Selected Stories of Bret Harte eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 447 pages of information about Selected Stories of Bret Harte.

Selected Stories of Bret Harte eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 447 pages of information about Selected Stories of Bret Harte.

At the mention of improvements, I involuntarily lifted my eyes, and met the half laughing, half embarrassed look of George.  The act did not escape detection, and I had at once the satisfaction of seeing that the rest of the family had formed an offensive alliance against us.

“It was agin Nater, and agin God,” added Tryan.  “God never intended gold in the rocks to be made into heathen candlesticks and crucifixens.  That’s why he sent ’Merrikans here.  Nater never intended such a climate for lazy lopers.  She never gin six months’ sunshine to be slept and smoked away.”

How long he continued and with what further illustration I could not say, for I took an early opportunity to escape to the sitting-room.  I was soon followed by George, who called me to an open door leading to a smaller room, and pointed to a bed.

“You’d better sleep there tonight,” he said; “you’ll be more comfortable, and I’ll call you early.”

I thanked him, and would have asked him several questions which were then troubling me, but he shyly slipped to the door and vanished.

A shadow seemed to fall on the room when he had gone.  The “boys” returned, one by one, and shuffled to their old places.  A larger log was thrown on the fire, and the huge chimney glowed like a furnace, but it did not seem to melt or subdue a single line of the hard faces that it lit.  In half an hour later, the furs which had served as chairs by day undertook the nightly office of mattresses, and each received its owner’s full-length figure.  Mr. Tryan had not returned, and I missed George.  I sat there until, wakeful and nervous, I saw the fire fall and shadows mount the wall.  There was no sound but the rushing of the wind and the snoring of the sleepers.  At last, feeling the place insupportable, I seized my hat and opening the door, ran out briskly into the night.

The acceleration of my torpid pulse in the keen fight with the wind, whose violence was almost equal to that of a tornado, and the familiar faces of the bright stars above me, I felt as a blessed relief.  I ran not knowing whither, and when I halted, the square outline of the house was lost in the alder bushes.  An uninterrupted plain stretched before me, like a vast sea beaten flat by the force of the gale.  As I kept on I noticed a slight elevation toward the horizon, and presently my progress was impeded by the ascent of an Indian mound.  It struck me forcibly as resembling an island in the sea.  Its height gave me a better view of the expanding plain.  But even here I found no rest.  The ridiculous interpretation Tryan had given the climate was somehow sung in my ears, and echoed in my throbbing pulse as, guided by the star, I sought the house again.

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Selected Stories of Bret Harte from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.