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The great white way

XXXV. DOWN THE RIVER OF COMING DARK.
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we were not pursued, or, if we were, we saw nothing of our pursuers. when the storm had all cleared away, we saw here and there people along the shore, but they did not offer to interfere with our flight. on the contrary, they seemed rather interested, and even pleased at our rate of speed. we believed that with the wedding ceremony of the princess and ferratoni the better nature of the race once more got the upper hand, and that they were satisfied to know that we were getting out of the country as rapidly as our skill and muscular development would permit.

some mental communication to this effect must have passed between the court of the lily princess and that of her brother, the prince of the purple fields, for when some twenty hours later (we had wound our watches now) we reached his palace, we found the prince and his court assembled at the outer entrance, and our own beautiful propeller boat 291waiting in readiness for the immediate continuance of our journey.

noticing the assembly as we came on we had some doubts as to their intentions, but we did not hesitate, and we found the prince and those about him gentle and kindly as before. their willingness that we should continue our journey, however, was quite apparent, and as our boat contained all our belongings and had been fully provisioned by the prince’s household, there was no excuse for delay.

indeed, we were as eager to get out of their halcyon vale as they were to have us, and we did not remain longer in it than it took for us to climb from one boat into the other and touch the button that started the propeller. the battery had not failed, and aided by the tide we were off with a speed that seemed to us like that of a torpedo boat. we turned then and waved our hands and called good-byes to the gentle prince and those of his pleasant palace.

and so adieu to the land of my fancy—my isle of lost argosies and forgotten songs. one among us had found there the ideal he sought—life’s perfect chord. for the others—the lives we had lived and the lives of those who had lived before us, had not fitted us for that port of dreams.

we would return to our own. when or by what means we did not know—the way ahead seemed long and weary—but come what might, we 292had resolved to reach once more those who waited beyond the cold desolation between, and with them to go back to the only life we knew, in a world of growth and change.

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