The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 09, No. 54, April, 1862 by Various
page 42 of 298 (14%)
page 42 of 298 (14%)
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o'clock sleeps regularly."
Ben chuckled, heaping up the sticks. "Go on down to the camp, as usual. At two, Ben, remember! We will be free to-night, old boy!" The black face looked up from the clogging smoke with a curious stare. "Ki! we'll be free to-night, Mars'!"--gulping his breath. Soon after, the sentry unlocked the gate, and he shambled off out into the night. Lamar, left alone, went closer to the fire, and worked busily at some papers he drew from his pocket: maps and schedules. He intended to write until two o'clock; but the blaze dying down, he wrapped his blanket about him, and lay down on the heaped straw, going on sleepily, in his brain, with his calculations. The negro, in the shadow of the shed, watched him. A vague fear beset him,--of the vast, white cold,--the glowering mountains,--of himself; he clung to the familiar face, like a man drifting out into an unknown sea, clutching some relic of the shore. When Lamar fell asleep, he wandered uncertainly towards the tents. The world had grown new, strange; was he Ben, picking cotton in the swamp-edge?--plunging his fingers with a shudder in the icy drifts. Down in the glowing torpor of the Santilla flats, where the Lamar plantations lay, Ben had slept off as maddening hunger for life and freedom as this of to-day; but here, with the winter air stinging every nerve to life, with the perpetual mystery of the mountains terrifying his bestial nature down, the strength of the man stood up: groping, blind, malignant, it may be; but |
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