal, for she not only paid me the ten pounds, and gave me my two weeks board and lodging in the bargain, but introduced me to a colored gentleman, a friend of hers, who sailed a little schooner twice a year to the Mosquito Shore, on the coast of Central America, where he traded off refuse rum and gaudy cottons for turtle-shells and sarsaparilla. There was a steamer from Kingston, once a month, to Cartha- gena, Chagres, San Juan, Belize, and along chapter{Section 4The prince Albert. 28 shore; but, for obvious reasons, I could not go in a steamer. So I struck up a bargain with the fragrant skipper, by the terms of which he bound himself to land me, bag and baggage, at Bluefields, the seat of Mosquito royalty, for the sum of three pounds, currency. Why Captain Ponto (for so I shall call my landlady's friend, the colored skipper) named his little schooner the Prince Albert, I can not imagine, unless he thought thereby to do honor to the Queen- Consort; for the aforesaid schooner had Jtidently got old, and been condemned, long before that lucky Dutchman woke the echoes of Gotha with his baby cries. The Prince Albert was of about seventy tons burden, built something on the model of the Jung-frau, the first vessel of the Netherlands that rolled itself into New York bay, like some unwieldy porpoise, after a rapid passage of about six months from the Hague. The wise men of th...