The Wing-and-wing Author:James Fenimore Cooper 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: continued light, easy, and graceful. After passing the entrance of the port a mile or more, he tacked and looked up towards the haven. By this time, however, he ... more »had got so near in to the western clifis, that their lee deprived him of all air; and after keeping his canvas open half an hour in the little roads, it was all suddenly drawn to the yards, and the lugger anchored. chapter{Section 4CHAPTER H. " His stock, a few French phrases, got by heart, With much to learn, but nothing to Impart; The youth obedient to his sire's commands. Seta off a wanderer Into foreign lands." Cowfik. It was now nearly dark, and the crowd, having satisfied its idle curiosity, began slowly to disperse. The Signer Viti remained till the last, conceiving it to be his duty to be on the alert, in such troubled times; but with all his bustling activity, it escaped his vigilance and means of observation to detect the circumstance that the stranger, while he steered into the bay with so much confidence, had contrived to bring up at a point where not a single gun from the batteries could be brought to bear on him; while his own shot, had he been disposed to hostilities, would have completely raked the little haven. But Vito Viti, though so enthusiastic an admirer of the art, was no gunner himself, and little liked to dwell on the effect of shot, except as it applied to others, and not at all to himself. Of all the suspicious, apprehensive, and curious, who had been collected in and about the port, since it was known the lugger intended to come into the bay, Ghita and 'Maso alone remained on watch, after the vessel was anchored. A loud hail had been given by those intrusted with the execution of the quarantine laws, the great physical bugbear and moral mystification of the Mediterranean; and the...« less