[From Canal Boy to President by Horatio Alger, Jr.]@TWC D-Link bookFrom Canal Boy to President CHAPTER XXV 7/11
Not stopping to argue the point, Garfield ordered him and his crew on board, and _himself taking the helm_, set out up the river. "Brown he stationed at the bow, where, with a long fending-pole in his hand, he was to keep one eye on the floating logs and uprooted trees, the other on the chicken-hearted captain. "The river surged and boiled and whirled against the boat, tossing her about as if she were a cockle-shell.
With every turn of her wheel she trembled from stem to stern, and with a full head of steam could only stagger along at the rate of three miles an hour.
When night came the captain begged to tie up till morning, for breasting that flood in the dark was sheer madness; but Brown cried out, 'Put her ahead, Gineral Jim,' and Garfield clutched the helm and drove her on through the darkness. "Soon they came to a sudden bend in the stream, where the swift current formed a furious whirlpool, and this catching the laboring boat, whirled her suddenly round, and drove her, head on, into the quicksands.
Mattocks were plied, and excavations made round the imbedded bow, and the bowman uttered oaths loud enough to have raised a small earthquake; but still the boat was immovable.
She was stuck fast in the mud, and every effort to move her was fruitless.
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