Old Kaskaskia by Mary Hartwell Catherwood
page 5 of 133 (03%)
page 5 of 133 (03%)
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splendors faded from the sky, leaving a pearl-gray bank heaped over the
farther river. Still Jean watched Kaskaskia. "But the glory remains when the light fades away," he sung to himself. He had caught the line from some English boatmen. "Ye dog, ye dog, where are you, ye dog?" called a voice from the woods behind him. "Here, grandfather," answered Jean, starting like a whipped dog. He took his red cap from under his arm, sighing, and slouched away from the bluff edge, the coarse homespun which he wore revealing knots and joints in his work-hardened frame. "Ye dog, am I to have my supper to-night?" "Yes, grandfather." But Jean took one more look at the capital of his love, which he had never entered, and for which he was unceasingly homesick. The governor's carriage dashed along the road beneath him, with a military escort from Fort Chartres. He felt no envy of such state. He would have used the carriage to cross the bridge. "If I but lived in Kaskaskia!" whispered Jean. The man on horseback, who met and passed the ball-goers, rode through Kaskaskia's twinkling streets in the pleasant glow of twilight. Trade had not reached its day's end. The crack of long whips could be heard, |
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