[The Prince and The Pauper by Mark Twain]@TWC D-Link bookThe Prince and The Pauper CHAPTER XVIII 10/17
He was obliged to keep moving, for every time he sat down to rest he was soon penetrated to the bone with the cold.
All his sensations and experiences, as he moved through the solemn gloom and the empty vastness of the night, were new and strange to him.
At intervals he heard voices approach, pass by, and fade into silence; and as he saw nothing more of the bodies they belonged to than a sort of formless drifting blur, there was something spectral and uncanny about it all that made him shudder.
Occasionally he caught the twinkle of a light--always far away, apparently--almost in another world; if he heard the tinkle of a sheep's bell, it was vague, distant, indistinct; the muffled lowing of the herds floated to him on the night wind in vanishing cadences, a mournful sound; now and then came the complaining howl of a dog over viewless expanses of field and forest; all sounds were remote; they made the little King feel that all life and activity were far removed from him, and that he stood solitary, companionless, in the centre of a measureless solitude. He stumbled along, through the gruesome fascinations of this new experience, startled occasionally by the soft rustling of the dry leaves overhead, so like human whispers they seemed to sound; and by-and-by he came suddenly upon the freckled light of a tin lantern near at hand.
He stepped back into the shadows and waited.
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