Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 728 pages of information about Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 3.

Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 728 pages of information about Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 3.

“Well, well!” he cried, “she must have fallen in love with me!  Perhaps she has never met any one else.  It is flattering to be her first love.”

So thinking, he fell into one of the treacherous quicksands which deceive the inexperienced traveler in the desert, and from which there is seldom any escape.  He felt he was sinking, and he uttered a cry of despair.  The panther seized him by the collar with her teeth, and sprang vigorously backward, drawing him, like magic, from the sucking sand.

“Ah, Mignonne!” cried the soldier, kissing her with enthusiasm, “we belong to each other now,—­for life, for death!  But play me no tricks,” he added, as he turned back the way he came.

From that moment the desert was, as it were, peopled for him.  It held a being to whom he could talk, and whose ferocity was now lulled into gentleness, although he could scarcely explain to himself the reasons for this extraordinary friendship.  His anxiety to keep awake and on his guard succumbed to excessive weariness both of body and mind, and throwing himself down on the floor of the grotto he slept soundly.  At his waking Mignonne was gone.  He mounted the little hill to scan the horizon, and perceived her in the far distance returning with the long bounds peculiar to these animals, who are prevented from running by the extreme flexibility of their spinal column.

Mignonne came home with bloody jaws, and received the tribute of caresses which her slave hastened to pay, all the while manifesting her pleasure by reiterated purring.

Her eyes, now soft and gentle, rested kindly on the Provencal, who spoke to her lovingly as he would to a domestic animal.

“Ah!  Mademoiselle,—­for you are an honest girl, are you not?  You like to be petted, don’t you?  Are you not ashamed of yourself?  You have been eating a Maugrabin.  Well, well! they are animals like the rest of you.  But you are not to craunch up a Frenchman; remember that!  If you do, I will not love you.”

She played like a young dog with her master, and let him roll her over and pat and stroke her, and sometimes she would coax him to play by laying a paw upon his knee with a pretty soliciting gesture.

Several days passed rapidly.  This strange companionship revealed to the Provencal the sublime beauties of the desert.  The alternations of hope and fear, the sufficiency of food, the presence of a creature who occupied his thoughts,—­all this kept his mind alert, yet free:  it was a life full of strange contrasts.  Solitude revealed to him her secrets, and wrapped him with her charm.  In the rising and the setting of the sun he saw splendors unknown to the world of men.  He quivered as he listened to the soft whirring of the wings of a bird,—­rare visitant!—­or watched the blending of the fleeting clouds,—­those changeful and many-tinted voyagers.  In the waking hours of the night he studied the play of the moon upon the sandy ocean,

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Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 3 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.