The Crater
The Crater
or, Vulcan's Peak
A Tale of the Pacific.
Book Excerpt
lphia, the river is, in truth, navigable
for such craft almost to Trenton Bridge. In the year 1793, when Mark
Woolston was just sixteen, a full-rigged ship actually came up, and lay
at the end of the wharf in Burlington, the little town nearly opposite
to Bristol, where she attracted a great deal of the attention of all the
youths of the vicinity. Mark was at home, in a vacation, and he passed
half his time in and about that ship, crossing the river in a skiff of
which he was the owner, in order to do so. From that hour young Mark
affected the sea, and all the tears of his mother and eldest sister, the
latter a pretty girl only two years his junior, and the more sober
advice of his father, could not induce him to change his mind. A six
weeks' vacation was passed in the discussion of this subject, when the
Doctor yielded to his son's importunities, probably foreseeing he should
have his hands full to educate his other children, and not unwilling to
put this child, as early as possible, in the way of supporting
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Regardless of Mark Twain's opinion, Cooper was a good writer with a decent command of the language and considerable knowledge of sea and forest.
This novel starts well but, sadly enough, deteriorates into a utopian tale well-larded with coincidences, and shows the limits of geological knowledge in the early 19th century.
Read the first half but consider well before finishing it.
This novel starts well but, sadly enough, deteriorates into a utopian tale well-larded with coincidences, and shows the limits of geological knowledge in the early 19th century.
Read the first half but consider well before finishing it.
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