[Willis the Pilot by Johanna Spyri]@TWC D-Link book
Willis the Pilot

CHAPTER XV
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Is it not so, Miss Wolston ?" "Yes, Master Fritz." On his side, Jack had approached Miss Sophia.
"So you won't give me your gazelle ?" he whispered.
"No, certainly not, Mr.Jack," replied Sophia; "if you had saved my life, as Fritz saved my sister's, I should then have had the right to make you a present.

But you know it is not my fault." "Nor mine either," said Jack.
"Perhaps not; but if I had fallen into the sea, you would have allowed the sharks to swallow me, would you not ?" "I only wish we had been attacked by a hyena or a bear on our way to Waldeck." "God be thanked, that we were not!" "Well, but look here, Miss Sophia; let me paint the scene.

You have fainted, as a matter of course, and fallen prostrate on the ground, insensible." "That is likely enough, if we had encountered one of the animals you mention." "Then I throw myself between you and the savage brute." "Supposing you were not half a mile off at the time." "No fear of that--he rises, on his hind legs, and glares." "Is it a hyena or a bear ?" "Oh, whichever you like--he opens his jaws, and growls." "Like the wolf at Little Red Riding Hood." "I plunge my arm down his throat and choke him." "Clever, very; but are you not wounded ?" "I beg your pardon, however; all my thoughts are centred in you--I think of nothing else." "I am insensible, am I not ?" "Yes, more than ever--we all run towards you, and exert ourselves to bring you back to your senses." "Then I come to life again." "No, stop a bit." "But it is tiresome to be so long insensible." "My mother has luckily a bottle of salts, which she holds to your nose--I run off to the nearest brook, and return with water in the crown of my cap, with which I bathe your temples." "Oh, in that case, I should open one eye at least.

Which eye is opened first after fainting ?" "I really don't know." "In that case, to avoid mistakes, I should open both." "It is only then, when I find you are recovering, that I discover the brute has severely bitten my arm." "Then comes my turn to nurse you." "You express your thanks in your sweetest tones, and I forget my wounds." "Sweet tones do no harm, if they are accompanied with salves and ointment." "In short, I am obliged to carry my arm in a sling for three months after." "Is that not rather long ?" "No; because your arm, in some sort, supplies, meantime, the place of mine." "Your picture has, at least, the merit of being poetic.

Is it finished ?" "Not till next New Year's Day, when you present me with an embroidered scarf, as the ladies of yore used to do to the knights that defended them from dragons and that sort of thing." "What a pity all this should be only a dream!" "Well, I am not particularly extravagant, at all events; others dream of fortune, honor, and glory." "Whilst you confine your aspirations to a bear, a bite, and a scarf." "You see nothing was wanted but the opportunity." "And foresight." "Foresight ?" "Yes; if you had previously made arrangements with a bear, the whole scene might have been realized." "You are joking, whilst I am taking the matter _au serieux_." "That order is usually reversed; generally you are the quiz and I am the quizzee." "You will admit, at all events, that I would not have permitted the bear to eat you." Here Sophia burst into a peal of laughter, and vanished with her gazelle.
FOOTNOTES: [D] Aulus Gellius, VII., 8.
[E] Macrobius, _Saturn_, XL, 4.
[F] Plutarch.
[G] Pliny, IX., 53..


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