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Authors: Travelers In Time

Philip Van Doren Stern (ed) (186 page)

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So
these
two,
having
got
into
my
imagination,
could
not
be
let
out again,
until
it
was
satisfied
that
all
which
could
be
done
was
done, and
a
moral
as
well
as
a
logical
end
arrived
at.

I
took
to
horse,
therefore,
and
set
out
for
home.

 

 

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Apart
from
my
adventure
with
those
people
my
memory
is
blurred. My
dealings
and
encounters
with
them
arc
distinct
as
though
they happened
to-day;
but
the
portions
of
the
narrative
interspacing
that adventure
have
already
more
than
half
faded
from
memory.
Yet
it seems
to
me
that
my
journey
back
was
a
long
one,
and
that
ships
had to
be
taken
as
well
as
horses
ere
I
had
returned
and
could
recognise landmarks
and
faces.

In
many
of
these
recognitions
the
passage
of
time
was
marked
for me
as
tho'
it
had
been
written.

Here
was
a
dwelling
which
had
not
before
been
here:
and
in
this place,
where
a
house
had
been,
there
was
a
roofless
ruin.

Here
a
man
tended
his
sheep.
When
I
passed
the
last
time
he
had not
been
old;
but
his
beard
had
whitened
as
though
in
one
night
of snow.

I
passed
youths
and
girls
who
knew
me
and
stood
aside;
but
they had
changed
from
the
children
I
might
have
remembered
into
lusty and
lengthy
and
unknown
people.

The
word
that
I
was
coming
must
have
far
preceded
me,
for
these people
recognised
me
with
curiosity
but
without
astonishment;
and in
my
own
house
I
was
clearly
expected
and
welcomed
with
all
the preparedness
a
master
might
hope
for.

I
had
not
hoped
for
any
welcome,
and
would
have
preferred
to come
back
as
anonymously
as
a
bird
does
who
returns
to
its
last
year's hedge;
for,
although
I
did
not
wish
to
escape
anything
that
might
be in
keeping
for
me,
I
did
desire
to
inform
myself
of
the
circumstances by
which
I
should
be
surrounded,
and
the
dangers
that
I
might
have to
front.

There
was
no
hint
of
danger
or
disquietude
among
my
people. Their
welcome
was
as
free,
their
service
as
easy
and
accustomed
as though
I
had
returned
from
a
visit
to
the
next
town.
And
the
marvel of
this
almost
stupefied
me;
while
the
impossibility
of
demanding direct
information
from
those
unsuspicious
people
plunged
me
in dismay.

I
thought
to
myself—"The
bodies
have
never
been
found,
and,
by some
extraordinary
chance,
suspicion
has
not
turned
upon
me
for their
disappearance."

At
the
thought
a
weight
was
lifted
from
my
soul;
but
only
for
a moment;
for
I
had
not
come
back
in
search
of
security,
but
in
order that
whatever
debt
was
due
by
me
should
be
paid.

BOOK: Philip Van Doren Stern (ed)
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