The Man in the Twilight eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 478 pages of information about The Man in the Twilight.

The Man in the Twilight eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 478 pages of information about The Man in the Twilight.

Leslie Standing stood for a moment before passing down the winding woodland trail on his way to the water-front below.  The view of it all was irresistible to him in his present mood, and he feasted his eyes hungrily while the resolve he had taken yielded an inflexible hardening.

Bat Harker was less affected by the things spread out before him.  He was concerned only for the mood of the man beside him.  So he waited with such patience as his hasty nature could summon.

“It’s all good, Bat, old friend,” Standing said, after a moment’s silent contemplation.  “It’s too good to lose.  It’s too good for us to stand for interference from—­Nathaniel Hellbeam.”

Bat grunted some sort of acquiescence.  He was gazing steadily out over the spruce belt which covered the lower slopes of the hillside.  His keen deep-set eyes were on the shipping lying out in the cove, watching the fussy approach of the bluff packet boat.

It was a scene of amazing natural splendour which the works of man had no power to destroy.  Farewell Cove was a perfect natural harbour, deep-set amidst surrounding, lofty, forest-clad hills.  It was wide and deep, a veritable sea-lake, backing inland some fifteen miles behind the wide headland gateway to the East, which guarded its entrance from the storming Atlantic.  Its shores were of virgin forest, peopled with the delicate-hued spruce, and all the many other varieties of soft, white, long-fibred timber demanded in the manufacture of the groundwood pulp needed for the world’s paper industry.

Far as the eye could see, in every direction, it was the same; forest and hill.  And, in the heart of it all, the great watercourse of the Beaver River debouched upon the cove which linked it with the ocean beyond.  It was a world of forest, seeming of limitless extent.

But the feast that had inspired Leslie Standing’s words was less the banquet which Nature had spread than the things which expressed the labours he and his companion had expended during the past seven years.  He was concerned for the endless forests.  He appreciated the great waterfall to the west, where the Beaver River fell off the highlands of the interior and precipitated itself into the cove below.  These were the two things in Nature he had demanded to make his work possible.  For the rest, the rugged immensity of scenery, the mighty contours of the aged land about him, the vastness of the harsh primordial world, so inhospitable, so forbidding under the fierce climate which Nature had imposed, made no appeal.  It served, and so it was sufficient.  The lights and shades under the summer sunlight were full of splendour.  No artist eye could have gazed upon it all and missed its appeal.  But these men lived amidst it the year round, and they had learned something of the fear which the ruthless northland inspires.  To them the beauty of the open season was a mockery, a sham, the cruel trap of a heartless mistress.

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The Man in the Twilight from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.