[Zanoni by Edward Bulwer Lytton]@TWC D-Link book
Zanoni

CHAPTER 3
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Dizzy and breathless, he bounded forward; when--hark!--a sullen, slow rolling sounded in his ear! He halted,--and turned back to gaze.

The fire had overflowed its course; it had opened itself a channel amidst the furrows of the mountain.

The stream pursued him fast--fast; and the hot breath of the chasing and preternatural foe came closer and closer upon his cheek! He turned aside; he climbed desperately with hands and feet upon a crag that, to the right, broke the scathed and blasted level of the soil.

The stream rolled beside and beneath him, and then taking a sudden wind round the spot on which he stood, interposed its liquid fire,--a broad and impassable barrier between his resting-place and escape.

There he stood, cut off from descent, and with no alternative but to retrace his steps towards the crater, and thence seek, without guide or clew, some other pathway.
For a moment his courage left him; he cried in despair, and in that overstrained pitch of voice which is never heard afar off, to the guide, to Mervale, to return to aid him.
No answer came; and the Englishman, thus abandoned solely to his own resources, felt his spirit and energy rise against the danger.


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