<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X"></SPAN>CHAPTER X</h2>
<br/>
<p>One day Wade remarked to Belllounds: "You can never tell what a
dog is until you know him. Dogs are like men. Some of 'em look
good, but they're really bad. An' that works the other way round.
If a dog's born to run wild an' be a sheep-killer, that's what
he'll be. I've known dogs that loved men as no humans could have
loved them. It doesn't make any difference to a dog if his master
is a worthless scamp."</p>
<p>"Wal, I reckon most of them hounds I bought had no good masters,
judgin' from the way they act," replied the rancher.</p>
<p>"I'm developin' a first-rate pack," said Wade. "Jim hasn't any
faults exceptin' he doesn't bay enough. Sampson's not as true-nosed
as Jim, but he'll follow Jim, an' he has a deep, heavy bay you can
hear for miles. So that makes up for Jim's one fault. These two
hounds hang together, an' with them I'm developin' others. Denver
will split off of bear or lion tracks when he jumps a deer. I
reckon he's not young enough to be cured of that. Some of the
younger hounds are comin' on fine. But there's two dogs in the
bunch that beat me all hollow."</p>
<p>"Which ones?" asked Belllounds.</p>
<p>"There's that bloodhound, Kane," replied the hunter. "He's sure
a queer dog. I can't win him. He minds me now because I licked him,
an' once good an' hard when he bit me.... But he doesn't cotton to
me worth a damn. He's gettin' fond of Miss Columbine, an' I believe
might make a good watch-dog for her. Where'd he come from,
Belllounds?"</p>
<p>"Wal, if I don't disremember he was born in a prairie-schooner,
comin' across the plains. His mother was a full-blood, an' come
from Louisiana."</p>
<p>"That accounts for an instinct I see croppin' out in Kane,"
rejoined Wade. "He likes to trail a man. I've caught him doin' it.
An' he doesn't take to huntin' lions or bear. Why, the other day,
when the hounds treed a lion an' went howlin' wild, Kane came up,
an' he looked disgusted an' went off by himself. He hunts by
himself, anyhow. First off I thought he might be a sheep-killer.
But I reckon not. He can trail men, an' that's about all the good
he is. His mother must have been a slave-hunter, an' Kane inherits
that trailin' instinct."</p>
<p>"Ahuh! Wal, train him on trailin' men, then. I've seen times
when a dog like thet'd come handy. An' if he takes to Collie an'
you approve of him, let her have him. She's been coaxin' me fer a
dog."</p>
<p>"That isn't a bad idea. Miss Collie walks an' rides alone a good
deal, an' she never packs a gun."</p>
<p>"Funny about thet," said Belllounds. "Collie is game in most
ways, but she'd never kill anythin'.... Wade, you ain't thinkin'
she ought to stop them lonesome walks an' rides?"</p>
<p>"No, sure not, so long as she doesn't go too far away."</p>
<p>"Ahuh! Wal, supposin' she rode up out of the valley, west on the
Black Range?"</p>
<p>"That won't do, Belllounds," replied Wade, seriously. "But Miss
Collie's not goin' to, for I've cautioned her. Fact is I've run
across some hard-lookin' men between here an' Buffalo Park. They're
not hunters or prospectors or cattlemen or travelers."</p>
<p>"Wal, you don't say!" rejoined Belllounds. "Now, Wade, are you
connectin' up them strangers with the stock I missed on this last
round-up?"</p>
<p>"Reckon I can't go as far as that," returned Wade. "But I didn't
like their looks."</p>
<p>"Thet comin' from you, Wade, is like the findin's of a jury....
It's gettin' along toward October. Snow'll be flyin' soon. You
don't reckon them strangers will winter in the woods?"</p>
<p>"No, I don't. Neither does Lewis. You recollect him?"</p>
<p>"Yes, thet prospector who hangs out around Buffalo Park, lookin'
fer gold. He's been hyar. Good fellar, but crazy on gold."</p>
<p>"I've met Lewis several times, one place and another. I lost the
hounds day before yesterday. They treed a lion an' Lewis heard the
racket, an' he stayed with them till I come up. Then he told me
some interestin' news. You see he's been worryin' about this gang
thet's rangin' around Buffalo Park, an' he's tried to get a line on
them. Somebody took a shot at him in the woods. He couldn't swear
it was one of that outfit, but he could swear he wasn't near shot
by accident. Now Lewis says these men pack to an' fro from Elgeria,
an' he has a hunch they're in cahoots with Smith, who runs a place
there. You know Smith?"</p>
<p>"No, I don't, an' haven't any wish to," declared Belllounds,
shortly. "He always looked shady to me. An' he's not been square
with friends of mine in Elgeria. But no one ever proved him
crooked, whatever was thought. Fer my part, I never missed a guess
in my life. Men don't have scars on their face like his fer
nothin'."</p>
<p>"Boss, I'm confidin' what I want kept under your hat," said
Wade, quietly. "I knew Smith. He's as bad as the West makes them. I
gave him that scar.... An' when he sees me he's goin' for his
gun."</p>
<p>"Wal, I'll be darned! Doesn't surprise me. It's a small
world.... Wade, I'll keep my mouth shut, sure. But what's your
game?"</p>
<p>"Lewis an' I will find out if there is any connection between
Smith an' this gang of strangers--an' the occasional loss of a few
head of stock."</p>
<p>"Ahuh! Wal, you have my good will, you bet.... Sure thar's been
some rustlin' of cattle. Not enough to make any rancher holler, an'
I reckon there never will be any more of thet in Colorado. Still,
if we get the drop on some outfit we sure ought to corral
them."</p>
<p>"Boss, I'm tellin' you--"</p>
<p>"Wade, you ain't agoin' to start thet tellin' hell-bent
happenin's to come hyar at White Slides?" interrupted Belllounds,
plaintively.</p>
<p>"No, I reckon I've no hunch like that now," responded Wade,
seriously. "But I was about to say that if Smith is in on any
rustlin' of cattle he'll be hard to catch, an' if he's caught
there'll be shootin' to pay. He's cunnin' an' has had long
experience. It's not likely he'd work openly, as he did years ago.
If he's stealin' stock or buyin' an' sellin' stock that some one
steals for him, it's only on a small scale, an' it'll be hard to
trace."</p>
<p>"Wal, he might be deep," said Belllounds, reflectively. "But men
like thet, no matter how deep or cunnin' they are, always come to a
bad end. Jest works out natural.... Had you any grudge ag'in'
Smith?"</p>
<p>"What I give him was for somebody else, an' was sure little
enough. He's got the grudge against me."</p>
<p>"Ahuh! Wal, then, don't you go huntin' fer trouble. Try an' make
White Slides one place thet'll disprove your name. All the same,
don't shy at sight of anythin' suspicious round the ranch."</p>
<p>The old man plodded thoughtfully away, leaving the hunter
likewise in a brown study.</p>
<p>"He's gettin' a hunch that I'll tell him of some shadow hoverin'
black over White Slides," soliloquized Wade. "Maybe--maybe so. But
I don't see any yet.... Strange how a man will say what he didn't
start out to say. Now, I started to tell him about that amazin' dog
Fox."</p>
<p>Fox was the great dog of the whole pack, and he had been
absolutely overlooked, which fact Wade regarded with contempt for
himself. Discovery of this particular dog came about by accident.
Somewhere in the big corral there was a hole where the smaller dogs
could escape, but Wade had been unable to find it. For that matter
the corral was full of holes, not any of which, however, it
appeared to Wade, would permit anything except a squirrel to pass
in and out.</p>
<p>One day when the hunter, very much exasperated, was prowling
around and around inside the corral, searching for this mysterious
vent, a rather small dog, with short gray and brown woolly hair,
and shaggy brows half hiding big, bright eyes, came up wagging his
stump of a tail.</p>
<p>"Well, what do you know about it?" demanded Wade. Of course he
had noticed this particular dog, but to no purpose. On this
occasion the dog repeated so unmistakably former overtures of
friendship that Wade gave him close scrutiny. He was neither young
nor comely nor thoroughbred, but there was something in his
intelligent eyes that struck the hunter significantly. "Say, maybe
I overlooked somethin'? But there's been a heap of dogs round here
an' you're no great shucks for looks. Now, if you're talkin' to me
come an' find that hole."</p>
<p>Whereupon Wade began another search around the corral. It
covered nearly an acre of ground, and in some places the
fence-poles had been sunk near rocks. More than once Wade got down
upon his hands and knees to see if he could find the hole. The dog
went with him, watching with knowing eyes that the hunter imagined
actually laughed at him. But they were glad eyes, which began to
make an appeal. Presently, when Wade came to a rough place, the dog
slipped under a shelving rock, and thence through a half-concealed
hole in the fence; and immediately came back through to wag his
stump of a tail and look as if the finding of that hole was easy
enough.</p>
<p>"You old fox," declared Wade, very much pleased, as he patted
the dog. "You found it for me, didn't you? Good dog! Now I'll fix
that hole, an' then you can come to the cabin with me. An' your
name's Fox."</p>
<p>That was how Fox introduced himself to Wade, and found his
opportunity. The fact that he was not a hound had operated against
his being taken out hunting, and therefore little or no attention
had been paid him. Very shortly Fox showed himself to be a dog of
superior intelligence. The hunter had lived much with dogs and had
come to learn that the longer he lived with them the more there was
to marvel at and love.</p>
<p>Fox insisted so strongly on being taken out to hunt with the
hounds that Wade, vowing not to be surprised at anything, let him
go. It happened to be a particularly hard day on hounds because of
old tracks and cross-tracks and difficult ground. Fox worked out a
labyrinthine trail that Sampson gave up and Jim failed on. This
delighted Wade, and that night he tried to find out from Andrews,
who sold the dog to Belllounds, something about Fox. All the
information obtainable was that Andrews suspected the fellow from
whom he had gotten Fox had stolen him. Belllounds had never noticed
him at all. Wade kept the possibilities of Fox to himself and
reserved his judgment, and every day gave the dog another chance to
show what he knew.</p>
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<SPAN name="p160.jpg"></SPAN>
<p class="ctr"><SPAN href="images/p160.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/p160.jpg" alt=""></SPAN><br/>
<b>"I'm beginnin' to feel that I couldn't let her marry that Buster
Jack,"<br/>
soliloquized Wade, as he rode along the grassy trail.</b></p>
<br/>
<p>Long before the end of that week Wade loved Fox and decided that
he was a wonderful animal. Fox liked to hunt, but it did not matter
what he hunted. That depended upon the pleasure of his master. He
would find hobbled horses that were hiding out and standing still
to escape detection. He would trail cattle. He would tree squirrels
and point grouse. Invariably he suited his mood to the kind of game
he hunted. If put on an elk track, or that of deer, he would follow
it, keeping well within sight of the hunter, and never uttering a
single bark or yelp; and without any particular eagerness he would
stick until he had found the game or until he was called off. Bear
and cat tracks, however, roused the savage instinct in him, and
transformed him. He yelped at every jump on a trail, and whenever
his yelp became piercing and continuous Wade well knew the quarry
was in sight. He fought bear like a wise old dog that knew when to
rush in with a snap and when to keep away. When lions or wildcats
were treed Fox lost much of his ferocity and interest. Then the
matter of that particular quarry was ended. His most valuable
characteristic, however, was his ability to stick on the track upon
which he was put. Wade believed if he put Fox on the trail of a
rabbit, and if a bear or lion were to cross that trail ahead of
him, Fox would stick to the rabbit. Even more remarkable was it
that Fox would not steal a piece of meat and that he would fight
the other dogs for being thieves.</p>
<p>Fox and Kane, it seemed to the hunter in his reflective
foreshadowing of events at White Slides, were destined to play most
important parts.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Upon a certain morning, several days before October first--which
date rankled in the mind of Wade--he left Moore's cabin, leading a
pack-horse. The hounds he had left behind at the ranch, but Fox
accompanied him.</p>
<p>"Wade, I want some elk steak," old Belllounds had said the day
before. "Nothin' like a good rump steak! I was raised on elk meat.
Now hyar, more'n a week ago I told you I wanted some. There's elk
all around. I heerd a bull whistle at sunup to-day. Made me wish I
was young ag'in!... You go pack in an elk."</p>
<p>"I haven't run across any bulls lately," Wade had replied, but
he did not mention that he had avoided such a circumstance. The
fact was Wade admired and loved the elk above all horned wild
animals. So strange was his attitude toward elk that he had gone
meat-hungry many a time with these great stags bugling near his
camp.</p>
<p>As he climbed the yellow, grassy mountain-side, working round
above the valley, his mind was not centered on the task at hand,
but on Wilson Moore, who had come to rely on him with the
unconscious tenacity of a son whose faith in his father was
unshakable. The crippled cowboy kept his hope, kept his cheerful,
grateful spirit, obeyed and suffered with a patience that was fine.
There had been no improvement in his injured foot. Wade worried
about that much more than Moore. The thing that mostly occupied the
cowboy was the near approach of October first, with its terrible
possibility for him. He did not talk about it, except when fever
made him irrational, but it was plain to Wade how he prayed and
hoped and waited in silence. Strange how he trusted Wade to avert
catastrophe of Columbine's marriage! Yet such trust seemed familiar
to Wade, as he reflected over past years. Had he not wanted such
trust--had he not invited it?</p>
<p>For twenty years no happiness had come to Wade in any sense
comparable to that now secretly his, as he lived near Columbine
Belllounds, divining more and more each day how truly she was his
own flesh and the image of the girl he had loved and married and
wronged. Columbine was his daughter. He saw himself in her. And
Columbine, from being strongly attracted to him and trusting in him
and relying upon him, had come to love him. That was the most
beautiful and terrible fact of his life--beautiful because it
brought back the past, her babyhood, and his barren years, and gave
him this sudden change, where he lived transported with the sense
and the joy of his possession. It was terrible because she was
unhappy, because she was chained to duty and honor, because ruin
faced her, and lastly because Wade began to have the vague, gloomy
intimations of distant tragedy. Far off, like a cloud on the
horizon, but there! Long ago he had learned the uselessness of
fighting his morbid visitations. But he clung to hope, to faith in
life, to the victory of the virtuous, to the defeat of evil. A
thousand proofs had strengthened him in that clinging.</p>
<p>There were personal dread and poignant pain for Wade in
Columbine Belllounds's situation. After all, he had only his subtle
and intuitive assurance that matters would turn out well for her in
the end. To trust that now, when the shadow began to creep over his
own daughter, seemed unwise--a juggling with chance.</p>
<p>"I'm beginnin' to feel that I couldn't let her marry that Buster
Jack," soliloquized Wade, as he rode along the grassy trail. "Fust
off, seein' how strong was her sense of duty an' loyalty, I wasn't
so set against it. But somethin's growin' in me. Her love for that
crippled boy, now, an' his for her! Lord! they're so young an' life
must be so hot an' love so sweet! I reckon that's why I couldn't
let her marry Jack.... But, on the other hand, there's the old
man's faith in his son, an' there's Collie's faith in herself an'
in life. Now I believe in that. An' the years have proved to me
there's hope for the worst of men.... I haven't even had a talk
with this Buster Jack. I don't know him, except by hearsay. An' I'm
sure prejudiced, which's no wonder, considerin' where I saw him in
Denver.... I reckon, before I go any farther, I'd better meet this
Belllounds boy an' see what's in him."</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>It was characteristic of Wade that this soliloquy abruptly ended
his thoughtful considerations for the time being. This was owing to
the fact that he rested upon a decision, and also because it was
time he began to attend to the object of his climb.</p>
<p>Bench after bench he had ascended, and the higher he got the
denser and more numerous became the aspen thickets and the more
luxuriant the grass. Presently the long black slope of spruce
confronted him, with its edge like a dark wall. He entered the
fragrant forest, where not a twig stirred nor a sound pervaded the
silence. Upon the soft, matted earth the hoofs of the horses made
no impression and scarcely a perceptible thud.</p>
<p>Wade headed to the left, avoiding rough, rocky defiles of
weathered cliff and wind-fallen trees, and aimed to find easy going
up to the summit of the mountain bluff far above. This was new
forest to him, consisting of moderate-sized spruce-trees growing so
closely together that he had to go carefully to keep from snapping
dead twigs. Fox trotted on in the lead, now and then pausing to
look up at his master, as if for instructions.</p>
<p>A brightening of the dark-green gloom ahead showed the hunter
that he was approaching a large glade or open patch, where the
sunlight fell strongly. It turned out to be a swale, or swampy
place, some few acres in extent, and directly at the foot of a last
steep, wooded slope. Here Fox put his nose into the air and
halted.</p>
<p>"What're you scentin', Fox, old boy?" asked Wade, with low
voice, as he peered ahead. The wind was in the wrong direction for
him to approach close to game without being detected. Fox wagged
his stumpy tail and looked up with knowing eyes. Wade proceeded
cautiously. The swamp was a rank growth of long, weedy grasses and
ferns, with here and there a green-mossed bog half hidden and a
number of dwarf oak-trees. Wade's horse sank up to his knees in the
mire. On the other side showed fresh tracks along the wet margin of
the swale.</p>
<p>"It's elk, all right," said Wade, as he dismounted. "Heard us
comin'. Now, Fox, stick your nose in that track. An' go slow."</p>
<p>With rifle ready Wade began the ascent of the slope on foot,
leading his horse. An old elk trail showed a fresh track. Fox
accommodated his pace to that of the toiling hunter. The ascent was
steep and led up through dense forest. At intervals, when Wade
halted to catch his breath and listen, he heard faint snapping of
dead branches far above. At length he reached the top of the
mountain, to find a wide, open space, with heavy forest in front,
and a bare, ghastly, burned-over district to his right. Fox
growled, and appeared about to dash forward. Then, in an opening
through the forest, Wade espied a large bull elk, standing at gaze,
evidently watching him. He was a gray old bull, with broken
antlers. Wade made no move to shoot, and presently the elk walked
out of sight.</p>
<p>"Too old an' tough, Fox," explained the hunter to the anxious
dog. But perhaps that was not all Wade's motive in sparing him.</p>
<p>Once more mounted, Wade turned his attention to the burned
district. It was a dreary, hideous splotch, a blackened slash in
the green cover of the mountain. It sloped down into a wide hollow
and up another bare slope. The ground was littered with bleached
logs, trees that had been killed first by fire and then felled by
wind. Here and there a lofty, spectral trunk still withstood the
blasts. Across the hollow sloped a considerable area where all
trees were dead and still standing--a melancholy sight. Beyond, and
far round and down to the left, opened up a slope of spruce and
bare ridge, where a few cedars showed dark, and then came black,
spear-tipped forest again, leading the eye to the magnificent
panorama of endless range on range, purple in the distance.</p>
<p>Wade found patches of grass where beds had been recently
occupied.</p>
<p>"Mountain-sheep, by cracky!" exclaimed the hunter. "An' fresh
tracks, too!... Now I wonder if it wouldn't do to kill a sheep an'
tell Belllounds I couldn't find any elk."</p>
<p>The hunter had no qualms about killing mountain-sheep, but he
loved the lordly stags and would have lied to spare them. He rode
on, with keen gaze shifting everywhere to catch a movement of
something in this wilderness before him. If there was any living
animal in sight it did not move. Wade crossed the hollow, wended a
circuitous route through the upstanding forest of dead timber, and
entered a thick woods that skirted the rim of the mountain.
Presently he came out upon the open rim, from which the depths of
green and gray yawned mightily. Far across, Old White Slides loomed
up, higher now, with a dignity and majesty unheralded from
below.</p>
<p>Wade found fresh sheep tracks in the yellow clay of the rim,
small as little deer tracks, showing that they had just been made
by ewes and lambs. Not a ram track in the group!</p>
<p>"Well, that lets me out," said Wade, as he peered under the
bluff for sight of the sheep. They had gone over the steep rim as
if they had wings. "Beats hell how sheep can go down without
fallin'! An' how they can hide!"</p>
<p>He knew they were near at hand and he wasted time peering to spy
them out. Nevertheless, he could not locate them. Fox waited
impatiently for the word to let him prove how easily he could rout
them out, but this permission was not forthcoming.</p>
<p>"We're huntin' elk, you Jack-of-all-dogs," reprovingly spoke the
hunter to Fox.</p>
<p>So they went on around the rim, and after a couple of miles of
travel came to the forest, and then open heads of hollows that
widened and deepened down. Here was excellent pasture and cover for
elk. Wade left the rim to ride down these slow-descending half-open
ridges, where cedars grew and jack-pines stood in clumps, and
little grassy-bordered brooks babbled between. He saw tracks where
a big buck deer had crossed ahead of him, and then he flushed a
covey of grouse that scared the horses, and then he saw where a
bear had pulled a rotten log to pieces. Fox did not show any
interest in these things.</p>
<p>By and by Wade descended to the junction of these hollows, where
three tiny brooklets united to form a stream of pure, swift, clear
water, perhaps a foot deep and several yards wide.</p>
<p>"I reckon this's the head of the Troublesome," said Wade.
"Whoever named this brook had no sense.... Yet here, at its source,
it's gatherin' trouble for itself. That's the way of youth."</p>
<p>The grass grew thickly and luxuriantly and showed signs of
recent grazing. Elk had been along the brook that morning. There
were many tracks, like cow tracks, only smaller, deeper, and more
oval; and there were beds where elk had lain, and torn-up places
where bulls had plowed and stamped with heavy hoofs.</p>
<p>Fox trailed the herd to higher ground, where evidently they had
entered the woods. Here Wade tied his horses, and, whispering to
Fox, he proceeded stealthily through this strip of spruce. He came
out to an open point, taking care, however, to keep well screened,
from which he had a glimpse of a parklike hollow, grassy and
watered. Working round to better vantage, he soon espied what had
made Fox stand so stiff and bristling. A herd of elk were trooping
up the opposite slope, scarcely a hundred yards distant. They had
heard or scented him, but did not appear alarmed. They halted to
look back. The hunter's quick estimate credited nearly two dozen to
the herd, mostly cows. A magnificent bull, with wide-spreading
antlers, and black head and shoulders and gray hind quarters,
stalked out from the herd, and stood an instant, head aloft,
splendidly significant of the wild. Then he trotted into the woods,
his antlers noiselessly spreading the green. Others trotted off
likewise. Wade raised his rifle and looked through the sight at the
bull, and let him pass. Then he saw another over his rifle, and
another. Reluctant and forced, he at last aimed and pulled trigger.
The heavy Henry boomed out in the stillness. Fox dashed down with
eager barks. When the smoke cleared away Wade saw the opposite
slope bare except for one fallen elk.</p>
<p>Then he returned to his horses, and brought them back to where
Fox perched beside the dead quarry.</p>
<p>"Well, Fox, that stag'll never bugle any more of a sunrise,"
said Wade. "Strange how we're made so we have to eat meat! I'd 'a'
liked it otherwise."</p>
<p>He cut up the elk, and packed all the meat the horse could
carry, and hung the best of what was left out of the reach of
coyotes. Mounting once more, he ascended to the rim and found a
slope leading down to the west. Over the basin country below he had
hunted several days. This way back to the ranch was longer, he
calculated, but less arduous for man and beast. His pack-horse
would have hard enough going in any event. From time to time Wade
halted to rest the burdened pack-animal. At length he came to a
trail he had himself made, which he now proceeded to follow. It led
out of the basin, through burned and boggy ground and down upon the
forest slope, thence to the grassy and aspened uplands. One aspen
grove, where he had rested before, faced the west, and, for reasons
hard to guess, had suffered little from frost. All the leaves were
intact, some still green, but most of them a glorious gold against
the blue. It was a large grove, sloping gently, carpeted with
yellow grass and such a profusion of purple asters as Wade had
never seen in his flower-loving life. Here he dismounted and sat
against an aspen-tree. His horses ruthlessly cropped the purple
blossoms.</p>
<p>Nature in her strong prodigality had outdone herself here. Pale
white the aspen-trees shone, and above was the fluttering,
quivering canopy of gold tinged with green, and below clustered the
asters, thick as stars in the sky, waving, nodding, swaying
gracefully to each little autumn breeze, lilac-hued and lavender
and pale violet, and all the shades of exquisite purple.</p>
<p>Wade lingered, his senses predominating. This was one of those
moments that colored his lonely wanderings. Only to see was enough.
He would have shut out the encroaching thoughts of self, of others,
of life, had that been wholly possible. But here, after the first
few moments of exquisite riot of his senses, where fragrance of
grass and blossom filled the air, and blaze of gold canopied the
purple, he began to think how beautiful the earth was, how Nature
hid her rarest gifts for those who loved her most, how good it was
to live, if only for these blessings. And sadness crept into his
meditations because all this beauty was ephemeral, all the gold
would soon be gone, and the asters, so pale and pure and purple,
would soon be like the glory of a dream that had passed.</p>
<p>Yet still followed the saving thought that frost and winter must
again yield to sun, and spring, summer, autumn would return with
the flowers of their season, in that perennial birth so gracious
and promising. The aspen leaves would quiver and slowly gild, the
grass would wave in the wind, the asters would bloom, lifting
star-pale faces to the sky. Next autumn, and every year, and
forever, as long as the sun warmed the earth!</p>
<p>It was only man who would not always return to the haunts he
loved.</p>
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