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The Open Boat and Other Stories

CHAPTER II
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a child was playing on a mountain and disregarding a battle that was waging on the plain. behind him was the little cobbled hut of his fled parents. it was now occupied by a pearl-coloured cow that stared out from the darkness thoughtful and tender-eyed. the child ran to and fro, fumbling with sticks and making great machinations with pebbles. by a striking exercise of artistic license the sticks were ponies, cows, and dogs, and the pebbles were sheep. he was managing large agricultural and herding affairs. he was too intent on them to pay much heed to the fight four miles away, which at that distance resembled in sound the beating of surf upon rocks. however, there were occasions when some louder outbreak of that thunder stirred him from his serious occupation, and he turned then a questioning eye upon the battle, a small stick poised in his hand, interrupted in the act of sending his dog after his sheep. his tranquillity in regard to the death on the plain was as invincible as that of the mountain on which he stood.

it was evident that fear had swept the parents away from their home in a manner that could make them forget this child, the first-born. nevertheless, the hut was clean bare. the cow had committed no impropriety in billeting herself at the domicile of her masters. this smoke-coloured and odorous interior contained nothing as large as a humming-bird. terror had operated on these runaway people in its sinister fashion, elevating details to enormous heights, causing a man to remember a button while he forgot a coat, overpowering every one with recollections of a broken coffee-cup, deluging them with fears for the safety of an old pipe, and causing them to forget their first-born. meanwhile the child played soberly with his trinkets.

he was solitary; engrossed in his own pursuits, it was seldom that he lifted his head to inquire of the world why it made so much noise. the stick in his hand was much larger to him than was an army corps of the distance. it was too childish for the mind of the child. he was dealing with sticks.

the battle lines writhed at times in the agony of a sea-creature on the sands. these tentacles flung and waved in a supreme excitement of pain, and the struggles of the great outlined body brought it nearer and nearer to the child. once he looked at the plain and saw some men running wildly across a field. he had seen people chasing obdurate beasts in such fashion, and it struck him immediately that it was a manly thing which he would incorporate in his game. consequently he raced furiously at his stone sheep, flourishing a cudgel, crying the shepherd calls. he paused frequently to get a cue of manner from the soldiers fighting on the plain. he reproduced, to a degree, any movements which he accounted rational to his theory of sheep-herding, the business of men, the traditional and exalted living of his father.

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