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The Hills of Hingham by Dallas Lore Sharp
page 33 of 160 (20%)
boreal night you could hear a hollow rumbling running down the length
of the pond--the ice being split with the wide iron wedge of the cold.

Down and down for three days slipped the silver column in the
thermometer until at eight o'clock on the fourth day it stood just
above zero. Cold? It was splendid weather! with four inches of ice on
the little pond behind the ridge, glare ice, black as you looked across
it, but like a pane of plate glass as you peered into it at the
stirless bottom below; smooth glare ice untouched by the wing of the
wind or by even the circling runner of the skater-snow. Another day
and night like this and the solid square-edged blocks could come in.

I looked at the glass late that night and found it still falling. I
went on out beneath the stars. It may have been the tightened
telephone wires overhead, or the frozen ground beneath me ringing with
the distant tread of the coming north wind, yet over these, and with
them, I heard the singing of a voiceless song, no louder than the
winging hum of bees, but vaster--the earth and air responding to a
starry lyre as some Aeolian harper, sweeping through the silvery spaces
of the night, brushed the strings with her robes of jeweled cold.

The mercury stood at zero by one o'clock. A biting wind had risen and
blew all the next day. Eight inches of ice by this time. One night
more and the crop would be ripe. And it was ripe.

I was out before the sun, tramping down to the pond with pike and saw,
the team not likely to be along for half an hour yet, the breaking of
the marvelous day all mine. Like apples of gold in baskets of silver
were the snow-covered ridges in the light of the slow-coming dawn. The
wind had fallen, but the chill seemed the more intense, so silently it
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