Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 5 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 593 pages of information about Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 5.

Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 5 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 593 pages of information about Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 5.
again brought Ragnhild’s image before his mind, jumped upon his skees, and darted down over the glittering snow.  It bore him toward the fjord.  A sharp, chill wind swept up the hillside, and rushed against him.  “Houseman’s son!” cried the wind.  Onward he hastened.  “Houseman’s son!” howled the wind after him.  Soon he reached the fjord, hurried on up toward the river-mouth, and coming to the Henjum boat-house, stopped, and walked out to the end of the pier, which stretched from the headland some twenty to thirty feet out into the water.  The fjord lay sombre and restless before him.  There was evidently a storm raging in the ocean, for the tide was unusually high, and the sky was darkening from the west eastward.  The mountain-peaks stood there, stern and lofty as ever, with their heads wrapped in hoods of cloud.  Gunnar sat down at the outer edge of the pier, with his feet hanging listlessly over the water, which, in slow and monotonous plashing, beat against the timbers.  Far out in the distance he could hear the breakers roar among the rocky reefs; first the long, booming roll, then the slowly waning moan, and the great hush, in which the billows pause to listen to themselves.  It is the heavy deep-drawn breath of the ocean.  It was cold, but Gunnar hardly felt it.

He again stepped into his skees and followed the narrow road, as it wound its way from the fjord up along the river.  Down near the mouth, between Henjum and Rimul, the river was frozen, and could be crossed on the ice.  Up at Henjumhei it was too swift to freeze.  It was near daylight when he reached the cottage.  How small and poor it looked!  Never had he seen it so before;—­very different from Rimul.  And how dark and narrow it was all around it!  At Rimul they had always sunshine.  Truly, the track is steep from Henjumhei to Rimul; the river runs deep between.

MARY ELIZABETH BRADDON

(1837-)

Whatever objections may be made to the sensational character of many of Miss Braddon’s earlier novels, her place is certainly in the ranks of the “born” story-tellers.  Although still in the prime of life, she has been before the public for thirty-seven years.  Her books have been produced in amazingly rapid and continuous succession.  She was born in London in 1837, wrote little stories in her early teens, and was fond of entertaining her companions with startling original tales.

When a young girl she conceived a passion for the stage, and a dramatic—­or melodramatic—­element is conspicuous in most of her novels.  She was barely twenty-one when she had completed a comedietta, ’The Lover of Arcadia,’ which, after many alterations and revisions, was put on the stage of the Strand Theatre in 1860, with—­naturally—­but moderate success.  Her disappointment was extreme.  She gave up the hope of becoming a successful dramatist.  Her next venture, like that of most young authors, was a small volume of poems, of which Garibaldi was

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Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern — Volume 5 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.