The Crockett almanac : containing sprees and scrapes in the West; life and manners in the backwoods, and exploits and adventures on the praries . 1144 IS F 6 544 36 6 48J4 426 41 4 49 6 33 4 58 14 4l| 4 43a 4 52a 5 2a 5 14a ID 19 S 6 554 356 494 42 6 42 4 49 6 344 57 14 23 5 35 5 44 555 6 7 0 38 5 runs high. 20 3 j6 57 4 35 6 504 416 43 4 48 6 354 57 14 14| 6 25 6 36 6 44 6 57 134 2J M6 584 346 52 4 40 6 44 4 48 6 36 4 56 13 591 7 42 7 50 7 59 8 10 2 21 22 T 6 59 4 33,6 53 4 40 6 45 4 17 6 374 56 13 43| 8 53 9 0 9 7 9 16 3 26 © enters f. 23 W7 0|4 32 6 54 4 39 6 46 4 47 6 384 56 13 27 10 6 10


The Crockett almanac : containing sprees and scrapes in the West; life and manners in the backwoods, and exploits and adventures on the praries . 1144 IS F 6 544 36 6 48J4 426 41 4 49 6 33 4 58 14 4l| 4 43a 4 52a 5 2a 5 14a ID 19 S 6 554 356 494 42 6 42 4 49 6 344 57 14 23 5 35 5 44 555 6 7 0 38 5 runs high. 20 3 j6 57 4 35 6 504 416 43 4 48 6 354 57 14 14| 6 25 6 36 6 44 6 57 134 2J M6 584 346 52 4 40 6 44 4 48 6 36 4 56 13 591 7 42 7 50 7 59 8 10 2 21 22 T 6 59 4 33,6 53 4 40 6 45 4 17 6 374 56 13 43| 8 53 9 0 9 7 9 16 3 26 © enters f. 23 W7 0|4 32 6 54 4 39 6 46 4 47 6 384 56 13 27 10 6 10 11 10 16 10 23 4 20 24 T 7 24 32 6 55 4 39 6 474 46 6 38 4 55 13 10 1118 1121 11 24 1128 5 11 25 F7 34 316 56 4 386 48 4 46 6 39 4 55 12 52 m m in m fi 1 2>\ S 7 44 30;6 57 4 386 494 45 6 404 55 12 33 0 32 0 33 0 35 0 36 6 51 27 7 5!4 30 6 58j4 376 504 45 6 414 55 12 14 145 144 142 140 7 41 5 Perigee. 23 M 7 6 4 59 4 37 6 514 45 6 42 4 55 11 53T 7 84 29 7 04 366 524 45 6 43 4 55 11 32 2 59 2 56 2 52 2 49 8 32 d-. The haves are filling to the ground. The branches are stripped of their verdure, and thewinds of Autumn chant the dismal requiem of the dying year. The birds of passage are nowseen in large flocks, embarking, with slow wing but earnest purpose, on their annual pilgrim-age. The wild-flowers, that have kept us company so long, and have cheered us amid thegeneral desolation of Nature, are now taking their leave, like the last lingering friends whohover around the departing barque of the voyager, and one by one disappear, with a sad andI long farewell. The naked orchard, the barren fields and gardens, and the moaning forest, un-equivocally declare, that the season of warmth and fertility has departed. Already are thelittle lakes crystallizing beneath the cold breath of the North ; and the ground is whitened bythe early frost. The mountain tops are barren, and the grass has withered. The long eve-nings are enjoyed by the gay and youthful; while the man of contempla


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, booksubjectamericanwitandhumor