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Show '1 ‘1‘ lit-Hm ti \l. 1 A t l\t "‘t\l \tl_" l"' l ‘ ;' t . 'l'll lC Tl )lllltfi'l' ' ' A ~. .hl it to Y l ' tiliixirMiw I>tltl< it ‘ ' Hit i l tr:- ‘lii‘liail wt 255 hands r'tl'l(‘(l‘ looting in trait ul‘ him. He seemed elder: the sentimental mix'etf that had heen always in his face rt't‘lllt‘tl now entirely to hare lel't, him. He had always ltllll<('fl hello-I- as though he wanted Some one to help him out, of a posit ion that \‘v';t\l')|)tlililt711ll, forhimgnmvhe was l1:i\etli-ir..sv ‘l‘tl l» "I it"imi‘ia'w. 1‘" l .t 17‘ ‘I\~‘\ l7 it ,,i vt" l V" ."i".‘..tii-toli:i\'e l ,: " i'li'. ware‘i'iltlll‘ timlim.l,lt'.t:.»--.W ."'i :~' -\'~-\Illl\ tt~.1:" IX? :il.<l ‘ ' H Ullml w. ‘ l.‘l‘ irwlawnte-t t 11.? llugwltal." ‘«-~ We ' 'i lltl'"Illuillijlittilll'tvl:li-~l lt‘ l "I . l . \i‘l l '.7:i‘l. v‘thv-‘ti-‘tl-H-a; ll‘s' "t'lass‘ ' whirl v 1' "I‘m." and l i: :isti.‘i»t‘rrl'tlll.‘ l.: hits and (‘lt\l"lil\ «it I'wi'wiem In" Klifiiii. t'..!i.l‘ 11;" :«A "\‘C'lf m :«t- :-"i hillll.‘\\ll‘.l"\‘liluil'lifii1""...i‘l. at onee :; l tla re ( t-l‘»ii"l \laxi- If. my" "\- aimn HS this that it might the more impress us. Our read, zltheugh l;;.\~ \‘mi'inlwl lllltil limition lielvHI'C, it was the high road, was retigh and uneven and we ad'aneed slowly: with eVerV step that the horses tool; I was the more conscious of a sinister and malign intluenee. i know how easily one} netwes ean lend atmosphere to some: thing: that is in itsell' innoeent and harmless enough, hut: oi. the rim" ""1 3": it‘ll-.3 l" 'N" ‘i'l'jf lu‘arL though it hail luwn thi- «ttl'nn'ul ol' some had happened ‘\'est‘ertla.\', neither 'l‘renehard‘s nerves ner Inuit :t‘ml get tlil't'l‘i with ix [5 possfifle. ;_.| i". f_ lln} s \‘.:'e 'th l" littt‘ this (‘ti‘it l‘ll‘ir»1| 1M" l‘lau'e. {1 gm} ', 1117:;3 ;.\ :I llasten. l't:.1. .\niiru it uitvh. hi t;:1_:\ tltviiig ti) F}, liltl" to low-ii \ulatt-h wasa little imam: s muted, 5:11 \t i‘-t~ t» our right in the l‘itrl'tfl. l lami heard it 1]. ~13. e i (win: a Form-t. alone in a. world where no one. eould reach him. During the whole drive to Vultueh we exehaneed no word. The sound of the eannon wit»: distant; hut ineessant, and strangely, as it, Ff‘t‘lllt'tl to me. we were alone. Once and again soldiers passed us, sonnet inns waeons with hitehens or provisions met us on the road, some! into» groups of men were waitinicr by the roadside, onee we saw them setting up telegraph wires, once a desolate liainl ol' .\u-~trian prisoners crossed our path, twiee wagons with wounded rumbled along-hut for the most, part we were alone. \Ve were out of the main trael; of the hattle. It was as though the Forest had arranged early I'lellifis. lt luul runnin: through it, a good high road, hut otherwise was far t't mph] from the "a", world. It 1""1 dm‘l"! ill" Wm" ln‘en iwiee lurinltvl'tli'll and was now; I heliered ruined ain" that MM}. 13m, the moment: it was it must he rememlwred that tat this time i, in spite of what mine were, strained. My sensation must, I think, have closely resemhled the, feelings of a diver who. for the first time, deseends below the water. I: had never felt anything like this before and there was quite. definitely about. my eyes. fril‘i‘llfl‘littll of gain;w alone with TrentI".I».1.__1‘1.i:_,_11[(.m.dtmth of myself and oi him. I Mia: him and without a word he \t-Qnt with me. \‘t'lzen \‘i" J 34. ‘1 mi" in the wagon l 1""de my nose, my mouth, a feeling of sull'oeation. T can only say that it; was exaetlu' as though I were breathing in an atmos- phere that was strange. to me. This may have heen partly the eli'eet of the sun that; was heating dUWII VOW Sl71""1§l.." at him. Upon us, lflll it was also, eill‘iullsl)' enough, the result of the llt‘utltlilétl'lt'l'p H1. lite Sign l‘iijtli 5&3; l was l'ranltl'v He was :flttiuii‘ on the straw, very quietly, 1115 |