[Gutenberg 42066] • The Young Marooners on the Florida Coast
- Authors
- Goulding, F.R.
- Publisher
- General Books
- Tags
- florida -- description and travel -- juvenile fiction , survival -- juvenile fiction , islands -- juvenile fiction , castaways -- juvenile fiction , rescues -- juvenile fiction , tampa bay (fla.) -- juvenile fiction , natural history -- florida -- juvenile fiction , robinsonades
- ISBN
- 9781459001916
- Date
- 2008-10-01T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.55 MB
- Lang
- en
Purchase of this book includes free trial access to [www.million-books.com](http://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: CHAPTER III. TAMPA BAY?BELLEVUE?UNLADING A DANGEROUS CUT?HOW TO STOP A BLEEDING ARTERY?TOM STARBOARD AGAIN. Tampa Bay is a perfect gem of its kind. Running eastward from the gulf for twelve or fifteen miles, then turning suddenly to the North, it is so far sheltered from without, that, except in case of severe westerly gales, its waters are ever quiet and clear as crystal. Its beach is composed of sand and broken shells of such snowy whiteness as almost to dazzle the eye, and it slopes so gradually from the land, that, in many places, a child may -wade for a great distance without danger. To those who bathe in its limpid waters it is a matter of curiosity to see below, the slow crawling of the conch, while the nimble crab scampers off in haste, and fish and prawn dart wantonly around. When the tide is down there is no turnpike in the world better fitted for a pleasure ride than that smooth hard beach, from which no dust can rise, and which is of course is level as a floor. The spot on which Dr. Gordon proposed to build, was one commanding a view both of the distant fort and of the open sea, or rather of the green islands which guarded the mouth of the bay. It already contained a small house, with two rooms, erected by a white adventurer, and afterwards sold to an Indian chief of the better class. Dr. Gordon had been originally attracted by the picturesque beauty of its location, and, on closer inspection, still more interested by seeing on each side of the chiefs door a large bell pepper, that, having grown for years untouched by frost, had attained the height of eight or ten feet, and was covered all the year round with magnificent bells of green and crimson. The old chief was dead, and the premises had been vacated for more than a year. Early in the afternoon the bri...