The Man-Wolf and Other Tales eBook

Emile Erckmann
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 231 pages of information about The Man-Wolf and Other Tales.

The Man-Wolf and Other Tales eBook

Emile Erckmann
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 231 pages of information about The Man-Wolf and Other Tales.

Time passed on slowly.  The distant village clock had struck twelve, then one, and two, and the young gipsy never stirred.  In the woods and jagged mountain-tops, the crags, the forests, descending into the valleys, she heard some mysterious call.  They spoke to her in a language not unknown to her.

“Yes,” she said to herself, “yes; I have seen all that before—­long ago—­a long time ago.”

Then with a quick, sharp glance at Fritz, who was in a deep sleep, she rose to her feet and began to fly.  Her light footsteps scarcely bent the grass beneath her; she ran on and on, up the hill; Friedland turned his head round with a careless glance, then stretched out once more his languid limbs, and composed himself to sleep.

Myrtle disappeared in the midst of the brambles which border the common wood.  At one bound she cleared the muddy ditch where a single frog was croaking amongst the rushes, and twenty minutes after she reached the top of the Roche Creuse, whence you may have a wide prospect of Alsace and the blue summits of the Vosges.

Then she turned to see if anybody was following her.  She could still distinguish Fritz asleep in the green meadow with his hat over his eyes, and Friedland and the sleeping cattle under their tree.

Farther on she could see the village, the river, the roof of the farm-house, with its flights of pigeons eddying round; the long, crooked street and red-petticoated women walking leisurely up and down; the little ivy-covered church where the good cure Niclausse had baptised her into the Christian faith and afterwards confirmed her.

And when she had sufficiently contemplated these objects, turning her face the other way towards the mountain, she was filled with delight to mark how the densely-crowded firs covered the hill-sides, up to their highest ridge, close as the grass of the fields.

At the sight of all this grandeur the young gipsy felt her heart beating and expanding with unknown delight, and again running on she darted through a rift between the rocks, lined with mosses and ferns, to reach the beaten track through the woods.

Her whole soul—­that wild, untrained soul of hers—­was rushing with her and impelling her onwards, kindling her countenance with a new ardour.  With her hands she clung to the ivy, with her naked feet she clung to the projections and the crevices to push on her way.

Soon she was on the other slope, running, tripping, leaping, sometimes stopping short to gaze upon surrounding objects—­a large tree, a ravine, a lonely sheet of water, or a pond full of flowers and sweet-smelling water-plants.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Man-Wolf and Other Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.