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    Chapter 2 - Page 2

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    would soon be missed and pursued.

    He reached his destination in safety; hired out to a farmer for a month
    through the harvest; then crossed from the Hudson to the Connecticut.
    Meeting here with an adventurer to the unknown regions lying about the
    head waters of the latter river, he ascended with this man in a canoe,
    paddling and pulling for many miles. Here again he hired himself out for
    three months; at the end of that time to receive for his wages two
    hundred acres of land lying in New Hampshire. The cheapness of the land
    was not alone owing to the newness of the country, but to the perils
    investing it. Not only was it a wilderness abounding with wild beasts,
    but the widely-scattered inhabitants were in continual dread of being,
    at some unguarded moment, destroyed or made captive by the Canadian
    savages, who, ever since the French war, had improved every opportunity
    to make forays across the defenceless frontier.

    His employer proving false to his contract in the matter of the land,
    and there being no law in the country to force him to fulfil it,
    Israel--who, however brave-hearted, and even much of a dare-devil upon a
    pinch, seems nevertheless to have evinced, throughout many parts of his
    career, a singular patience and mildness--was obliged to look round for
    other means of livelihood than clearing out a farm for himself in the
    wilderness. A party of royal surveyors were at this period surveying the
    unsettled regions bordering the Connecticut river to its source. At
    fifteen shillings per month, he engaged himself to this party as
    assistant chain-bearer, little thinking that the day was to come when he
    should clank the king's chains in a dungeon, even as now he trailed them
    a free ranger of the woods. It was midwinter; the land was surveyed upon
    snow-shoes. At the close of the day, fires were kindled with dry
    hemlock, a hut thrown up, and the party ate and slept.

    Paid off at last, Israel bought a gun and ammunition, and turned
    hunter. Deer, beaver, etc., were plenty. In two or three months he had
    many skins to show. I suppose it never entered his mind that he was thus
    qualifying himself for a marksman of men. But thus were tutored those
    wonderful shots who did such execution at Bunker's Hill; these, the
    hunter-soldiers, whom Putnam bade wait till the white of the enemy's eye

    was seen.

    With the result of his hunting he purchased a hundred acres of land,
    further down the river, toward the more settled parts; built himself a
    log hut, and in two summers, with his own hands, cleared thirty acres
    for sowing. In the winter seasons he hunted and trapped. At the end of
    the two years, he sold back his land--now much improved--to the original
    owner, at an advance of fifty pounds. He conveyed his cash
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