The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,672 pages of information about The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner.

The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,672 pages of information about The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner.

The guide seemed really to fear that, if we did not get out of the woods that night, he would never go out; and, yielding to his dogged resolution, we kept on in search of the trail, although the gathering of dusk over the ground warned us that we might easily cross the trail without recognizing it.  We were traveling by the light in the upper sky, and by the forms of the tree-stems, which every moment grew dimmer.  At last the end came.  We had just felt our way over what seemed to be a little run of water, when the old man sunk down, remarking, “I might as well die here as anywhere,” and was silent.

Suddenly night fell like a blanket on us.  We could neither see the guide nor each other.  We became at once conscious that miles of night on all sides shut us in.  The sky was clouded over:  there wasn’t a gleam of light to show us where to step.  Our first thought was to build a fire, which would drive back the thick darkness into the woods, and boil some water for our tea.  But it was too dark to use the axe.  We scraped together leaves and twigs to make a blaze, and, as this failed, such dead sticks as we could find by groping about.  The fire was only a temporary affair, but it sufficed to boil a can of water.  The water we obtained by feeling about the stones of the little run for an opening big enough to dip our cup in.  The supper to be prepared was fortunately simple.  It consisted of a decoction of tea and other leaves which had got into the pail, and a part of a loaf of bread.  A loaf of bread which has been carried in a knapsack for a couple of days, bruised and handled and hacked at with a hunting-knife, becomes an uninteresting object.  But we ate of it with thankfulness, washed it down with hot fluid, and bitterly thought of the morrow.  Would our old friend survive the night?  Would he be in any condition to travel in the morning?  How were we to get out with him or without him?

The old man lay silent in the bushes out of sight, and desired only to be let alone.  We tried to tempt him with the offer of a piece of toast:  it was no temptation.  Tea we thought would revive him:  he refused it.  A drink of brandy would certainly quicken his life:  he couldn’t touch it.  We were at the end of our resources.  He seemed to think that if he were at home, and could get a bit of fried bacon, or a piece of pie, he should be all right.  We knew no more how to doctor him than if he had been a sick bear.  He withdrew within himself, rolled himself up, so to speak, in his primitive habits, and waited for the healing power of nature.  Before our feeble fire disappeared, we smoothed a level place near it for Phelps to lie on, and got him over to it.  But it didn’t suit:  it was too open.  In fact, at the moment some drops of rain fell.  Rain was quite outside of our program for the night.  But the guide had an instinct about it; and, while we were groping about some yards distant for a place where we could lie down, he crawled away into the darkness, and curled himself up amid the roots of a gigantic pine, very much as a bear would do, I suppose, with his back against the trunk, and there passed the night comparatively dry and comfortable; but of this we knew nothing till morning, and had to trust to the assurance of a voice out of the darkness that he was all right.

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The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.