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nts, separated by some almighty hand, and thus left frowning at each other. It was with a feeling of awe that one looked up the face of these stupendous cliffs, and I felt a shuddering sensation as I neared the mighty gate between them. "Do you see that point?" asked Seguin, indicating a rock that jutted out from the highest ledge of the chasm. I signified in the affirmative, for the question was addressed to myself. "That is the leap you were so desirous of taking. We found you dangling against yonder rock." "Good God!" I ejaculated, as my eyes rested upon the dizzy eminence. My brain grew giddy as I sat in my saddle gazing upward, and I was fain to ride onward. "But for your noble horse," continued my companion, "the doctor here would have been stopping about this time to hypothecate upon your bones. Ho, Moro! beautiful Moro!" "Oh, mein Gott! Ya, ya!" assented the botanist, looking up against the precipice, apparently with a feeling of awe such as I felt myself. Seguin had ridden alongside me, and was patting my horse on the neck with expressions of admiration. "But why?" I asked, the remembrance of our first interview now occurring to me, "why were you so eager to possess him?" "A fancy." "Can I not understand it? I think you said then that I could not?" "Oh, yes! Quite easily, monsieur. I intended to steal my own daughter, and I wanted, for that purpose, to have the aid of your horse." "But how?" "It was before I had heard the news of this intended expedition of our enemy. As I had no hopes of obtaining her otherwise, it was my design to have entered their country alone, or with a tried comrade, and by stratagem to have carried her off. Their horses are swift, yet far inferior to the Arab, as you may have an opportunity of seeing. With such an animal as that, I would have been comparatively safe, unless hemmed in or surrounded, and even then I might have got off with a few scratches, I intended to have disguised myself, and entered the town as one of their own warriors. I have long been master of their language." "It would have been a perilous enterprise." "True! It was a _dernier ressort_, and only adopted because all other efforts had failed; after years of yearning, deep craving of the heart. I might have perished. It was a rash thought, but I, at that time, entertained it fully." "I hope we shall succeed now." "I have high hopes. It seems as if some overruling
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