The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 07, No. 44, June, 1861 Creator by Various
page 73 of 272 (26%)
page 73 of 272 (26%)
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He looked down upon me with that look that always drinks up my sight
into his, and said,-- "You are sorry to go, Lucy. I will stay." "No, Saul, I wish to go. You shall teach me the pleasures of wild life; and who knows but I shall like it so well that we will give up civilization for it? Where shall I pack all these books?" "Leave them all," he said. "We will close the house as it is, until we come back." And I left them all at home. In the heart of these preparations an insane desire came into my mind to know something of Saul's ancestors, and there was but one way to know, namely, by asking, which I would not do of human soul. Thus it came to pass that I was driven out, between this would of my mind and wouldn't of my soul, to search for some knowledge from inanimate things. The last night before our departure I became particularly restless and unsatisfied. I went to the place of burial of the villagers, where I found duly recorded on two stones the names of Saul's parents, Richard Monten and Agnes Monten, his wife. There was nothing Indian there, and I went home once more to the place that had been so happy until the spirit of inquiry grew stronger than I. That night I watched Saul, until he grew restless, and asked me why I did so. I evaded direct reply, and on the morrow we were wheeling westward. From the instant we left the line of man's art, Saul became another |
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