The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 08 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 633 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 08.

The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 08 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 633 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 08.

“Shall we see the post today?” asked the girl, “because it has fallen down, you know, and then the snow will fall on it and the red color will be white.”

“We shall be able to see it though, for that matter,” replied the boy; “even if the snow falls upon it and it becomes white all over we are bound to see it, because it is a thick post, and because it has the black iron cross on its top which will surely stick out.”

“Yes, Conrad.”

Meanwhile, as they had proceeded still farther, the snowfall had become so dense that they could see only the very nearest trees.

No hardness of the road, not to mention its ruts, was to be felt, the road was everywhere equally soft with snow and was, in fact, recognizable only as an even white band running on through the forest.  On all the branches there lay already the beautiful white covering.

The children now walked in the middle of the road, furrowing the snow with their little feet and proceeding more slowly as the walking became more tiresome.  The boy pulled up his jacket about his throat so that no snow should fall in his neck, and pulled down his hat so as to be more protected.  He also fastened his little sister’s neckerchief which her mother had given her to wear over her shoulders, pulling it forward over her forehead so that it formed a roof.

The wind predicted by grandmother still had not come, on the other hand, the snowfall gradually became so dense that not even the nearest trees were to be recognized, but stood there like misty sacks.

The children went on.  They drew up their shoulders and walked on.

Sanna took hold of the strap by which Conrad had his calfskin bag fastened about his shoulders and thus they proceeded on their way.

They still had not reached the post.  The boy was not sure about the time, because the sun was not shining and all was a monotonous gray.

“Shall we reach the post soon?” asked the girl.

“I don’t know,” said the boy, “I can’t see the trees today and recognize the way, because it is so white.  We shall not see the post at all, perhaps, because there is so much snow that it will be covered up and scarcely a blade of grass or an arm of the black cross will show.  But never mind.  We just continue on our road, and the road goes between the trees and when it gets to the spot where the post stands it will go down, and we shall keep on it, and when it comes out of the trees we are already on the meadows of Gschaid, then comes the path, and then we shall not be far from home.”

“Yes, Conrad,” said the girl.

They proceeded along their road which still led upward.  The footprints they left behind them did not remain visible long, for the extraordinary volume of the descending snow soon covered them up.  The snow no longer rustled, in falling upon the needles, but hurriedly and peacefully added itself to the snow already there.  The, children gathered their garments still more tightly about them, in order to keep the steadily falling snow from coming in on all sides.

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The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 08 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.