God's Country—And the Woman eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 280 pages of information about God's Country—And the Woman.

God's Country—And the Woman eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 280 pages of information about God's Country—And the Woman.

The beginning of the gray northern dawn was not far away.  Philip knew that without looking at the hour.  He sensed it.  It was in the air, the stillness of the forest, in the appearance of the stars and moon.  To prove himself he looked at his watch with the match with which he lighted his pipe.  It was half-past three.  At this season of the year dawn came at five.

He walked slowly along the strip of sand between the dark wall of the forest and the lake.  Not until he was a mile away from the camp did he stop.  Then something happened to betray the uneasy tension to which his nerves were drawn.  A sudden crash in the brush close at hand drew him about with a start, and even while he laughed at himself he stood with his automatic in his hand.

He heard the whimpering, babyish-like complaint of the porcupine that had made the sound, and still chuckling over his nervousness he seated himself on a white drift-log that had lain bleaching for half a century in the sand.

The moon had fallen behind the western forests; the stars were becoming fainter in the sky, and about him the darkness was drawing in like a curtain.  He loved this hour that bridged the northern night with the northern day, and he sat motionless and still, covering the glow of fire in his pipe bowl with the palm of his hand.

Out of the brush ambled the porcupine, chattering and talking to itself in its queer and good-humoured way, fat as a poplar bud ready to burst, and so intent on reaching the edge of the lake that it passed in its stupid innocence so close that Philip might have struck it with a stick.  And then there swooped down from out of the cover of the black spruce a gray cloudlike thing that came with the silence and lightness of a huge snowflake, hovered for an instant over the porcupine, and disappeared into the darkness beyond.  And the porcupine, still oblivious of danger and what the huge owl would have done to him had he been a snowshoe rabbit instead of a monster of quills, drank his fill leisurely and ambled back as he had come, chattering his little song of good-humour and satisfaction.

One after another there came now the sounds that merged dying night into the birth of day, and for the hundredth time Philip listened to the wonders that never grew old for him.  The laugh of the loon was no longer a raucous, mocking cry of exultation and triumph, but a timid, question note—­half drowsy, half filled with fear; and from the treetops came the still lower notes of the owls, their night’s hunt done, and seeking now the densest covers for the day.  And then, from deep back in the forests, came a cry that was filled with both hunger and defiance—­the wailing howl of a wolf.  With these night sounds came the first cheep, cheep, cheep of the little brush sparrow, still drowsy and uncertain, but faintly heralding the day.  Wings fluttered in the spruce and cedar thickets.  From far overhead came the honking of Canada geese flying southward.  And one by one the stars went out, and in the south-eastern skies a gray hand reached up slowly over the forests and wiped darkness from the earth.  Not until then did Philip rise from his seat and turn his face toward camp.

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Project Gutenberg
God's Country—And the Woman from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.