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<h2> CHAPTER IX. </h2>
<p>FRITZ and I spent the whole of the next day in the woods. We took the ass
and one of the dogs with us, but left all else at home.</p>
<p>Our way first lay through a dense wood, where we saw no end of small
birds, but such game could not now tempt Fritz to waste his shot. We then
had to cross a vast plain, and to wade through the high grass, which we
did with care, lest we should tread on some strange thing that might turn
and bite us.</p>
<p>We came at last to a grove of small trees, and in their midst I saw a
bush, which I knew to be the wax tree, for the wax grew on it like white
beads. I need not say how glad I was to find so great a prize. We had up
to this time gone to bed as soon as the sun went down, for we had no lamp
to use; but as we could now make wax lights, I told Fritz that we had
found what would add two or three hours per day to our lives. We took as
much of the wax as would serve us for some time, and then made our way out
of the grove.</p>
<p>"How came you," said Fritz, "to know so much of the queer beasts, trees,
and plants that we have found here?"</p>
<p>"When young," said I, "I used to read all the books that fell in my way;
and those that told of strange lands and what was to be seen in them had
for me as great a charm as they have for Ernest, who has read a great
deal, and knows more of plants than you do."</p>
<p>"Well," said he, "I will do the same if I but get the chance. Can you tell
what is the name of that huge tree on the right? See, there are balls on
the bark."</p>
<p>We went close to it, and found that these balls were of thick gum, which
the sun had made quite hard. Fritz tried to pull one of them off, but felt
that it clung tight to the bark, though he could change its shape with his
warm hands. "Look," said he, "I feel sure that this is the IN-DI-A RUB-BER
which we used to clean our school books." I took a piece of it in my hand,
and said, "To be sure it is. What shall we not find in this rich land?" I
then told him how the men in the New World made flasks of this gum, in
which form it is sent to all parts of the world. "And I do not see why we
should not make boots of it in the same way. We have but to fill a sock
with sand, then put gum all round it, while in a soft state, till it is as
thick as we need, then pour the sand out, and we shall have made a shoe or
a boot that will at least keep out the damp, and that is more than mine do
just now."</p>
<p>Not far from this we came to a bush, the leaves of which were strewn with
a white dust; and close by were two or three more in the same state. I cut
a slit in the trunk of one of these, and found it full of the white dust,
which I knew by the taste to be SA-GO. We took all of this that we could
get out of the tree, for it would add to our stock of food; and when our
bags were full we laid them on the back of the ass, and set off to find
our way back to The Nest.</p>
<p>"Each day brings us fresh wealth," said my wife; "but I think we might now
try to add to our goods." I knew that she had some fear lest we should one
day get lost in the woods, or meet with wild beasts, so I at once said
that we would now stay at home, at least for some days.</p>
<p>My first work was to make some wax lights, for my wife could then mend our
clothes at night, while we sat down to talk. This done, the next task they
gave me was to make a churn. I took a large gourd, made a small hole in
the side, and cut out as much as I could, so as to leave but the rind. In
this I put the cream, laid a piece on the hole, and bound it up so that
none could come out. The boys then held a cloth, and on it I put the
gourd, which they rolled from side to side. They kept up this game with
great mirth for near an hour, when my wife took off the string, and found
that the churn had done its work well.</p>
<p>As our sledge was not fit to use on rough roads, my next work was to make
a cart. I had brought a pair of wheels from the wreck, so that my task did
not prove a hard one.</p>
<p>While I was thus at work, my wife and the boys took some of the fruit
trees we had brought with us, and put them in the ground where they
thought they would grow best. On each side of the path that led from The
Nest to the Boy's Bridge they put a row of young nut trees. To make the
path hard we laid down sand from the sea shore, and then beat it down with
our spades.</p>
<p>We were for six weeks at this and such like work. We were loth to spare
any pains to make The Nest, and all that could be seen near it, look neat
and trim, though there were no eyes but our own to view the scene.</p>
<p>One day I told my sons that I would try to make a flight of stairs in
place of the cane steps with rope sides, which were, to tell the truth,
the worst part of our house. As yet we had not used them much, but the
rain would some day force us to keep in The Nest, and then we should like
to go up and down stairs with more ease than we could now climb the rude
steps. I knew that a swarm of bees had built their nest in the trunk of
our tree, and this led me to think that there might be a void space in it
some way up. "Should this prove to be the case," I said, "our work will be
half done, for we shall then have but to fix the stairs in the tree round
the trunk." The boys got up and went to the top of the root to tap the
trunk, and to judge by the sound how far up the hole went. But they had to
pay for their want of thought; the whole swarm of bees came out as soon as
they heard the noise, stung their cheeks, stuck to their hair and clothes,
and soon put them to flight.</p>
<p>We found that Jack, who was at all times rash, had struck the bees' nest
with his axe, and was much more hurt by them than the rest. Ernest, who
went to his work in his slow way, got up to it last, and thus did not get
more than a sting or two, but the rest were some hours ere they could see
out of their eyes. I took a large gourd, which had long been meant to
serve for a hive, and put it on a stand, We then made a straw roof to keep
it from the sun and wind, and as by this time it grew dark, we left the
hive there for the night.</p>
<p>Next day, the boys, whose wounds were now quite well, went with me to help
to move the bees to the new home we had made for them. Our first work was
to stop with clay all the holes in the tree but one through which the bees
were wont to go in to their nest. To this I put the bowl of a pipe, and
blew in the smoke of the weed as fast as I could. At first we heard a loud
buzz like the noise of a storm afar off; but the more I blew my pipe the
less grew the sound, till at last the bees were quite still.</p>
<p>We now cut out a piece of the trunk, three feet square, and this gave us a
full view of the nest. Our joy was great to find such a stock of wax, for
I could see the comb reached far up the tree. I took some of the comb, in
which the bees lay in swarms, and put it by on the plank.</p>
<p>We then put the gourd on the comb that held the swarm, and took care that
the queen bee was not left out. By these means we soon got a hive of fine
bees, and the trunk of the tree was left free for our use.</p>
<p>We had now to try the length of the hole. This we did with a long pole,
and found it reached as far up as the branch on which our house stood.</p>
<p>We now cut a square hole in that side of the trunk next the sea shore, and
made one of the doors that we had brought from the ship to fit in the
space. We then made the sides smooth all the way up, and with planks and
the staves of some old casks, built up the stairs round a pole which we
made fast in the ground. To do this we had to make a notch in the pole and
one in the side of the trunk for each stair, and thus go up step by step
till we came to the top. Each day we spent a part of our time at what we
could now call the farm, where the beasts and fowls were kept, and did odd
jobs as well, so that we should not make too great a toil of the flight of
stairs, which took us some six weeks to put up.</p>
<p>One day Fritz caught a fine EA-GLE, which he tied by the leg to a branch
of the tree, and fed with small birds. It took him a long while to tame,
but in time he taught it to perch on his wrist, and to feed from his hand.
He once let it go, and thought he would have lost it, but the bird knew it
had a good friend, for it came back to the tree at night. From that time
it was left free, though we thought that some day its love of war and wild
sports would tempt it to leave us for the rocks of the sea shore, where
Fritz had first found it.</p>
<p>Each of my boys had now some pet to take care of, and, I may say, to
tease, for they all thought they had a fair right to get some fun out of
the pets they could call their own; but they were kind to them, fed them
well, and kept them clean.</p>
<p>In what I may term my spare time, which was when I left off work out of
doors, I made a pair of gum shoes for each of my sons, in the way I had
told Fritz it could be done. I do not know what we should have done had we
not found the gum tree, for the stones soon wore out the boots we had, and
we could not have gone through the woods or trod the hard rocks with bare
feet.</p>
<p>By this time our sow had brought forth ten young pigs, and the hens had
each a brood of fine chicks. Some we kept near us, but most of them went
to the wood, where my wife said she could find them when she had need to
use them.</p>
<p>I knew the time must now be near when, in this clime, the rain comes down
day by day for weeks, and that it would wash us out of The Nest if we did
not make a good roof to our house. Then our live stock would need some
place where they could rest out of the rain. The thatch for The Nest was
of course our first care; then we made a long roof of canes for our live
stock, and on this we spread clay and moss, and then a thick coat of tar,
so that it was rain proof from end to end. This was held up by thick canes
stuck deep in the ground, with planks made fast to them to form the walls,
and round the whole we put a row of cask staves to serve for rails. In
this way we soon had a barn, store room, and hay loft, with stalls for the
cow, the ass, and what else we kept that had need of a place to live in.</p>
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