[The Last of the Foresters by John Esten Cooke]@TWC D-Link bookThe Last of the Foresters CHAPTER LXII 4/6
"Oh, yes! I know what it means! They laugh at it--but they ought not to.
It is heaven in the heart--sunshine in the breast.
Oh, I feel that what I mean by love is purer than the whole wide world besides! Yes, yes--because I would die for her! I would give my life to save her any suffering--her hand on my forehead would be dearer and sweeter than the cool spring in the hills after a weary, day-long hunt, when I come to it with hot cheeks and burnt-up throat! Oh, yes! I may be an Indian, and be different--but this is all to me--this feeling, as if I must go to her, and kneel down and tell her that my life is gone from me when I am not near her--that I walk and live like a man dreaming, when she does not smile on me and speak to me!" Verty's head drooped, and his cheeks reddened with the ingenuous blush of boyhood.
Then he raised his head, and murmured, with a smile, which made his face beautiful--so full of light and joy was it. "Yes--I think I am in love with Redbud--and she does not think it wrong, I am sure--oh, I don't think she will think it wrong in me, and turn against me, only because I love her!" Having arrived at this conclusion, Verty went along smiling, and admiring the splendid tints of the foliage--drinking in the fresh, breezy air of morning, and occasionally listening for the cries of game--of deer, and turkey, pheasants, and the rest.
He heard with his quick ear many of these sounds: the still croak of the turkey, the drumming of the pheasant; more than once saw disappear on a distant hill, like a flying shadow, the fallow deer, which he had so often chased and shot.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|