The Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen eBook

Rudolf Erich Raspe
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 185 pages of information about The Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen.

The Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen eBook

Rudolf Erich Raspe
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 185 pages of information about The Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen.

My words filled them with confidence and valour, and they unanimously agreed to continue the chase.  We penetrated the frightful deserts and gloomy woods of America, beyond the source of the Ohio, through countries utterly unknown before.  I frequently took the diversion of shooting in the woods, and one day that I happened with three attendants to wander far from our troop, we were suddenly set upon by a number of savages.  As we had expended our powder and shot, and happened to have no side-arms, it was in vain to make any resistance against hundreds of enemies.  In short, they bound us, and made us walk before them to a gloomy cavern in a rock, where they feasted upon what game they had killed, but which not being sufficient, they took my three unfortunate companions and myself, and scalped us.  The pain of losing the flesh from my head was most horrible; it made me leap in agonies, and roar like a bull.  They then tied us to stakes, and making great fires around us, began to dance in a circle, singing with much distortion and barbarity, and at times putting the palms of their hands to their mouths, set up the war-whoop.  As they had on that day also made a great prize of some wine and spirits belonging to our troop, these barbarians, finding it delicious, and unconscious of its intoxicating quality, began to drink it in profusion, while they beheld us roasting, and in a very short time they were all completely drunk, and fell asleep around the fires.  Perceiving some hopes, I used most astonishing efforts to extricate myself from the cords which I was tied, and at length succeeded.  I immediately unbound my companions, and though half roasted, they still had power enough to walk.  We sought about for the flesh that had been taken off our heads, and having found the scalps, we immediately adapted them to our bloody heads, sticking them on with a kind of glue of a sovereign quality, that flows from a tree in that country, and the parts united and healed in a few hours.  We took care to revenge ourselves on the savages, and with their own hatchets put every one of them to death.  We then returned to our troop, who had given us up for lost, and they made great rejoicings on our return.  We now proceeded in our journey through this prodigious wilderness, Gog and Magog acting as pioneers, hewing down the trees, &c., at a great rate as we advanced.  We passed over numberless swamps and lakes and rivers, until at length we discovered a habitation at some distance.  It appeared a dark and gloomy castle, surrounded with strong ramparts, and a broad ditch.  We called a council of war, and it was determined to send a deputation with a trumpet to the walls of the castle, and demand friendship from the governor, whoever he might be, and an account if aught he knew of Wauwau.  For this purpose our whole caravan halted in the wood, and Gog and Magog reclined amongst the trees, that their enormous strength and size should not be discovered, and give umbrage to the lord of

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The Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.