The Adventurous Seven: Their Hazardous Undertaking
E-text prepared by Roger Frank and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
THE DOCTOR'S CANE CAME CUTTING THROUGH THE AIR
The village schoolroom was packed as full as it would hold, and the air was so thick that, as Sylvia said, it could almost be scooped up with a spoon. The lecturer was stout and perspiring freely, but he meant to do his duty at all costs, and he rose to the occasion with tremendous vigour, declaiming in really fine style:
It is a poor man's paradise, and there is no place on the face of this earth to rival it. You reach it by a pleasure cruise across summer seas, to find it has the finest scenery your eyes have ever beheld and a climate that is not to be beaten.
Hear, hear! shouted Rumple, clapping vigorously. He had led the applause from the very beginning of the lecture, only it was a little awkward for the lecturer that he mostly broke into the middle of a sentence instead of waiting for a pause, as a more judicious person might have done.
Encore! yelled Billykins, forgetting for the moment that it was not a concert, and, as the lecture had already lasted for upwards of an hour and a half, it might have proved a little tedious to some of the audience if it had been repeated from the very beginning.
The rows of people sitting in the seats behind broke into a wild uproar of stamping, thumping, and clapping which lasted for nearly five minutes, and, of course, raised more dust to thicken the atmosphere.
The pause gave the lecturer time to recover his breath and wipe some of the perspiration from his face; it also made him rather cross, for he had somehow got the idea that he was being laughed at, which was quite wrong, because all seven of the Plumsteads, from Nealie down to Ducky, thought that he was doing very well indeed.
If you don't believe what I say, concluded the lecturer, just come out to New South Wales and see for yourselves if I have not told you the plain, unvarnished truth; and I repeat what I have said before, that although it is no place for the idle rich, for the man or the woman who wants to work it is not to be beaten.
Bessie Marchant
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THE ADVENTUROUS SEVEN
CHAPTER I
The Great Idea
CHAPTER II
The Deputation
CHAPTER III
The Emigrants
CHAPTER IV
Rumple's Discovery
CHAPTER V
The End of the Voyage
CHAPTER VI
A Real Friend
CHAPTER VII
The One-armed Man
CHAPTER VIII
The Start
CHAPTER IX
In a Strange Place
CHAPTER X
A Fright at Night
CHAPTER XI
Anxious Hours
CHAPTER XII
Repairing the Damage
CHAPTER XIII
In Sight of Hammerville
CHAPTER XIV
The Arrival
CHAPTER XV
A Great Shock
CHAPTER XVI
The Next Thing to be Done
CHAPTER XVII
In the Thick of It
CHAPTER XVIII
"Father, We Want You!"
CHAPTER XIX
The News
CHAPTER XX
How It All Ended