Page:Life and astonishing adventures of Peter Williamson (1).pdf/13

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they sat round the fire and roasted their meat of which they had robbed my dwelling. When they had prepared it, and satisfied their voracious appetites, they offered some to me; though it is easily imagined I had but little appetite to eat, under the tortures and miseries I had undergone, but was I foreed to seem pleased with what they (illegible text)ered me, lest, by refusing it, they had again resumed their hellish praetiees. What I could not eat, I contrived to get between the bark and the tree where I was fixed, they having unbound my hands until they imagined I had eat all they gave me; but then they again bound me as before, in which deplorable condition was I foreed to continue all that day. When the sun was set, they put out the fire, and covered the ashes with leaves, as is their usual custom, that the white people might not discover any traees or signs of their having been there.

Going from thence along by the river, for the distance of six miles, loaded as I was before, we arrived at a spot near the Apalachian mountains, where they hid their plunder under logs of wood; (illegible text) Oh, shocking to relate! from thence did these ghoulish monsters proceed to a neighbouring house, occupied by one Joseph Snider and his unhappy family, consisting of his wife, five children, and a young man, his servant. They soon got admittance into the unfortunate man's house, where