FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   197   198   199   200   201   202   203   204   205   206   207   208   209   210   >>  
hispering their conjectures to one another, they observed Guapo, to their great astonishment, _pointing his arrow upward_, and making as if he was going to discharge it in the air! This he, in fact, _did_ do a moment after; and they would have been puzzled by his apparently strange conduct, had they not observed, in the next instant, that the arrow, after flying high up, came down again head-foremost and stuck upright in the back of the turtle. The turtle dived at once, and all of them expected to see the upright arrow carried under water. What was their surprise as well as chagrin to see that it had fallen out, and was floating on the surface! Of course the wound had only been a slight one, and the turtle would escape, and be none the worse for it. But Guapo shared neither their surprise nor chagrin. Guapo felt sure that the turtle was his, and said nothing; but, jumping into the canoe, began to paddle himself out to where the creature had been last seen. What could he be after? thought they. As they watched him, they saw that he made for the floating arrow. "Oh!" said they, "he is gone to recover it." That seemed probable enough, but, to their astonishment, as he approached the weapon it took a start, and ran away from him! Something below dragged it along the water. That was clear, and they began to comprehend the mystery. The _head_ of the arrow was still sticking in the shell of the turtle. It was only the shaft that floated, and that was attached to the head by a string! The latter had been but loosely put on, so that the pressure of the water, as the turtle dived, should separate it from the shaft, leaving the shaft with its cord to act as a buoy, and discover the situation of the turtle. Guapo, in his swift canoe, soon laid hold of the shaft, and after a little careful manoeuvring, succeeded in landing his turtle high and dry upon the bank. A splendid prize it proved. It was a "jurara" tortoise--the "tataruga," or great turtle of the Portuguese, and its shell was full three feet in diameter. Guapo's mode of capturing the "jurara" is the same as that generally practised by the Indians of the Amazon, although strong nets and the hook are also used. The arrow is always discharged upwards, and the range calculated with such skill, that it falls vertically on the shell of the turtle, and penetrates deep enough to stick, and detach itself from the shaft. This mode of shooting is necessary, els
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   197   198   199   200   201   202   203   204   205   206   207   208   209   210   >>  



Top keywords:
turtle
 

floating

 

upright

 

chagrin

 

surprise

 

jurara

 

observed

 
astonishment
 

succeeded

 
careful

manoeuvring

 

landing

 

loosely

 

pressure

 

string

 
floated
 

attached

 
separate
 

discover

 

situation


comprehend

 
mystery
 

leaving

 

sticking

 

upwards

 

calculated

 

discharged

 
shooting
 

detach

 

vertically


penetrates
 

strong

 
tataruga
 

Portuguese

 

tortoise

 

proved

 

splendid

 

practised

 

Indians

 

Amazon


generally

 

diameter

 

capturing

 
foremost
 
instant
 

flying

 
fallen
 

surface

 

carried

 

expected