The Last Man eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 624 pages of information about The Last Man.
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The Last Man eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 624 pages of information about The Last Man.

It was seldom indeed that we escaped, to use an old-fashioned phrase, scot free.  Our dainty fare was often exchanged for blows and imprisonment.  Once, when thirteen years of age, I was sent for a month to the county jail.  I came out, my morals unimproved, my hatred to my oppressors encreased tenfold.  Bread and water did not tame my blood, nor solitary confinement inspire me with gentle thoughts.  I was angry, impatient, miserable; my only happy hours were those during which I devised schemes of revenge; these were perfected in my forced solitude, so that during the whole of the following season, and I was freed early in September, I never failed to provide excellent and plenteous fare for myself and my comrades.  This was a glorious winter.  The sharp frost and heavy snows tamed the animals, and kept the country gentlemen by their firesides; we got more game than we could eat, and my faithful dog grew sleek upon our refuse.

Thus years passed on; and years only added fresh love of freedom, and contempt for all that was not as wild and rude as myself.  At the age of sixteen I had shot up in appearance to man’s estate; I was tall and athletic; I was practised to feats of strength, and inured to the inclemency of the elements.  My skin was embrowned by the sun; my step was firm with conscious power.  I feared no man, and loved none.  In after life I looked back with wonder to what I then was; how utterly worthless I should have become if I had pursued my lawless career.  My life was like that of an animal, and my mind was in danger of degenerating into that which informs brute nature.  Until now, my savage habits had done me no radical mischief; my physical powers had grown up and flourished under their influence, and my mind, undergoing the same discipline, was imbued with all the hardy virtues.  But now my boasted independence was daily instigating me to acts of tyranny, and freedom was becoming licentiousness.  I stood on the brink of manhood; passions, strong as the trees of a forest, had already taken root within me, and were about to shadow with their noxious overgrowth, my path of life.

I panted for enterprises beyond my childish exploits, and formed distempered dreams of future action.  I avoided my ancient comrades, and I soon lost them.  They arrived at the age when they were sent to fulfil their destined situations in life; while I, an outcast, with none to lead or drive me forward, paused.  The old began to point at me as an example, the young to wonder at me as a being distinct from themselves; I hated them, and began, last and worst degradation, to hate myself.  I clung to my ferocious habits, yet half despised them; I continued my war against civilization, and yet entertained a wish to belong to it.

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The Last Man from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.