The Man Who Laughs eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 754 pages of information about The Man Who Laughs.

The Man Who Laughs eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 754 pages of information about The Man Who Laughs.

The mother lay there, her back to the snow, her face to the night; but perhaps at the moment when the little boy stripped himself to clothe the little girl, the mother saw him from the depths of infinity.

CHAPTER III.

A BURDEN MAKES A ROUGH ROAD ROUGHER.

It was little more than four hours since the hooker had sailed from the creek of Portland, leaving the boy on the shore.  During the long hours since he had been deserted, and had been journeying onwards, he had met but three persons of that human society into which he was, perchance, about to enter—­a man, the man on the hill; a woman, the woman in the snow; and the little girl whom he was carrying in his arms.

He was exhausted by fatigue and hunger, yet advanced more resolutely than ever, with less strength and an added burden.  He was now almost naked.  The few rags which remained to him, hardened by the frost, were sharp as glass, and cut his skin.  He became colder, but the infant was warmer.  That which he lost was not thrown away, but was gained by her.  He found out that the poor infant enjoyed the comfort which was to her the renewal of life.  He continued to advance.

From time to time, still holding her securely, he bent down, and taking a handful of snow he rubbed his feet with it, to prevent their being frost-bitten.  At other times, his throat feeling as if it were on fire, he put a little snow in his mouth and sucked it; this for a moment assuaged his thirst, but changed it into fever—­a relief which was an aggravation.

The storm had become shapeless from its violence.  Deluges of snow are possible.  This was one.  The paroxysm scourged the shore at the same time that it uptore the depths of ocean.  This was, perhaps, the moment when the distracted hooker was going to pieces in the battle of the breakers.

He travelled under this north wind, still towards the east, over wide surfaces of snow.  He knew not how the hours had passed.  For a long time he had ceased to see the smoke.  Such indications are soon effaced in the night; besides, it was past the hour when fires are put out.  Or he had, perhaps, made a mistake, and it was possible that neither town nor village existed in the direction in which he was travelling.  Doubting, he yet persevered.

Two or three times the little infant cried.  Then he adopted in his gait a rocking movement, and the child was soothed and silenced.  She ended by falling into a sound sleep.  Shivering himself, he felt her warm.  He frequently tightened the folds of the jacket round the babe’s neck, so that the frost should not get in through any opening, and that no melted snow should drop between the garment and the child.

The plain was unequal.  In the declivities into which it sloped the snow, driven by the wind into the dips of the ground, was so deep, in comparison with a child so small, that it almost engulfed him, and he had to struggle through it half buried.  He walked on, working away the snow with his knees.

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The Man Who Laughs from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.