Chapter 5

5-1John H. Tripler, Esq.

5-1John H. Tripler, Esq.

5-2Our self-forgetting traveller omits to give the distances of the remarkable journey he is pursuing. On the morning of the 6th he left Papertown; on the evening of the 7th he parted with the troops at Altodale; and now a little before midnight of the 8th he is at Newville—having walked a distance which cannot be much short ofninety milesin somesixty-five hours; carrying for more than one-half of the distance aboutone thousand letters, whose weight could not have been less thanthirty pounds—all this through drenching rains and over horrible roads; and fording or swimming streams whose bridges had been swept away by the flood!

5-2Our self-forgetting traveller omits to give the distances of the remarkable journey he is pursuing. On the morning of the 6th he left Papertown; on the evening of the 7th he parted with the troops at Altodale; and now a little before midnight of the 8th he is at Newville—having walked a distance which cannot be much short ofninety milesin somesixty-five hours; carrying for more than one-half of the distance aboutone thousand letters, whose weight could not have been less thanthirty pounds—all this through drenching rains and over horrible roads; and fording or swimming streams whose bridges had been swept away by the flood!


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