Page:Thirty-One Years on the Plains and in the Mountains.djvu/125

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LEARNING TO READ.
89


rection of the camp. The boys had a great deal of sport at my expense, and many times during the winter I was reminded of the bear hunt, in which the bear hunted me.

After we had got everything nicely fixed up in our new quarters, Johnnie West one evening got down his sachel, took out a book and sat and read till bed time. The following evening when he took the book up again, I asked him what he was reading, and he said, "Robin- Crusoe." I asked him why he did not read aloud so the rest of us could hear, and he did read aloud until bed time. I told him I would give any- thing if I could read as he did. So he said if I would try to learn, he would teach me to read that winter as good as he could I assured him there would be nothing lacking on my part, so the next night I took my first lesson. At that time I did not

Reading Robinson Crusoe.

know all the letters, but I was determined to learn to read. In a very short time I had learned all my letters, and being possessed of a great memory, I learned very fast, and Johnnie, seeing I was so determined in the matter, spared no pains in teaching me, and by the next spring I could read Robinson Crusoe myself. Having a start, I could learn of my own accord, and to Johnnie