1 A bear ought to climb; therefore will I take a look above them.
2 Do you keep him under your rifle while I creep in behind, through the bush, and take him alive.
3 Come," he said, with a good-humored smile; "the buck that will take to the water must be headed, and not followed.
4 If my father has done you this injustice, show him how an Indian can forgive an injury, and take back his daughters.
5 Sagamore, you will take the hillside, to the right; Uncas will bend along the brook to the left, while I will try the trail.
6 The man is, most manifestly, a disciple of Apollo," cried the amused Alice, "and I take him under my own especial protection.
7 Shove in the canoe nigher to the land, Uncas; this sand will take a stamp as easily as the butter of the Jarmans on the Mohawk.
8 The white man seemed to take counsel from their customs, and, relinquishing his grasp of the rifle, he also remained silent and reserved.
9 I told you to take that loping miscreant under the line of white point; now, if your bullet went a hair's breadth it went two inches above it.
10 Heyward was far from regretting that his mummeries were to be performed on one who was much too ill to take an interest in their failure or success.
11 It is enough, for the present, that we trusted to an Indian guide to take us by a nearer, though blinder path, and that we are deceived in his knowledge.
12 A long, low island lay at a little distance before them, and, as they closed with it, the chasing canoe was compelled to take a side opposite to that on which the pursued passed.
13 Cheered by these assurances, and satisfied by a reasoning that was so obvious, while it was so simple, the party resumed its course, after making a short halt, to take a hurried repast.
14 "These lakes are useful at times, especially when the game take the water," continued the scout, gazing about him with a countenance of concern; "but they give no cover, except it be to the fishes."
15 That's a trail that nothing but a nose can follow," said the satisfied scout, looking back along their difficult way; "grass is a treacherous carpet for a flying party to tread on, but wood and stone take no print from a moccasin.
16 It was in the afternoon of the fifth day of the siege, and the fourth of his own service in it, that Major Heyward profited by a parley that had just been beaten, by repairing to the ramparts of one of the water bastions, to breathe the cool air from the lake, and to take a survey of the progress of the siege.
17 The thief is leaning against the foot of the sugar sapling, that you can see over them bushes; his right leg is in a line with the bark of the tree, and," tapping his rifle, "I can take him from where I stand, between the angle and the knee, with a single shot, putting an end to his tramping through the woods, for at least a month to come.
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